Temple and Synagogue Listings Sponsored by Temple Israel Spirituality TORAH PORTION Synagogues from page B9 Temple Emanu-El 14450 W.10 Mile, Oak Park, 48237, (248) 967-4020. Rabbi: Joseph P. Klein. Cantor: Darcie Sharlein. Services: Friday 7:30 p.m. No Saturday services until Aug. 23. Temple Israel 5725 Walnut Lake, West Bloomfield, 48323, (248) 661-5700. Rabbis: Harold S. Loss, Paul M. Yedwab, Joshua L. Bennett, Marla Hornsten, Jennifer T. Kaluzny. Cantor: Michael Smolash. Cantorial soloist: Neil Michaels. Minyan Monday-Thursday 7:30 a.m.; Friday 7:30 p.m.; Saturday 10:30 a.m.; Sunday 9 a.m. Friday, Shabbat Unplugged. Wedding blessings of Amy Lauren Marks and Aaron Matthew Swedler. Baby naming of Noa Mila Gendelman, daughter of Janet and Vladimir Gendelman; Arielia Josephine Ginter, daughter of Liron and Darryl Ginter; Sari Ryan Golding, daughter of Brooke and Mark Golding; Leonor Couceiro daCosta Newman, daughter of Alexandra and David Newman; Madison Jane Zoref, daughter of Marcie and Jonathan Zoref. Temple Kol Ami 5085 Walnut Lake, West Bloomfield, 48323, (248) 661-0040. Rabbi: Norman T. Roman. Rabbi emeritus: Ernst J. Conrad. Soloist: Tiffany Steyer. Services: Friday 6 p.m.; Saturday 10:30 a.m. Congregation Shaarey Zedek 1924 Coolidge, East Lansing 48823, (517) 351-3570. Rabbi: Amy Bigman. Rabbi Emeritus: Morton Hoffman. Cantorial solo- ist: Pamela Schiffer. Services: Friday 8 p.m. (7 p.m on the second Friday of the month), Saturday 9 a.m. Temple Shir Shalom 3999 Walnut Lake, West Bloomfield, 48323, (248) 737-8700. Rabbis: Dannel Schwartz, Michael L. Moskowitz. Cantorial soloist: Penny Steyer. Services: Friday 6:30 p.m. Saturday 9 a.m. U-M Reform Chavurah 1429 Hill St., Ann Arbor 48104, (734) 769- 0500. Regular Friday evening services through the school year. Co-chairs: Shayna Liberman, Stefanie Albowitz, Edi David, Rebecca Kamil. Reformchairs07@umich.edu . Reform/Renewal Congregation Shir Tikvah 3900 Northfield Parkway, Troy, 48084, (248) 649-4418. Rabbi: Arnie Sleutelberg. Services: Friday 7:45 p.m.; Saturday 10 a.m. Services outdoors, both days, weather permitting. Renewal Pardes Hannah 2010 Washtenaw Ave., Ann Arbor, 48104, (734) 213-8374. Rabbi: Elliot Ginsburg. Affiliation: Alliance for Jewish Renewal. Services: Friday night, monthly. Shabbat morning the second and fourth Saturday each month. Services are led by the rabbi and other group leaders. B10 July 31 • 2008 Secular Humanistic The Birmingham Temple 28611 W.12 Mile, Farmington Hills, 48334, (248) 477-1410. Rabbi: Tamara Kolton. Founding rabbi: Sherwin T. Wine. Services: Friday 8 p.m. Jewish Cultural Society 2935 Birch Hollow Drive, Ann Arbor, 48108- 2301, (734) 975-9872. First Friday Shabbat observances, adult programs, pre-school. Sunday school, b'nai mitzvah program, High Holiday observances. Jewish Parents Institute JCC, 6600 W. Maple, West Bloomfield, 48322, (248) 661-1000. Director: Marilyn Wolfe. Alternative cultural Jewish celebra- tions; secular bar/bat mitzvah ceremonies; adult programming; cultural Sunday school from nursery through teen. Sholem Aleichem Institute 28690 Southfield, Suite 293, Lathrup Village, 48076, (248) 423-4406. President: Alva Dworkin. Holiday observances; Friday night oneg Shabbat; cultural events. Workmen's Circle Arbeter Ring JCC, 15110 W. Ten Mile, Oak Park, 48237, (248) 432-5677. President: Arlene Frank. Michigan district director: Ellen R. Bates- Brackett. Secular and cultural holiday observances. Shabbes potlucks, bar/bat mitzvahs, educational and cultural pro- gramming. Welcoming community, Jewish/ Yiddish culture, social justice. Sephardic Keter Torah Synagogue 5480 Orchard Lake Road, West Bloomfield, (248) 681-3665. Chazan: Ben Zion Ben Shimon. Services: Friday at candlelighting. Saturday 9 a.m., 5:45 p.m. Monday and Thursday 6 a.m.; Thursday 9:15 p.m. Traditional B'nai David P.O. Box 251574, West Bloomfield, 48325, (248) 855-5007. Cantor: Ben-Zion Lanxner. Services: Saturday 9 a.m. Services held at Hadassah House, 5030 Orchard Lake Road, West Bloomfield. Minyans Fleischman Residence 6710 W. Maple, West Bloomfield, 48322, (248) 661-2999. Rabbi: Avie Shapiro. Services: Sunday-Thursday abbreviated