My Humble Thanks to
Parents and Community
.
I have a goodly inheritance! '
—Psalms, xvi. 6
With thanks unto the Lord, I humbly express my debt of
gratitude to my parents, for their great legacy which has inspired
me to continue their charitable work in our community.
My Father's devotion to the Synagogue and his life-long
activities in behalf of the improverished and less-fortunate; my
Mother's devotion to the Yeshivah and her piety—have combined
to pass on to me an inheritance that I consider holy.
This legacy has come to fruition in many interests, and it
is especially personified in the Memorial Plaque at the entrance
of the new building of Yeshivoth Beth Yehudah.
This plaque honors them—but it honors me, my wife and
•my children even more as a personification of the spirit 1. have
inherited from pious and devoted parents. I am grateful to the
entire community for having participated in building the new
Yeshivah structure.
For this inheritance, I express this heartfelt sense of grati-
tude and dedicate myself anew to*a continuation of the sacred
work that has ennobled the lives of my parents.
DAVID GOLDBERG
THE LATE TZ IPA GOLDBERG
1871-1947
HONOR TO THE MEMORY OF THE LATE
MORRIS AND MIA GOLDBERG
The late Morris and Tzipa Goldberg are honored in a
center in which they would have preferred to be memorial-
ized—in a house of prayer and learning, in an academy of
study and research, in Yeshivath Beth Yehudah.
Tzipa Goldberg passed on to her son, David Goldberg, a
devOtiori to this traditional center of knowledge. Her great
legacy—an abiding interest in the Yeshivah—hasi been em-
braced by her son with humility, with devotion, with conse-
cration to the ideal incorporates in this school.
Officially opened a week after the eighth Yahrzeit for
Tzipa Goldberg, the new Yeshivah Building is a monument
to the memory of this saintly woman and her equally pious
hUsband. -
Her granddaiaghter, Susan, who officially opened the
new Yeshivah Building on Sunday, proudly carries on her
name, Tzipa.
•
T7 ipa Sima Goldberg and Rabbi
.
Isaac Stollman
Offically opening the new building of Yeshivoth Beth Yehudah,
at the entrance of which is the plaque honoring the memory of
Tzipa and Morris. Goldberg.
Rabbi Stollman is a former president of Yeshivath Beth Yehudah and under
ifireetioli the iteshivath *Wilt •the first school' 'building' 'on - Dexter.
-
The late Morris Goldberg also left a great heritage to his
_son.. He was 81 when he died 17 years ago. He had retired
15 years before his death and it was only then that his son,
his entire family, learned that he had used the meager funds
at his disposal not "for cigarettes," as he constantly spoke of
his funds, but • to aid the poor in the neighborhood and his
synagogue, the sick he had heard about, the needy and tire
ailing.
Like his wife, Tzipa, Morris Goldberg was a man \of
charity.
Their son, David Goldberg, considers himself especially
blessed to have inherited their spirit and their devotion to-
their people, their faith and their community.
April- 29, 1955 ,
8—DE1RO tt JEW [SFr NEWS
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April 29, 1955 - Image 8
- Resource type:
- Text
- Publication:
- The Detroit Jewish News, 1955-04-29
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