metro Shalom San Miguel Couple works to build community in Mexico. Jackie Headapohl I Managing Editor ach year around Thanksgiving, Charles "Carlos" Soberman and his wife, Linda, head south of the border to San Miguel de Allende, Mexico, a 16th- century city with cobblestone streets nestled in the mountains. The Sobermans purchased a home there in 2005 and have been busy building community there ever since. "I'm not a person who can relax:' says Soberman, a retired university professor and businessman who sold his third-generation family business, Mercury Paint, in 1996. Soberman took up Spanish while teach- ing business classes at Wayne State. He and Linda fell in love with San Miguel on their travels to Spanish-speaking countries. "I got involved with the Jewish community in San Miguel; he says. When the Sobermans first moved to San Miguel, the small Jewish community of 15-25 people was meeting for weekly ser- vices in the reading room of a local hotel. Calling themselves "Shalom San Miguel; the group put on cultural and holiday events. "It was more a cultural group than a synagogue," Soberman says. A few years later, as Dan Lessner, a retired doctor from New York, and Larry and Carole Stone from Pittsburgh, who taught Hebrew school and knew liturgical music, moved into the area, the services took on a more traditional philosophy. Since the organization has no rabbi, all services are lay led, usu- ally by Lessner, but also by others including Carole Stone and Soberman. "We needed a new model; Soberman says. The group incorporated as CHESMA, which stands for Comunidad Hebrea En San Miguel de Allende, an interdenominational Jewish community of about 120 members, a quarter of whom are Mexican natives and the rest expats from the U.S. and Canada. "About five years ago, non-Jewish Mexicans asked if they could watch our ser- vices:' Soberman says. "Some people became spiritually attracted and began attending services and Torah study. Others believed that their ancestors from Spain had been forced to convert. Four years ago, we had our first conversion ceremony for about a dozen people Three Hispanic rabbis now living in the United States presided over the emotional conversion ceremony. CHESMAs motto is "one community, many journeys:" The group is an umbrella organization unaffiliated with any specific Jewish movement. It does have a traditional, E Soberman celebrates the opening of the Community and Computing Center with the school's principal and local children. egalitarian minyan group that has been accepted for membership in the United Synagogue of Conservative Judaism. The group's siddurim include a Hebrew, English and English transliteration version as well as a Hebrew, Spanish and Spanish transliteration version. Both were put together by a committee of members. Torah discussion groups in English and Spanish, film showings, monthly Shabbat dinners and other community gatherings. Soberman is on the board, is active in fund- raising and looks for visiting rabbis. He's also in charge of the artist/ scholar-in-residence program. Linda Soberman is a renowned artist who is active in San Miguel's large art community, A New Home where she frequently Although the group exhibits. She cur- rently has an exhibit, began looking for a building to rent that The Empty Chairs, on was within walking view at the Holocaust distance of the center Memorial Center in Farmington Hills. The of town, it wasn't until 2012 that they found multi-image installa- a suitable place. Once Charles Soberman at the JC3 seder tion, more than 100 occupied by the non- earlier this year steel chairs cascading profit Feed the Hungry, from the ceiling from which builds kitchens and feeds children in invisible thread, memorializes lives lost in rural communities, the building was suitable the Holocaust, war and global genocides that for CHESMA, but out of their price range. continue to this day. "It was $250,000, and we had about Michael Wolk, the architect of Keter Torah $12,000 in our treasury:' Soberman says. in West Bloomfield who spends part of the "We were able to negotiate the price down winter in San Miguel, introduced Soberman and raise a $100,000 down payment from the to noted synagogue designer Alex Gruss. Jewish community in a matter of weeks: Gruss, a native Spanish speaker born in Fundraising by the two of them and oth- Buenos Aires, who designed the bimah ers since the purchase has continued, and the of Keter Torah, enthusiastically offered to building will be paid off this fall. donate his services to remodel the JC3 build- The building is called the JC3 (Jewish ing. He flew to San Miguel last winter and Cultural and Community Center). In addi- began his preliminary drawings, which were tion to Conservative, Reform and meditative accepted by the board. Bathrooms were services, there are Spanish-language classes, added to the building, a former warehouse, The ark in the sanctuary area of the JC3 this summer. Renovations on the area to be used as the sanctuary are next on the agenda. This year, the board of CHESMA will ring in the Jewish new year with a brief spiritual service and community dinner on Sunday, Sept 13. On the first day of Rosh Hashanah, there will be an English-dominant Reform service; on the second day, there will be a traditional Conservative High Holiday service. All services are free and open to members, non-members and tourists in San Miguel. Connecting Communities Not content merely with his work with CHESMA — he can't relax — Soberman also became involved with Feed the Hungry, delivering food once a week to a rural com- munity called San Francisco. Soberman also volunteers for an organization called Computadoras Pro Jovenes (CPJ), which works to put donated computers into rural schools. The computers, which didn't have Internet access, are loaded with Spanish Windows and other Spanish-language software. CPJ, through Soberman, donated computers to the primary school in San Francisco. He began teaching schoolchildren how to use the computers, but he became frustrated when he realized "the kids weren't learn- ing enough:' Working with CPJ, he helped to develop the curriculum for a six-week course. At the end, he would take these rural students to San Miguel where they would eat at a restaurant, enjoy ice cream and get on the Internet — often for the first time. "I was teaching about four kids every six San Miguel on page 14 12 September 10 • 2015 JN