Rosh Hashanah >> communal messages This Is Our Time R osh Hashanah offers us a unique moment to be thankful for the year we have lived, for our family and friends, and for the wonderful com- munity of Jewish Detroit we call home. The new year is also a time to look for- ward to the future with hope and excite- ment for the joys and possibilities that lie ahead. And, whether we are 9 years old or 90, we find that each Rosh Hashanah is unique and important in its own way. For all of us who care passionately about the Jewish community, however, this year is truly special and worth cel- ebrating. Not long ago, we faced a daunting financial crisis that affected many of our Jewish families and individuals and threatened the security of our commu- nity. It was only through an extraordinary measure of commitment, leadership and resourcefulness that we overcame this challenge and maintained our health and stability. As Federation leaders, we cannot hope to express the enormous gratitude we feel to all those who stepped forward on behalf of their fellow Jews, including pre- vious generations who worked to build a strong foundation for Jewish Detroit. Because of your strength, vision and gen- erosity, we have weathered the crisis and find that a new day is here. With it comes the opportunity to pay that generosity forward to future generations. This is a special time for us. It is a time when our community is once again on the rise, when more of our most vulnerable members — including our seniors, indi- viduals with disabilities, families in need and others — are cared for with love and respect. This is a time when our children have new avenues to connect with their Jewish heritage and young people are finding opportunities within their com- munity and city. It is a time when Jewish education and culture are blossoming and when our bond with Israel is taking on new dimension and depth. We must recognize that, despite these accomplishments, this is also a time when many of our fellow Jews are still strug- gling, and there remains much work to be done in taking care of the needs of the community. It is a time to rededicate ourselves to the principles of tzedakah and to the efforts to ensure the needs of our Jewish family in Detroit, in Israel and around the world. This is our time, for the Jewish future in Detroit belongs to each of us. If we are willing to commit deeply to our com- munity, it is a time when great things are possible for Jewish Detroit. On behalf of Federation, we want to wish every member of our Jewish com- munity a healthy, happy and joyous new year. Together, we will step forward toward a time of peace and harmony for Jews here, in Israel and everywhere across the world. Douglas Bloom, president, Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit Todd Sachse, president, United Jewish Foundation of Metropolitan Detroit Scott Kaufman, CEO, Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit Chag Samayach. Happy New Year From The JCC R osh Hashanah is a time that awakens our senses. The air sings with the smell of autumn: sweet apples and falling leaves and cool air. Our holiday tables are laden with delicious foods like chicken (prepared in a healthy way, of course!), roasted vegetables, round challah and honey. Synagogues are filled with the sound of prayer, and we are blessed to see family and friends as they join us in celebra- tion. So, too, are our hearts and souls awak- ened because Rosh Hashanah is a time of renewed hope, a time to express our gratitude and wonder at the beautiful world around us. At the Jewish Community Center of Metropolitan Detroit, we begin our new year with a sense of appreciation for our donors and members, volunteers and friends. We are honored to work with you and be part of this community. Like virtually every nonprofit institu- tion, we face financial challenges. But we never forget that our ultimate suc- cess is about people: are we providing the finest programming and service to everyone from infants to seniors to families to teens with special needs? We have certainly put our heart into it. This past year we held hundreds of cultural and educational events and hosted truly extraordinary talent at the Berman Center for the Performing Arts. We presented the annual Jewish Book Fair, the JCC Stephen Gottlieb Music Festival, the Gottlieb Family Festival of the Arts and the Lenore Marwil Jewish Film Festival. Our Janice Charach Gallery's exhibits were breathtaking. We offered the best in Jewish learn- ing through Seminars for Adult Jewish Enrichment, opened the new Community Recreation Park in Oak Park, made a lot of children happy at Center Day Camps, Camp Discovery and with the Kids All Together inclusion program. We hosted trips around the world and offered visitors a chance to see Israel in a Shalom Street exhibit. We presented outstanding program- ming for senior adults with the Active Life and IRP, introduced the JCC Lenny Krayzelburg Swim Academy, welcomed the Jewish Gay Network as an agency, improved ourselves and our community with the Kindness Project and held a great Dr. Larry D. Sills Memorial Golf Classic. We worked to make certain that our daily programs, the Pitt Child Development Center, Meyers Library, Center Fitness, Sports and Inline Hockey, were beyond compare. And we're already planning the JCC Maccabi Games & ArtsFest, to be held here next summer, which I am so excited for! Thank you for giving us the opportu- nity to present all of these and to serve as a gathering place for everyone. We wish you a sweet new year with good health, happiness, friends and family all around you. Love, Love, Love, Florine Mark, president, Jewish Community Center of Metropolitan Detroit Looking Forward And Looking Back A s we look forward to the new Jewish year 5774, Detroit's Jews will pray for peace and security for Jews everywhere and especially in Israel, and for prosperity and progress for us and our non-Jewish friends and neighbors. We have a sense of optimism and hope, but also are not without some 68 August 29 • 2013 JN trepidation. Before we look forward, we look back to the major events of 5773 and how they affected the Jewish community. We remember that a major conflict erupted between Israel and Hamas in November, as Israeli civilians were threatened, Israeli troops were mobilized and the Iron Dome anti-missile system — jointly developed by the U.S. and Israel — was for the first time fully deployed (thank- fully, with much success). Meanwhile, Iran's nuclear ambitions, endangering not just Israel but the entire world, continued at an accelerated pace. The scourge of terrorism remained an ever-present danger. The civil war in Syria and its reverberations in Lebanon and Jordan proved increasingly worri- some. The recent coup in Egypt, with that country's stability having been the lynchpin keeping the Middle East from utterly devolving for more than four decades, raised a host of worries for