PRICE MAPLE PHARMACY PHARMACY 10 OFF 5829 Maple Rd. Ste. 129 • West Bloomfield, MI 48322 purchase of OTC Medications & Vitamins (Btw. Orchard Lake & Farmington Rd.) 248.757.2503 with any new or transferred prescriptions. $2.00 MARCH 5-11, 2015 / 14-20 ADAR 5775 theJEWISHNEWS.com A JEWISH RENAISSANCE MEDIA PUBLICATION » Divorce Support Bar mitzvah project helps kids of divorce express their feelings. See page 14. » Netanyahu In D.C. The rift between the Israeli prime minister and President Obama comes to a head. See pages 22, 24-26. DETROIT JEWISH NEWS metro » Fressing With Fishman Ryan Fishman premieres his new monthly column on eating out and more. See page 45. Benjamin Netanyahu addresses AIPAC the day before his speech to a joint session of Congress. » cover story Media Savvy Personable rabbi goes beyond typical outreach. Shelli Liebman Dorfman Contributing Writer R abbi Herschel Finman was almost a Buddhist. It was at the top of his list as he seriously investigated other religions and philoso- phies while surrounded by siblings making highly unusual choic- es in a family of traditional Jews. "By the end of the 1970s," Finman said, Rabbi Herschel Finman "I would have three broth- ers, one a Buddhist, one a macrobiotic hermit, one a hippie rabbi; and three sisters, one a junkie, now clean and work- ing as nutritional expert; one a member of a nefarious Christian cult, now, thank God, married to dentist and working as a colonics expert; and one a punk rocker, Barbara Lewis I Contributing Writer F first comes love, then comes marriage, Then comes baby in a baby carriage. For centuries, that's been the normal progression, but the times they are a-changing. Many couples are postponing parenthood or choosing to forego it altogether. They've even coined a new term for their condition: childfree as opposed to childless, which implies their life is missing something. Michael Hildebrandt, 35, and Jessica Camp, 33, of Fenton are among them. They've never wanted to be parents and are very happy with their childfree life. Having children "was never on my agenda: said Hildebrandt, a nurse at the University of Michigan Health System in Ann Arbor. "It's just not something I want to do. It doesn't fit into the lifestyle I want to live. I could never see myself with kids." His wife agrees, though her medical history contributed to CONTINUED ON PAGE 8 1942 - 2015 Covering and Connecting Jewish Detroit Eve y Week 8 1 98805 her decision. She's an only child; her late mother had numerous miscarriages before she was born and suffered clinical depres- sion. Camp has health concerns of her own that would likely have made it difficult to conceive and carry a child, and she didn't want to repeat her mother's experience. "I knew I probably wouldn't be able to have kids:' said Camp, an associate professor of social work at University of Michigan- Flint. Discussing one's intention to be childfree is a delicate subject when dating. "I would always bring it up early in a relationship," Camp said. "It's a tough topic of conversation. Some guys I dated just expected I would have kids and stay home:' For some, the decision to be childfree includes concerns about overpopulation. "I feel there are enough people in the world and too many of them are having kids that shouldn't," said Miles Steam, 39, a ceramics artist who lives and works in Berkley. "I didn't feel it would be responsible bringing a life into this world, not knowing for sure if they would end up happy:' Steam feels many people have children to accomplish what they themselves cannot. "I really don't feel ifs fair to have kids reach for the stars when most people are too scared to do it themselves:' he said. "Unless you can accomplish something, you get lost to time:' He and his wife, he says, "are living our dreams, not trying to rear a child to live theirs:" CONTINUED ON PAGE 12 93363 5