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May 16, 2013 - Image 37

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 2013-05-16

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Free to the public

sheppy dog fund lecture

Hillel First-Grader
Sets Yad Ezra
Donation In Motion

THE BINDING OR
SACRIFICE Of ISAAC

A Central Theme in the Art of the
Three Monotheistic Religions

Dr. Shalom Sabar, Guest Lecturer

Professor of the History of Art, Jewish Folklore and Material Culture at
The Hebrew University of Jerusalem and the Schusterman Visiting Scholar,
at the University of Washington, Seattle

This lecture will present the story of Abraham, its
meaning and significance as it was interpreted
from Late Antiquity through the Middle Ages by
Jewish, Christian and Islamic artists according
to the principles of their respective religions.

Wednesday
May 29
6:00p

Flint Institute of Arts
1120 E. Kearsley St.
Flint, MI 48503
810.234.1695
flintarts.org

image
Rembrandt Harmenszoon van Rijn
Dutch, 1606-1669
Abraham and Isaac
etching on paper, 1645
6.0625 x 5
Gift of the Whiting Foundation
through Mr. and Mrs. Donald E.
Johnson, 1970.16

The Sheppy Dog Fund
Lecture has been established
to address the topics of art,
religion and history prior to
the 19th century, funded
annually by the Sheppy Dog
Fund, Dr. Alan Klein, Advisor

1630690

orremklim v.

Talya Rotberg with many
donations for Yad Ezra

F

first-graders at Hillel Day
School in Farmington Hills
have donated several large
bins of non-perishable food items
to Yad Ezra, Michigan's only kosher
food pantry, in a food drive spear-
headed by one of their classmates.
Talya Rotberg's family regu-
larly delivers groceries to Yad
Ezra clients; they approached the
first-grade teachers with the idea
to collect food on a large scale.
Talya's mother, Leemor Rotberg,
a Hillel alumna, visited each class
to explain the distribution of food
to the needy as an act of tzedakah
(charity).
"It's hard for young children to
empathize or to imagine truly being
hungry, but they knew they were
doing something kind for others,"
teacher Carol Fridson said. Students
also learned that organizations like
Yad Ezra in Berkley help "make the
world a better place:'
"This early experience," Fridson
said, "gives them a little taste of
what is out there in the world" E

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May 16 • 2013

37

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