30 April 4 • 2019
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Th
 is could be one treatment for a pull 
quote with really profound words in 
slightly larger and bolder type.

— NAME

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Brewed with top fermenting yeast at cellar 
temperature, ales are fuller-bodied, with 
nuances of fruit or spice and a pleasantly 
hoppy finish. Generally robust and complex 
with a variety of fruit and malt aromas, ales 
come in many varieties. They could include 
Bitters, Milds, Abbey Ales, Pale Ales, Nut 
Browns, etc.
Ales are often darker than lagers, ranging 
from rich gold to reddish amber. Top ferment-
ing, and more hops in the wort gives these 
beers a distinctive fruitfulness, acidity and 
pleasantly bitter seasoning. Ales have a more 
assertive, individual personality than lager, 
though their alcoholic strength is the same.

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community news

Mug Cutline
Mug Cutline
Contributing Writer

Seder led by 
Rabbi Steven Rubenstein. 
Special activities for the kids.

1st Night Seder
Friday, April 19 at 6:30 p.m.

Experience the freedom of Passover 
and enjoy a delicious meal 
without the cooking and cleanup. 
Dietary laws observed.

Register online at www.cbahm.org or by calling 248-851-6880. 
Registration is required by April 10. 
 
$50 per adult, $30 per child ages 4-12, 
children 3 and under are free.

Congregation Beth Ahm
Big enough to enrich you. Small enough to know you.
 
 www.cbahm.org

co-sponsored by:

Small Shul
Big Seder

On May 19, the Detroit Tigers will 
once again host Jewish Heritage Day 
at the ballpark. Prior to the 1 p.m. 
Detroit Tigers/Oakland Athletics 
game, the Tigers will feature an 
on-field ceremony plus special 
moments throughout the day. Enjoy 
kosher food, Jewish-themed trivia 
and the blast of the shofar after the 
ceremonial first pitch. Plus, kids can 

run the bases after the game.
You can purchase single or group 
tickets. Each ticket comes with an 
amazing Tigers/Jewish Heritage 
ballcap (designed for this event) and 
an Olde English D kippah. A portion 
of the ticket revenue goes to support 
the Jewish Federation.
Contact dave.thompson@tigers.
com for questions and group rates.

Play Ball

Ghalib Victor Begg, a retired busi-
nessowner who now lives in Florida, 
served on the Bloomfield Hills 
School Board of Education and 
was one of the founding members 
of Bloomfield Hills’
 Muslim Unity 
Center and the Interfaith Leadership 
Council (IFLC).
In the aftermath of 9/11, Begg 
urged leaders in Detroit’
s Muslim 
community to build bridges with 
people of other faiths and back-
grounds to do the work needed to 
heal. A member of the Michigan 
Roundtable for Diversity and 
Inclusion, Begg and others met with 

leaders of the Jewish 
Community Relations 
Council. From these 
meetings were planted 
the seeds that bloomed 
into the IFLC.
Begg said he 
believes that one of the 
greatest pathways to peaceful inter-
faith coexistence is getting to know 
one’
s neighbor. He returns to Metro 
Detroit to discuss his new book, Our 
Muslim Neighbors, 10 a.m., Sunday, 
April 7, at Congregation Beth Ahm 
on Maple Road in West Bloomfield. 

Victor Begg To Discuss Our Muslim Neighbors

Victor Begg

Join Wayne State University’
s Cohn-
Haddow Center for Judaic Studies 
and Center for Peace and Conflict 
Studies for an exclusive event orga-
nized in response to the massacre in 
Pittsburgh at Tree of Life Synagogue 
on Oct. 27, 2018.
This symposium, 9 a.m.-12:30 p.m. 
Sunday, April 14, at Temple Beth El 
in Bloomfield Township will look at 
the nuanced history, contemporary 
trends and future outcomes related 
to anti-Semitism and other forms of 
group-based hate.

In addition, a panel of renowned 
experts across many disciplines will 
shed light on the current trends of 
hate and what we can do to combat 
it. 
Panel moderators will be 
Professor Fred Pearson and Dr. Eric 
Montgomery of the Wayne State 
University Center for Peace and 
Conflict Studies. Dr. Cassie Miller 
of the Southern Poverty Law Center 
will give the keynote address.
The event is free and open to the 
public. 

Beyond Fear and Hate: 
Recent Ramifi
 cations of Anti-Semitism

