frontlines >> letters }low 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 copies 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. Jewish Links To Motown Was A Fascinating History Tonight, I was part of a very happy, enthusiastic audience at the Berman Center for the Performing Arts. We all gathered to listen to Jan Durecki, the director of the Rabbi Leo M. Franklin Archives of Temple Beth El, talk about Motown's Jewish connections ... Motown's Mensches, as she call these folks. I don't know when, but sometime during the evening I noticed, like most, I was sitting on the edge of my seat listening to the music and watching Jan do her magic. As a Detroiter, I have always been proud of the legacy of Berry Gordy's Motown, but as a Jew, I never made the connection to how fel- low Jewish Detroiters helped shape and form the legendary music company. Jan educated us about the common link between Soupy Sales, David Silver, Robin Seymour, the Noveck broth- ers (Sidney and Harold), Al Abrams, Bob Green, Paul Winters, David and Paul Handleman, Mort Persky, Brian Wells, Abraham Silver, Ron Miller, Mickey Shorr, Art Glasser, Stuart Avig, Bernard Yeszin, Jerry Light and Martin Coleman. These Jewish men, and oth- ers too numerous to name, helped Berry Gordy's Motown achieve artistic and financial success. Allen Rawls, director of the Motown Museum and a member of the Motown Board of Trustees, came to hear Jan. He stood up at the end of the evening to applaud the presentation and admitted he'd gained a whole new perspective of our Jewish community involve- ment with Berry Gordy that insured Motown's success. I also couldn't help but think how lucky we are to have the Berman Center for the Performing Arts as a venue and to have organizations such as the Jewish Historical Society of Michigan, the JCC Library and the Temple Beth El Archives to put in place community educational programs that tell community stories that make a dif- ference. I encourage my fellow Jewish News readers to take time to visit the Motown Museum. The songs and art- ists will still be the highlight but the impact of our community may now be included in the story. Arnie Collens Immediate Past President Jewish Historical Society of Michigan Waterford Chabad Does Not Have Permission For Lawsuit In its most recent letter to the Jewish News (Dec. 6 page 5), Chabad- Lubavitch of Michigan (CLM) and its public relations machine try to jus- tify CLM's decision to sue the Torah Center and its individual board mem- bers in secular court. Keep in mind that CLM is suing us to get us to transfer the Torah Center to CLM, even though the land, the shul and the entire congregation was built from the ground up by the Torah Center, its rabbi and its congregants, and not by CLM. The trial court threw out CLM's case, so CLM has now appealed it to the Michigan Court of Appeals. CLM never explains in any of its public relations statements that the Vaad Rabbonai Lubavitch, which CLM contends is the highest judicial authority in Chabad, has stated on two separate occasions (in 2008 and 2012), that CLM does not have per- mission to sue the Torah Center or its board in secular court. The reason being that neither the Torah Center nor its board have ever been a party to any Din Torah in any Bais Din (Jewish rabbinical arbitration) con- cerning the Torah Center's property. CLM did not like that clear instruc- tion from the Vaad. So CLM went outside of Chabad to try to get per- mission from some other authority to justify suing the Torah Center and the individual board members in secular court. CLM approached a non-Chabad rabbinic group, which had no involve- ment whatsoever in the underlying dispute. That is strange indeed consider- ing that CLM has been arguing to the secular courts that Chabad is a hierar- chy, and it must follow the decrees of only higher Chabad authorities. CLM ignores the Vaad Rabbonai Lubavitch when it suits CLM's purposes. CLM is engaging in double talk. It alone is responsible for the tremen- dous Chilul HaShem [desecration of God's Name] created by its lawsuit against the Torah Center and its individual board members in secular court. After CLM lost, one would have hoped that it would have stopped the harm it has caused to this community by dragging another Jewish institution and its individual board members through the secular courts. Instead, CLM doubled down and continues to pursue its lost case in the Michigan Court of Appeals. How much more time, money and waste will CLM cause this community, diverting our scarce resources from being used to benefit the soul of our Jewish com- munity? CLM's public relations statements will not change the fundamental fact that CLM is the aggressor in all of this. CLM can put the entire matter to rest by simply dropping its appeal today. What a wonderful Chanukah gift that would be for our entire com- munity. If you are an individual board member involved in any way with Chabad, you should pay close atten- tion to what CLM is doing here. Bais Chabad Torah Center West Bloomfield Why Isn't Israel Allowed To Defend Its Citizens? After years of ever-increasing rocket attacks, mainstream media like the New York Times finally decided to allow that Israel has a right to self- defense as long as she doesn't exercise it. She must, according to these high- minded "opinionators," show restraint and work with Egypt to broker a truce. And so it came to pass. Of course, it wasn't Israel's "restraint" that made this latest truce possible. It was her military prowess and a little arm- twisting by our doughty secretary of state. Given the tendency of Egypt's president to make a peace sign with one hand and give Hamas the high sign with the other, the climate doesn't bode well for Israel remaining rocket- free for any length of time. In any event, once again, Israel has been "rescued" from the brink of suc- cess. Once again she has been told to turn the other cheek, a nifty pirouette no Christian (or Muslim) nation would ever be asked to perform. But if the pundits affirm Israel's right to protect her citizens, they can't very well deny that it's also her duty. If this means Israel has to do whatever it takes to subdue her enemies, so be it. While no one wants to see her fol- low a scorched earth policy, she is not, and should not be, obligated to have more concern for her enemy's children than for her own. The higher standard should not be the double standard. Mitzi Alvin Franklin Nicole Rubin and Lorraine Applebaum partying at Congregation Beth Shalom Jac Hanukkah is a time to celebrate the dream of religious freedom. For individuals in JARC's Independent Living Program, it's also a time to celebrate with family and friends, thanks to the generosity of party hosts Anita and Ron Taylor and their children Stacey and Marc Wittenberg. JARC wishes everyone a beautiful, meaningful Happy Hanukkah! Support JARC Today! Make your gift at jarc.org or 248.538.6611 1776620 December 13 • 2012 5