Spirituality A Lifetime Of Service Bea Sacks' social action and justice programs help heal the world. N Vivian DeGain Special to the Jewish News of long after the 1967 riots in Detroit, Southfield High School teacher Bea Sacks recognized that her all-white student community needed a curriculum to learn about diver- sity and how discrimination against minorities limited their lives. So the history and American govern- ment teacher cre- ated a new class called Minority Groups. "It became a Bea Sacks very popular:' the former teachers said of the course that also was taught in other Michigan school districts. Social action and tikkun olam (repairing the world) have been driving forces throughout her life. Now, 40 years later, Sacks is being The late Abraham honored for her Sacks during World work by Temple War II Emanu-El, which recently named the Bea Sacks Social Action Fund in her honor, and by the Michigan Women's Foundation, which gave her its Trillium Lifetime Achievement Award on May 1 in Novi (and on May 8 in Grand Rapids). At a recent Shabbat service, Temple Emanu-El members applauded her accomplishments and the importance of tikkun olam. "We felt it was time to thank Bea for all that she has done for Temple Emanu- El and our community," said President Dolores Galea. "She and her late husband, Abraham, were founding members of Temple Emanu-El more than 50 years ago. Bea has initiated countless programs over the years to promote social action and social justice, and she has served both as the longtime Social Action Committee chairman and as temple president for three years in the early 1990s!' Bea volunteered for the Red Cross during the war. Rabbi Joseph Klein said, "As we honor Bea, we are reminded of what is expected of us. Bea models for us — in her dedica- tion and devotion to the congregation and in her personal efforts to make a differ- ence in our world — the covenant-con- nection that is the mitzvah of commanded righteousness. She is a Jewish hero!' Robert Sedler co-founded the temple's Social Action Committee with Sacks, who lives in Huntington Woods. "Bea is the heart and soul of our Social Action Committee said Sedler, a Wayne State University law professor. "Bea started mitzvah projects (as a component of b'nai mitzvah student preparation) at our temple, and the idea is taken as common- place in all Reform temples now and many Conservative!' Numerous past projects include a seminar about the 50th anniversary of the landmark Supreme Court civil rights case, Brown vs. the Board of Education. Projects close to her own heart are efforts for the military. Abraham Sacks served in the Army during World War II, and she volun- teered for the Red Cross as a blood donor recruiter and an ambulance staff assis- tant. For many Chanukahs, Bea has col- lected donations to send candy to Jewish American soldiers through the Jewish Chaplains Service in New York, where she grew up, and more recently, for CDs for wounded soldiers at Walter Reed Army and the Bethesda Naval hospitals. Temple Emanu-El's Social Action Committee, under her leadership, collects rent money, medical supplies and Jewish ritual items for a developing Jewish com- munity in Brovary, Ukraine, through Yad L'Yad (hand to hand). The committee holds a bottle-and-can drive to send funds to a South African hospice, assisting the AIDS crisis. The committee also hosts food drives and temple dinners to assist the hungry locally, nationally and inter- nationally for Yad Ezra, Forgotten Harvest, St. Mark's Food Pantry in Macomb County as well as for the victims of the Asian Tsunami and Hurricanes Andrew and Katrina. Anne Costello, temple member said, "What is most inspiring is that Bea doesn't consider herself to be very religious or spiritual. She does good for goodness' sake. Not because we are impelled to do so as Jews, but because there is need. To me, that is the purest form of tikkun olam. And this is not a notion Bea tends to in her leisure. She has made it her life, whether working for Sander Levin for 25 years, organizing for Better Schools in Berkley, or marching on Washington!' Don Cohen, former temple executive director and a 50-year member, said Bea is very effective at getting volunteers for any good cause. "Bea is a bulldog;' he said. "She gets her teeth around a thing and doesn't let go. Many things at temple, now and since its beginning, wouldn't get done without her." Most recently, he said, the Social Action Committee decided to "go green!' Sacks led the way to replace temple's light bulbs in the school. Rabbi David Saperstein of the Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism in Washington, D.C., sent a tribute for her service. He quoted her favorite saying from Pirkei Avot, "You are not required to finish the work, neither are you at liberty to abstain from it!' ❑ Vivian DeGain is a freelance writer in Rochester Hills. May 8 • 2008 B1