You Serve, J-Serve Join other Jewish teens making a difference — volunteer on April 26. Teen Volunteer Corps members Hilary Dorman, 16, Emily Andrew Milgrom Teen2Teen Staff Writer -Serve is a day of service for Jewish youth around the world. The program, founded in 2005 by an inspired teen, provides opportuni- ties for Jewish teens to participate in acts of loving-kindness, just and chari- table giving, and reinforces the idea that Jews have a duty to help the world that we live in. This year, that day is Sunday, April 26. Last year, 10,000 teens from across the United States, Canada and Israel participated in J-Serve. Projects varied among the 65 registered communities. Some included beach cleanups, wetlands restoration and a rally and walkathon to raise money that will be used to fight genocide in Darfur. Rabbi Sid Schwarz, president and j founder of PANIM (of which J-Serve is a collaboration), said, "What makes J-Serve so powerful is that it enables the entire Jewish community to act in a unified fashion, transcending denomi- national and institutional lines." This year, teens in Metro Detroit and Ann Arbor will clean, paint and renovate the Isaac Agree Downtown Synagogue. This synagogue continues to offer Shabbat and holiday services and functions as the last remaining syna- gogue building in Detroit. After years of wear-and-tear, the synagogue members look forward to working with teens in our community to beautify and renovate its building. The group of approximately 100 teens will be split in half. Each half will partici- pate in a downtown walking tour led by the Jewish Historical Society of Michigan as well as working on the synagogue. Goodman, 14, Tedi Dorman, 14, and Pearl Dorman, 12, all of West Bloomfield Joey Kepes, Josh Dean and Ben Eilender, all 16 and of West Bloomfield, help clean up after the party thrown by the Teen Volunteer Corps. The event goes from 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Sunday, April 26. Advanced online reg- istration at www.jserve.org/detroit, is required and closes April 19. The bus transportation drop-off and pick-up location is Adat Shalom Synagogue in Farmington Hills. J-Serve 2009 is made possible by the Korotkin Insurance Group, Southfield. Participants will include teens and adult chaperoned from Metro Detroit and Ann Arbor. Participating youth organizations include Yeshivat Akiva in Southfield, Adat Shalom Synagogue, Congregation Shaarey Zedek of Oakland County, ATID: Alliance for Teens in Detroit in Farmington Hills, Frankel Jewish Academy in West Bloomfield, Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit, Oakland County-based Tamarack Camps, Temple Emanu-El in Oak Park, Temple Israel in West Bloomfield, Teen Volunteer Corps, Young Judaea and local BBYO, MCUSY, NCSY and NFTY youth groups. ❑ Andrew Mllgrom, 16, Is a Junior at Frankel Jewish Academy, West Bloomfield. Teen2Teen and Detroit Public Television are collaborating on a project to add video stories to our Web sites. Interested Jewish teens should e-mail Dana Loewenstein at dloewenstein@dptv.org to find out more. Noah Newman, 14, Bloomfield Township; Andrew Gordner, 14, Franklin; Samuel Kepes, 14, West Bloomfield; and Jonah Newman, 12, Bloomfield Township are part of Adat Shalom's Teen Volunteer Corps. A42 April 9 g 2009 Watch een in nest week's Jewish News