$2.00 MARCH 27 -APRIL 2, 2014 / 25 ADAR 11 -2 NISAN 5774 theJEWISHNEWS.com A JEWISH RENAISSANCE MEDIA PUBLICATION » Going Strong After 26 years, rabbi's lunch-and- learn still satisfies a hunger for spirituality. See page 16. » The First Retirement Carl Seidman seized the day and changed his life. See Red Thread, page 34. DETROIT JEWISH NEWS metro » Who Needs Gluten? Those with celiac desease must stay away; others may be buying into a fad. See page 46. Carl Seidman took a cooking class in Vietnam. > cover story Historic Rulin Local same-sex marriage court decision results in celebration and ambiguity. Ronelle Grier I Contributing Writer t was a weekend mixed with celebration, disap- pointment and uncertainty for hundreds of couples and supporters of same-sex marriage in Michigan, as Federal Judge Bernard Friedman issued a momentous decision that legalizes marriage between two members of the same sex. Friedman's opinion was made public on Friday afternoon, March 22, and the following day, clerks in four Michigan counties held Saturday hours so more than 300 couples could experience a long- awaited wedding day. By that evening, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit issued a "stay" Judge in response to an emergency Friedman motion filed by Michigan Attorney General Bill Schuette, putting Friedman's judgment on hold until the matter is con- sidered by the appeals court. For Elizabeth Sollish and Lisa Bargende Sollish, who are raising two daughters in their Huntington Woods home, a marriage ceremony was the culmina- tion of their 21-year partnership. After standing in A happy family: Lisa Bargende Sollish, Remy, Harper and Elizabeth Sollish. CONTINUED ON PAGE 12 Anna Berg (shown with `Dear Mr. Zuckerberg' Saskia Pantell) orga- nized two pro-Israel ral- lies in Stockholm where she lives. She also started the "Dear Mr. Zuckerberg" Facebook page and a petition to get anti-Semitic hate off the site. Online petition urges Facebook co-founder to remove hateful anti-Semitic pages. Robin Schwartz I Contributing Writer I i N n many ways, Facebook is a work of fiction — anyone can join the online, global social network, post anything (sub- ject to the website's rules) and pretend to be someone or something they're not. Posts can include exaggerations, made- up stories and sometimes even outright lies. Among its 1.3 billion monthly active users, many of whom simply log on to share family photos, birthday greet- ings or news about daily life events, there are also countless Printed In Michigan 1942 - 2013 Covering and Connecting Jewish Detroit Eve y Week 8 1 1 1 08805 CONTINUED ON PAGE 8 93363 5