TORAH PORTION Religious Court Detroit-area Vaad adopts standards for universally accepted conversions. Commanded To Remember Shabbat Ha'azinu: Deuteronomy 32:1-52; 11 Samuel 22:1-51. W Rabbis Doniel Neustadt, Vaad chairman, Chaim Bergstein, Elimelech Silberberg, Ari Kostelitz and Leib Tropper, chairman of the rabbinic commit- tee of the Eternal Jewish Family. Also participating, but not pictured, was Rabbi Shaul Zachariash, former chairman of the conversion department. T he Council of Orthodox Rabbis of Greater Detroit (Vaad) has taken a major step to serve Jews in the Metro Detroit by expanding its beit din into a fully staffed rabbinical court that will deal with all monetary and other disputes as well as conversions within the local community. The Vaad also reached an agree- ment on Sept. 22 with the Eternal Jewish Family International (EJF), based in Monsey, N.Y., that the beit din will subscribe to the standards for universally accepted conversions in intermarriage that have been adopted by the leading Torah sages in Israel and this country. EJF was founded in 2005 by Rabbi Leib Tropper, chairman of the organization's rabbinical board. The dean of Yeshiva Kol Yaakov/Horizons in Monsey, Tropper was encouraged by well-known Torah leaders to cre- ate an organization that would help intermarried couples overcome the muddled world of problematic con- versions, creating anguish for many families that subsequently learn that their conversions are not universally accepted. In a series of conferences in Newark, Miami, Boston, Washington and Jerusalem, EJF gathered some of the world's foremost halachic experts in formulating the standards for uni- versally accepted conversions. A key element in the EJF conversions is that potential converts adopt a lifestyle that is consistent with observing the 613 commandments of the Torah, including observing the Shabbat, fam- ily purity and the laws of kashrut. Often the first point of contact for potential converts and their Jewish spouses is a local Orthodox rabbi who guides the potential convert through a process of education that is much like that of any Orthodox child in a Jewish day school. During that process, EJF has made it possible for the couples to participate in special seminars where they not only meet other couples also in the process of acquiring universally accepted conversion, but hear from leading educators about important aspects of becoming integral parts of the Jewish community. The Detroit beit din, established 26 years ago, is the 18th in the worldwide network of religious courts that sub- scribe to the EJF standards. Like other courts, the Detroit beit din will be involved in multiple issues that require the intervention of a reli- gious court, including monetary dis- putes and divorces. The EJF affiliation was announced by representatives of the Vaad after a meeting with Tropper. The local rabbis thanked EJF Chairman Tom Kaplan for his finan- cial support of this new affiliation between EJF and the Detroit beit din. More than 1,000 intermarried couples referred by rabbis affiliated with EJF have been involved in the organiza- tion's programs and services. 111 hat a terrifying Torah por- do not live in a vacuum of time; but we tion all around! Parshat are the next link in a chain of genera- Ha'azinu starts out mildly tions who have come before us. enough but midway, we are Our Yom Kippur obser- in for a shock. The language vance reaffirms this with is strong, vivid and down- the yizkor service at the right frightening. center of our worship. As the people have Today, in particular, we abandoned their end of the remember those who have covenant by following false come before us; we remem- gods, God is "beside God's- ber their stories and how self" in anger. Pledging they impacted our lives. misfortune upon them, God They paved the way: They speaks of the arrows, fam- taught us; they suffered, ine, plague, pestilence and Rabbi Marla celebrated and, because fanged beasts that God will Hornsten of who they were, we have let loose upon the people Special to the become the people that we (Deuteronomy 32: 24). Jewish News are. When God recognizes So, whether it is for a sense that this only fuels the fire and gives of family and connection or about the more power to the enemy, God pledges ethics and core values that we live by or once again to redeem Israel and defeat even the shared memory of our people, the enemy according to the original memory provides us a with sense of promise. community, of relationship and of his- While I find this Torah portion tory that is fundamental to who we are. extremely frightening in its language Although this lesson is surrounded and its imagery, a verse from the by the language of fear, do not be opening is so different in tone and in afraid to heed it. If you have older texture that I am drawn directly to it. relatives, take the opportunity this It speaks to us as individuals and as holiday season to sit down and ask Jews, especially at this High Holiday them questions about their experi- season. ences (you might want to video the Verse 7, chapter 32 reads: "Remember conversation as a memento or as doc- the days of old, Consider the years umentation); if you are the one with of ages past; Ask your father, he will the stories, don't be afraid to sit your inform you; Your elders they will tell family down and tell them the stories. you ..:' While the text actually refers to I promise you will never regret it, and the patriarchal (and matriarchal) days in so doing, you will have obeyed one of Abraham and Sarah, I like the verse of the most valuable commands of our because it is personal, drawing me back Torah: Zakor! Remember. E to my own ancestors, my grandparents and even the generations I never knew. I Marla R. Hornsten is a rabbi at Temple want to hear the family lore again. I want Israel in West Bloomfield. to know how my branch of the family tree fits together with those who came before me. Conversations As Jews, we are commanded to Do you know for whom you are remember over and over again. Our named? Do you know any sto- communal history is a vital part of our ries about that person? Why is identity. This verse suggests to us that the theme of remembrance so remembering is an active duty, not a important at the High Holiday passive one. We need to ask about our season? How do you think you past from those who know it; we need can best relay your stories, les- to study it; we need to make it part our- sons, values to the next genera- selves — just as we have as a people. We tion? October 9 2008 B3