jews d in the on the cover continued from page 20 Cheryl Patton, President/CEO 29488 Woodward Ave. #235 Royal Oak, MI 48073 Phone: 248.417.9443 Web: angelarmscare.com Email: cheryl@angelarmscare.com A COMPANION CARE SERVICE t#BUIJOH t'FFEJOH t-BVOESZ t)PVTFLFFQJOH t(SPPNJOH)ZHJFOF t.FEJDBUJPO3FNJOEFST 2169010 We are an in-home service provider for the elderly, ill and disabled. We assist with personal care, home making and more up to 24 hours. We are insured and bonded. Call 248-262-7111 or 313-272-1222 4PVUIåFME3E 4UFt4PVUIåFME.* XXXITITTMMDPSHtITITT!BUUOFU Want to Live a Life Rich in Meaning and Contentment? Achieve HAPPINESS by changing how you act and make decisions. Congregants Celebrate In Jewish Owned Local Business xÇxÊ °Ê ˆ}Ê i>ÛiÀ]Ê-ՈÌiÊÓÈäÊUÊ/ÀœÞ]ÊÊ{nänÎ "˜ÊÌ iÊ œÀÌ Ê-ˆ`iʜvÊ ˆ}Ê i>ÛiÀÊLiÌÜii˜Ê,œV iÃÌiÀÊ,œ>`Ê>˜`ʈÛiÀ˜œˆÃ Ó{n‡x£x‡nnÇÎ œÀÊ`ۈVi]Ê6ˆ`iœÃÊ>˜`ÊÀ̈ViÃ]Ê iVŽÊ"ÕÌ\ ÌÌ«\ÉÉ/ÀœÞ*ÃÞV œÌ iÀ>«Þ°Vœ“ÉLœ}É ‡5(6,'(17,$/‡&200(5&,$/2)),&( ‡'(6,*1$66,67$1&( Call Carol Cohan Cell (248) 763-0614 OFFICE (248) 912-6655 www.furniture-redefined.com 22 May 11 • 2017 jn young people in the membership of our new Temple,” he said. “We hope that our Temple will embody the spirit of youth. We shall avail ourselves of the new trends and the new insights which are giving American Judaism a new direction.” Loss added, “In each generation, Temple Israel has maintained an enduring commitment to this foun- dational idea. When I arrived in the community, with 18 teenagers on our first mission, we began a sum- mer program. Many years later, we were asked to be the founding part- ner and merged our Temple Israel mission with the present Federation teen mission.” In Fram’s time, a challenge for the new temple was finding a home. With wartime building material shortages and restrictions, the fledgling congre- gation held services in the auditorium of the Detroit Institute of Arts and religious school at Hampton Public School for nine years. It moved into its own building on Manderson Avenue in Palmer Woods in 1950, with nearly 1,000 members. At the end of the 1970s, the congregation purchased land in West Bloomfield and moved into its current space. From its inception, the congrega- tion and its founding clergy, includ- 2155010 ing Rabbi M. Robert Syme, who was raised Orthodox, worked at reviving many of the symbols and traditions in Judaism that were for decades rejected by classical Reform Judaism, according to Yedwab. Temple Israel was the first Reform congregation in this area to introduce a cantor to services, to revive the tra- dition of bar mitzvah and to give girls a bat mitzvah starting in the 1950s. Ritually, over the decades, it reintro- duced a daily minyan. Perhaps the most contentious of rituals it incorporated was in 1996, when it became the first Reform congregation in the nation to have a mikvah. At the time, Temple Israel was putting in an expansion and leader- ship proposed adding the ritual bath. After studying Jewish texts, members came to understand the mikvah could be used to mark times of transition and healing in a person’s life, such as entering a stage of cancer remission, according to Yedwab. JEWISH EDUCATION The more things change, the more they remain the same, even in the span of seven decades. Temple Israel has always placed its highest priority on youth and Jewish educational opportunities from the Style On April 22, more than 350 guests gathered to cele- brate Temple Israel’s 75th anniversary. Guests dined on hors d’oeuvres and multiple food stations as well as an extravagant dessert selec- tion provided by the Epicurean Group. Specialty cocktails were created, such as the Temple-Tini, Mazel Tov Margarita and the Manderson Mule — homage to the home address Temple held in Detroit before moving to its cur- rent location in 1980. Libations flowed and guests pulled out all the stops on the dance floor. Along with the Simone Vitale Band, revel- ers enjoyed several selections performed by Cantors Michael Smolash and Neil Michaels. Throughout the evening, video played of the 50th anniversary as well as a photo montage covering all the decades in Temple Israel’s history. Rabbi Harold Loss and Temple President Dr. Edward Royal spoke briefly, reflecting on the past, celebrating the present and enlightening congre- gants to the exciting plans for the future. • Temple Israel’s cur- rent president, Edward Royal, and past presi- dent Stanley Finsilver