and those changes are sometimes abrupt. We are not going anywhere, but I do worry about various pots of $100,000 here or $500,000 there. What we will look like three years from now will be a little different from what we looked like three years ago, but our core will remain the same.” FAMILY AFFAIR While the “Jewish” in the agency’s name respects its origins, the word “Family” has additional meaning to some. Many of the 1,000 volunteers who help each year are related. Erica Solway, 36, of Ann Arbor, for instance, learned about vol- unteerism from watching her moth- er, Nancy Solway, a current board member. When Erica was a teenag- er, she tagged along with her mother, a “Friendly Visitor” to Erica and Nancy a disabled woman Solway named Lynn. Blind and confined to a wheelchair, Lynn lived at the Prentis Apartments in Oak Park, but a broken leg had tem- porarily put her in Menorah House in Southfield. “I had to do community service for school, so I asked if anyone at Menorah House could use a visitor,” Erica recalled. “I ended up develop- ing a bond with a man named Othni and visiting with him weekly for a couple of years until I went to col- lege. He died, but I still stay in touch with his family.” Her experiences at Menorah House fueled her career in geriatrics. “I had never given it much thought before, but it really changed me, and I just ran with the experi- ence,” said Erica, currently associ- ate director of the University of Michigan National Poll on Healthy Aging and who formerly worked on health and aging policy for the U.S. Senate. “It was pretty eye-opening to realize how much can be done to improve the care for older adults.” Now 66 and serving her second stint on the board of directors, Nancy Solway of Bloomfield Hills, said meeting Lynn in 1988 through the Friendly Visitors program had a major effect on her life. “We were good friends from the day we met, and we visited for about 23 years until she passed away six years ago. It was a great relationship for both of us and a very special part of my life,” Nancy said. “Being a part of JFS has influenced and grounded my life. It’s a group I am proud and honored to be affiliated with.” Current board chair Suzan Curhan of West Bloomfield fondly recalls how her step-grandmother, the late Edythe Jackier, was an active volunteer. “It speaks to the heart and soul of who we are,” said Curhan, 56. “We are such a dynamic group and passion- ate with different Suzan Curhan views that come to the table. We are not perfect and there is a lot that Introducing Jewish Detroit’s New Resource for Connecting You to the Help You Need If you or someone you know could use some assistance, the Jewish community is here to help. One call or visit to jhelp.org is all it takes to connect you to the resources that can make a difference. continued on page 38 Join The Celebration JFS’ 90th Anniversary Event on Wednesday, May 30, features a talk by Jeannette Walls, author of The Glass Castle, a captivating memoir of her youth spent in dire poverty because of her parents’ alcoholism and mental illness. Tickets for the event, which is chaired by Andi and Larry Wolfe, are $36, two for $50 and $10 for students. The program begins at 7 p.m. at Congregation Shaarey Zedek in Southfield. For tickets or sponsorship information, call (248) 592-2339 or visit jfsannualevent.org. JHELP is for: Children, Teens, Families, Seniors and Others in Need Our Services Include: * Older Adults * Planning and Finances * Food * Career Services * Transportation * Housing * * * * * Mental Health People with Disabilities Holocaust Survivors Health & Wellness Victims of Abuse We are here for you. 1-833-44J-HELP jhelp.org Made possible by The Jewish Fund, the D. Dan and Betty Kahn Foundation and the Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit. jn May 17 • 2018 37