Metro New Local Yeshivah Toledo school breathes new life into B'nai Israel's former building. Shelli Liebman Dorfman Senior Writer T he purchase of a single building on Walnut Lake Road is the impetus for an influx of new residents to relocate to West Bloomfield. On Dec. 20, the former Congregation Shaarey Zedek (CSZ) B'nai Israel Center officially became the home of the Mesivta of Toledo, which includes a school and commu- nity prayer service and education programs. Plans for the purchase began last summer after CSZ announced it would close the West Bloomfield facility on Sept. 18 to consolidate operations into its Southfield building. A Sept. 28 vote among the synagogue's mem- bership approved the sale of the building. After searching on and off for a year- and-a-half — in both West Bloomfield and Southfield — MesivtA administrators deemed the building ideal for classes, ser- vices and social and athletic activities. But because a major component of the yeshivah is a residential boys high school, renovations were necessary to create dormitory rooms, showers and a laundry area. During the nearly four months of meet- ings with West Bloomfield Township officials to gain site plan approval, the school rented the building from CSZ so students could begin classes at the beginning of the school year. Mesivta's 30 students in grades 9-12 are currently living in private homes in West Bloomfield, Southfield and Oak Park. They will move into the building upon completion of construction, which began Dec. 27. Move To West Bloomfield The school had been housed in Congregation Etz Chayim in Toledo since it was founded four years ago. "We wanted it to be in a place that would be central to the hometowns of the students we hoped to attract, and the space in Toledo was available,' said Rabbi Pinchus Neuberger, the school's director. "But we always consid- ered ourselves a Detroit-area school" While they were based in Toledo, Mesivta's group of young rabbis — none of whom were Toledo natives — had to make arrange- ments for their own children to commute daily to school at Yeshiva Beth Yehudah in both Southfield and Oak Park and Yeshivas Darchei Torah in Southfield. Several of the rabbis already had a Detroit connection. Rabbi Menachem Freedman, head of school, is the nephew of Rabbi E.B. Joe Dettloff, site manager for Belfor Property Restoration of Birmingham, talks with Rabbi Pinchus Neuberger about Rabbi Menachem Freedman oversees students taking a test. A hallway at Mesivta of Toledo high school. "Bunny" Freedman, executive director of Jewish Hospice and Chaplaincy Network in West Bloomfield, and Rabbi Tzali Freedman, director of the Central East region of the National Conference of Synagogue Youth in Southfield. Menachem Freedman's grandfather, the late Rabbi Avrohom Abba Freedman, a beloved longtime Torah educator in Detroit, greatly influenced his initiative toward Torah education. Menachem's wife is the daughter of Rabbi Avraham Jacobovitz, founder of Machon L'Torah in Oak Park, and his sister, Esther, is married to Neuberger. Both Freedman and Mesivta Rabbi Avraham Dreyfus studied at the Kollel Institute of Greater Detroit in Oak Park. At that time, Freedman developed the plan to create the school. "There was a need for an out-of-town yeshivah option in the Midwest, with a high level of learning, like those on the East Coast;' he said. And now they've brought that idea — and new residents — to West Bloomfield. In addition to the students, four of the school's rabbis and their families have moved to West Bloomfield, where they have become involved in area synagogues, attend- ing services during school breaks when the construction. Mesivta is closed. Freedman and his family are living in a home once occupied by another rabbi. "Part of our purchase agreement with Shaarey Zedek included the house owned by the synagogue, where Rabbi [Eric] Yanoff and his family lived',' he said. All of the school's students who had been enrolled for classes this year made the move from Toledo. For a dozen of them, that meant coming back to their home community. The boys will live at the school, along with class- mates from other cities, including Cleveland, Chicago, New Jersey and Baltimore. Neuberger said, "All of the rabbis who were with us in Toledo came with us. We hired new secular studies teachers after arriving." The staff totals 12. What's Inside? In addition to the school, Mesivta of Toledo — which will retain the Ohio-generated name — is also a synagogue and learning center, with both open to the community. "We don't want to take away from anyone's regular synagogue, but we are here as a place to daven, both during the week and on Shabbos," Neuberger said. Community learning also has begun. "For now, we haven't started a women's section, but we already have men and boys coming to learn in evening classes and with a study partner we provide," Neuberger said. The building, constructed in 1975 by Congregation B'nai Israel of Pontiac, which later merged with CSZ, includes classrooms, a library, a social hall, a sanctuary and meat and dairy kitchens. Daily meals are prepared by Jewel Kosher Caterers in Oak Park. Neuberger declined to give monetary details or names of donors to the school, but said, "People have stepped up to start this project, and we look forward to continuing to work with the community at large:' Added Freedman, "We got started with community donations and loans. [Community member] Hartley Harris [of West Bloomfield] volunteered to help out and was instrumental in meeting with the West Bloomfield planning commission." Said Neuberger, "Township Supervisor Michele Economou Ureste and trustee and planning commission member Steven Kaplan, along with the entire township staff, were helpful and ready to work to benefit West Bloomfield:' At this time, Mesivta does not receive sup- port from the Bloomfield Township-based Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit. "We will do a building campaign and offer dedication opportunities in the near future Freedman said. Neuberger said the choice of West Bloomfield is ideal."We feel like we are in the center of the community; but in a pastoral setting': he said. Added Freedman, "We chose the area deliberately. We didn't want to be in Oak Park or Southfield; we wanted the boys from those areas to have an out-of-town feel. "We want to be able to offer a whole new level of learning in West Bloomfield. We want to be a center for anyone who wants to, to be able to come learn Torah." For information on Mesivta of Toledo's boys high school, commu- nity education programs or religious services, call (248) 738-7230 or contact Rabbi Menachem Freedman at (248) 219-8969. oil 23