frontlines >> letters How to Send Letters We prefer letters relating to JN articles. We reserve the right to edit or reject letters. Letters of 225 words or less are considered first. Longer ones will be subject to trimming. Letter writers are limited in frequency of publication. Letters must be original and contain the name, address and title of the writer and a day phone number. Non-electronic cop ies must be hand signed. Send letters to the JN: 29200 Northwestern Highway, Suite 110, Southfield, MI 48034; fax (248) 304-8885; e-mail, letters@the jewishnews.com . We prefer email. Taking Baby Steps This New Year 5773 As Rosh Hashanah fast approaches, we are meant to make resolutions for the New Year. While the rest of the world does this on Dec. 31, with champagne in hand while watching the ball drop, those of us that are Jewish have to con- tend with an ever-changing date that falls in either September or October. Doesn't seem very fair, does it? Then again, when was it fair (or easy for that matter) to be Jewish? As I write these words, I am think- ing of how I want to improve next year. The things I want to do that will not only change me for the better, but also affect the people I love, work with and interact with on a daily basis in a posi- tive way. That got me to thinking about all the resolutions I have made in the past, and the sad reality that most of them were not kept. Most were forgotten weeks, if not days after they were made. We make these resolutions with such conviction; motivating ourselves to change once the ball drops or, in our case, the sun goes down. It's pretty depressing when you really think about it. Isn't that the case for most of us? How many of us are discouraged by our lack of progress, reasserting the same old commitments? How many of us arrive at Rosh Hashanah stunned to discover that we're making the same resolutions we made the year before, and the year before that and the one before that? Do we have any motiva- tion left? Do we have any credibility left? How do we break this pattern? How do we treat this New Year as truly new, as a real opportunity for growth and change? What goals do we have a realistic chance of achieving? Realistic being the operative word here. Change happens slowly, incremen- tally over long periods of time. As my rabbis have taught me, the accomplish- ment is in the persistence, in the ability to continue to look ahead, to keep put- ting one foot in front of the other, to keep trying. True growth and change comes about in those small, consistent steps. We all want to be great overnight. But I need to accept the fact that's not going to happen. And even more importantly, I need to understand that it is a goal that is too difficult to achieve. Too much stress! There are no quick fixes when you are talking about life-changing actions. I am reminded of one of my favor- ite movies, What About Bob? where Richard Dreyfuss (Dr. Marvin) lectures Bill Murray about the importance of taking "baby steps" to change your behavior. Dr. Marvin is right. Hopefully through this slower pace, I will achieve real change. Andre Douville West Bloomfield, Lubavitch Should Drop Appeal Of Its Lawsuit As a current member of Bais Chabad Torah Center, I served as treasurer dur- ing the time the Torah Center paid for the purchase of its property. Member donations funded the purchase, with no funds contributed by the Lubavitch Foundation of Michigan. I wish to express my profound disap- pointment in the Lubavitch Foundation for continuing to pursue an appeal of its lawsuit against our congregation even after it was thrown out of court by Judge Chabot. One would expect some sense of social and communal responsibility on the part of the Lubavitch Foundation; one would assume that it would now attempt to heal the wounds that it cre- ated by not pursuing the lawsuit it lost. Instead, it continues to add to the division and pain it has already inflict- ed on the entire Jewish community of Detroit by continuing to pursue the case on appeal. I am also disappointed with the law firm Honigman Miller et. al., for its involvement in this lawsuit that is causing such damage to our Jewish community. During this period of Asseret Yemei Teshuvah, the Days of Penitence, I hope and pray that the Lubavitch Foundation will come to its senses and drop its appeal. David Hillel Morrison Huntington Woods Thomas More Law Center Is Justified In Eagle Case There are none so blind as those who will not look. Case in point is the let- ter "Thomas More Law Center Merits Closer Scrutiny" (Sept. 13, page 6). Let's look at the main points. So, what is wrong with the TMLC not having an interest in Eagle until they saw a connection with radical Islamic groups? There is, indeed, such a connection. The purchaser, ICA has documented connections with the North American Islamic Trust, which is a Saudi-funded organization connected to terrorist funding organizations. Also, CAIR, a front organization for Hamas and the Muslim Brotherhood, had identified ICA as one of its constituents. I believe that TMLC has it right. A charge of "McCarthyism" is often the refuge when one can't dispute doc- umented connections to seditious orga- nizations. By the way, in retrospect, we now know that the government was, indeed, inundated with communists, unfortunately many of them Jews. The target of TMLC is not "Muslims:' it is Islamists. TMLC is absolutely correct in saying that nowhere in the Constitution is there the phrase "separation of church and state." The First Amendment says "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohib- iting the free exercise thereof" That is what is guaranteed, and that is what prevents forcing our children to pray in school honoring a state- controlled religion — this is what sepa- rates us from Islamists. To intimate that TMLC's agenda in this affair is to support forcing our children to pray to government-sponsored religion shows how far hate for that organization can be carried. The letter writer credits TMLC for him joining the ACLU and the ADL. Apparently he isn't bothered by the fol- lowing fact: When the U.S. and Israel walked out of and boycotted the noto- rious 2001 U.N. conference on racism in Durban, South Africa, because the conference was rife with anti-Semitism and hatred of the West, the ACLU chose to stay and join in the hate fest. The writer should take a few min- utes to look at the TMLC's 22 pages of allegations that are documented by the Farmington Public School's own communications as revealed under the Freedom of Information Act, and see for yourself that an investigation is warranted. The public is unaware of the facts because the local media has blindly supported the school district, never bothering to do any investigative journalism. Why is that? Richard Kaplan prepares for the hotiday IALC The High Holy Days are a time of personal reflection and meditation. For everyone at ARC, it is also an opportunity to wish friends, family and a generous, loving community a very Happy and Healthy New Year! 32nd Annual Fall Fundraiser, Irving Ginsberg, Ph.D. Farmington Hills Corrections • In "Alleged Hate Crime At MSU" (Sept. 6, page 8), Zach Tennen is not a member of Chi Alpha Epsilon Pi, according to the fraternity's scribe, Justin A. Polk. • In "Rub-A-Dub" (Sept. 13, page 54), ORT wanted to clarify that the organization netted $300,000. The story had reported that it grossed $300,000. OCTOBER 23, 2012 FOX THEATRE BUY TICKETS NOW www.j a rcorg September 20 • 2012 5