metro

Meyer 6. Cohen
and
6hirlee Bloom

present

PASSOVEX 2014

t

Prime 10

New Location:

15600 Ten Mile load at Greenfield, Southfield
248-327-7344

PRIMOCATEDING@GMAILCOM

Entrees
Herb Roasted '/2 Chicken
Apple Honey 1/2 Chicken
Stuffed Marmalade Chicken
Pickled Salmon
Lean Beef Brisket
Whole Turkey
Turkey Gravy

Turkey Carving

8.99 ea
9.99 ea.
10.99 ea.
14.99 lb.
19.99 lb.
89.99 ea.
7.99 qt.

7.99 ea.

Side Disfies

12.99 lb.
Chopped Liver
Gefilte Fish
4.75 ea.
Chicken Soup
8.99 qt.
Matzo Ball
1.75 ea.
Potato Anna
8.99 qt.
Matzo Farfel Stuffing
8.99 qt.
Kishke
2.99 ea.
Whole Kishke
9.99 ea.
Carrot Tzimmes
8.99 qt.
Turkey Stuffed Cabbage (6 pk.)
13.99 pk.
Beef Stuffed Cabbage (6 pk.)
13.99 pk.
Turkey or Beef Stuffed Cabbage --large 8.99 ea.
13.99
Turkey Meatballs (1 dozen)
Beef Meatballs (1 dozen)
13.99
Vegetable Souffle
6.99 pt.
Fruit Compote
6.99 pt.
6.99 pt.
Charoset
Sedar Plate
11.99 ea.
Potato Kugal '/8 pan
12.99
Potato Kugal -- 1/4 pan
22.99
Potato Kugal -- 1/2 pan
34.99
Matzo Kugal 1 /8 pan
12.99
Matzo Kugal -- 1/2 pan
22.99
Matzo Kugal -- 1/2 pan
34.99

Dessert available upon request.
Please place order by April 4.

20

arch 20 • 2014

Boy Scout Oren Lerner helps with a J-Serve community project.

Serving Jewishly

Boy Scout grows through his
experience with J-Serve projects.

Oren Lerner
Special to the Jewish News

I

began participating in J-Serve
projects with my Boy Scout Troop
364, chartered by Adat Shalom
Synagogue in Farmington Hills. A
tenet of Scouting is community service.
Jewish Scouting serves the community.
Judaism also teaches tikkun olam,
which means to me much more than
being good stewards of the Earth, but
also helping the community to be a
better place for all.
J-Serve, the International Day of
Jewish Youth Service, fulfills the goals
of tikkun olam and community service
for me not only as a Jew, but also as
a member of the community. I have
grown through J Serve to better appre-
ciate what I have, the gifts I have been
given and my responsibility to give
back to the community.
For seven years, J-Serve Detroit has
allowed local Jewish teens in grades
6-12 to interact with each other and
other teens in the community. Many of
the projects are interdenominational.
Following an opening program
at Temple Beth El in Bloomfield
Township at noon Sunday, March 30,
more than 200 Jewish teens will par-
ticipate in a spring project at five loca-
tions run by Detroit's Police Athletic
League (PAL). Activities will include
painting, setting up sports fields, sort-
ing through donations and more.
This past summer, I volunteered
through J-Serve Detroit in Community
Action Day sponsored by Summer

-

in the City. Hundreds of youths from
many other ethnic and religious back-
grounds participated.
I helped paint murals on walls next
to Muslim girls wearing hijabs, and
helped clean out and rebuild a play-
ground with others. We handed out
school packs and reading books to
children in the community. Another
time, we participated with hundreds
of youths at Detroit's Focus Hope in
hands-on community projects.
J-Serve has provided to me a wonder-
ful opportunity to grow as a person, a
Jew, a responsible member of the com-
munity and as a dedicated Boy Scout.
J-Serve is open to all Jewish teens,
no matter of affiliation or background.
All of the programs are chaperoned by
adults, observe kashrut, and are safe
and meaningful experiences. The proj-
ects are run by the youths, which helps
us gain important experience to be
community leaders in the future.
Thanks to the dedication of more
than 40 local J-Serve partners, the
Schulman Fund through the Jewish
Federation of Metropolitan Detroit
and a grant from J-Serve National,
J-Serve Detroit has a variety of projects
throughout the year.
J-Serve lays a great foundation of
community involvement and building
responsibility to be active, engaged
community members as adults.

❑

Oren Lerner, 15, lives in West Bloomfield.

For more details on J-Serve Detroit and

upcoming projects, visit www.jservdetroit.

org or email Barrett Harr at bharr®urj.org .