Minchah: 10 minutes before sunset, followed by Maariv. Friday and Saturday, Minchah 5 p.m.; Maariv 6:10 p.m.; Saturday and Sunday, 9:15 a.m. Call to confirm times. Yeshivat Akiva 21100 W.12 Mile, Southfield, 48076, (248) 386-1625. Services: During the school year, morning services at 7:30 a.m.; afternoon services at 2:40 p.m. Community is invited. Legacy And The Land Shabbat Masei: Numbers 28:9-15, 33:1-36:13; Jeremiah 2:4-28, 3:4; Isaiah 66:1, 23. Torah in their midst. This third party may have been doomed to fail, but at least their idealism regarding the land his is what God has com- spawned the very special five daugh- manded concerning the ters who never lost faith either in God daughters of Zelophehad or in the equality of His saying: 'they may marry Torah or in the significance, anyone they wish provided centrality and Jewish con- they marry into a family quest of the Land of Israel. of their father's tribe. No Rabbi Akiva identified inheritance of the children Zelophehad with the cul- of Israel may pass from one pable gatherer of wood, a tribe to another, for the chil- wicked Sabbath desecra- dren of Israel shall cleave tor who was condemned everyone to the inheritance to death. I believe that of the tribe of their fathers' Rabbi Akiva was stress- (Numbers 36:6,7). In effect, Rabbi Shlomo ing a crucial foundation this final biblical deci- Riskin stone of Judaism: We are sion orchestrates a bridge Special to the both a nationality as well between women and famil- Jewish News as a religion; God entered ial rights on the one and into a national covenant tribal rights on the other. with Abraham "between the pieces" in In biblical history, tribal rights which He guaranteed the first patri- were very zealously guarded (not unlike individual state's rights in early arch eternal progeny and the bound- aries of the Land of Israel as well as American history). the Divine Revelation of a religious These five women went all the way covenant at Sinai. up the judicial and political ladder Zelophehad certainly "lapsed" in until they stood before Moses himself, terms of his religious obligations by insisting upon the justice of their desecrating the Sabbath; however, this claim to inherit their father's land so dare not distract from his national that Zelophehad have a portion in the status as a member of Klal Yisrael, the future eternity of Israel through his Jewish nation. Remember that the basis descendants' working and living in for the claim of the daughters was that ancestral land in Israel. "the name of their father not be dimin- Let us look at Zelophehad, as well ished" by his inability to bequeath land as the character of his daughters, in Israel if he lacked male heirs. from the perspective of a talmudic The counter argument might have discussion. R. Yehuda b. Beteyra sees been — according to Akiva — that Zelophehad as one of the ma'apilim, your father doesn't deserve a heri- the brazen would-be conquerors of tage in the Land of Israel if he was a Israel; and this perception assumes transgressor of the law. Perhaps Akiva three distinct parties of Israelites all specifically identifies Zelophehad as opposed to Moses in the desert but the culpable wood-gatherer in order each with its own unique platform. to stress that one may cut himself off The first is Datan and Aviram, who from the religious covenant without saw the fleshpots of Egypt as the real removing his privileges as a member land flowing with milk and honey, of the national covenant, the historic and that's where they wanted to be; nation of Israel. And since his daugh- the second is Korah who, like Naturei ters learned their Zionism from him, Karta, wished to remain in the reli- his name is glorified throughout gious "Koller of God outside of Israel, Jewish history through the special so as not to become sullied by the daughters whom he parented and stench and struggle of a new startup inspired. state; and the third are the ma'apilim, the non-religious Zionists who storm Shlomo Riskin is chancellor of Ohr Torah the ramparts of the land of Canaan Stone and the Chief Rabbi of Efrat, without God or the Holy Ark of the Efrat, Israel T ❑