contents Feb. 18-24, 2016 | 9-15 Adar I 5776 | Vol. CXLIX, No. 3 38 SHABBAT LIGHTS Shabbat: Friday, Feb. 19, 5:51 p.m. Shabbat Ends: Saturday, Feb. 20, 6:54 p.m.* Shabbat: Friday, Feb. 26, 6 p.m. Shabbat Ends: Saturday, Feb. 27, 7:02 p.m.* * Times according to Yeshiva Beth Yehudah calendar. Cover design: Michelle Sheridan The Detroit Jewish News (USPS 275-520) is published every Thursday at 29200 Northwestern Highway, #110, Southfield, Michigan. Periodical postage paid at Southfield, Michigan, and additional mailing offices. Postmaster: send changes to: Detroit Jewish News, 29200 Northwestern Highway, #110, Southfield, MI 48034. Chabad rabbis with Detroit ties welcome vacationers to the Caribbean. Here Jews in the Virgin Islands celebrate Lag b'Omer with a bonfire. Around Town ............... 28 Arts & Life .................... 49 Calendar....................... 34 Dining In ...................... 54 Editor’s Picks ............... 52 Family Focus ............... 38 Israel ....................... 42-47 jewish@edu ................. 40 Life Cycles .................... 59 Marketplace ................ 62 Mentsh of the Month 15 Metro ............................ 10 Obituaries .................... 65 Spirituality ................... 37 Sports ........................... 48 Spotlight ...................... 65 Synagogue List ........... 36 Torah Portion .............. 35 Viewpoints......................5 10 Columnists Annabel Cohen ........... 54 Ben Falik .........................5 Ryan Fishman ............. 56 Danny Raskin ............. 58 Robert Sklar ..................6 Detroiters in Florida: Cantor David Propis and Rabbi Aaron Starr of Shaarey Zedek held a concert in Boca Raton Feb. 14. OUR JN MISSION The Jewish News aspires to communicate news and opinion that ’s useful, engaging, enjoyable and unique. It strives to reflec t the full range of diverse viewpoints while also advocating positions that strengthen Jewish unit y and continuit y. We desire to create and maintain a challenging, caring, enjoyable work environment that encourages creativit y and innovation. We acknowledge our role as a responsible, responsive member of the communit y. Being competitive, we must always strive to be the most respec ted, outstanding Jewish communit y publication in the nation. Our rewards are informed, educated readers, ver y satisfied adver tisers, contented employees and profitable growth. Quick Click … From the William Davidson Digital Archive of Jewish Detroit History Mike Smith Detroit Jewish News Foundation Archivist S ummer camps for Jewish youth have a long history in Michigan. The Feb. 4 issue of the JN featured its annual camp guide. And, I won- dered — when did the JN or the Jewish Chronicle (JC) first feature ads or stories about summer camps? The first entries I could find regard- ing summer camps were in 1917, on the Chronicle’s “Society” pages. For one of many examples, in the Aug. 24 issue, it was noted that “Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Selling” were motoring to visit their daughter, Louise, who was at summer camp in Maine. Another entry from Oct. 29, 1920, noted that the Detroit Community Fund would provide $9,221 to the Jewish Fresh Air Society, which maintained a “sum- mer camp on the Grosse Pointe Shore Line.” In August 1921, it reported that the Shaarey Zedek Boy Scouts left for the “Detroit Council Camp, Osius.” The first detailed story on a summer camp was about E.H. Saulson opening his Camp Grand Sable for boys, 3.5 miles from Grand Marais, in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula. The story was published on May 12, 1922. Camp Grand Sable also had the first advertisement for summer camps, which ran in the June 9 issue that year. Indeed, summer camps have been a topic for nearly 100 years in the JN and JC. * Jewish Fund’s Teen, Adult Surveys Online T he Jewish Fund, in part- nership with the Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit, has launched a comprehen- sive community study to gauge the health and welfare needs of the Jewish community. The results will be used to ensure that the right programs are in place today, tomorrow and into the future for those who need assistance. “In many instances, funders make decisions based on what they think certain needs are, or will be,” said Karen Schoenberg Sosnick, Jewish Fund chair. “The better decision for us is to base our decisions on a com- bination of objective data and subjec- tive observations from a broad array of key stakeholders. This will allow us to ensure that our investments are helping the most people and having as big an impact as possible.” The community study will include focus groups and online surveys for Jewish agency executives as well as online surveys for Jewish adults and teens, which can be accessed now through March 9 at www.jewishcom- munitysurvey.morpace.com for adults age 18 and older and at www.jewish- teensurvey.morpace.com for teens ages 13-17. The community study will also assist all of the Jewish agencies in Metro Detroit that serve Jewish peo- ple via health and welfare programs and services because the results will be shared broadly, said Margo Pernick, Jewish Fund executive direc- tor. The Jewish Fund and Federation are working with Farmington Hills- based international research and consulting firm Morpace Inc. on the community study. * Want to learn more? Go to the DJN Foundation archives, available for free at www.djnfoundation.org. February 18 • 2016 3