Machpelah Cemetery Subject of Circuit Court Suit Over Control By CHARLOTTE DUBIN Can a cemetery that was organized by three syna- gogues be controlled as a privately managed project? Do the synagogues have legal recourse to regain supervi- sion? These questions will be tackled Monday morning in Oakland County Circuit Court, when 63 - year - old Machpelah Cemetery is the subject of a suit brought by two of the founding congrega- tions. Judge James Thorburn will preside. Organized in 1910 by Congs. Shaarey Zedek (then Orthodox), Beth Jacob and Bnai Israel, the cemetery continued under the super- vision of the latter two after Shaarey Zedek withdrew from the partnership in 1913, receiving five acres as its share. The five acres were sold later to Nusach H'ari. Cemetery directors at the founding were David Oppen- heim, David Meister and Moses Kaufman, each of whom—the plaintiffs declare —held 79 of the 250 shares of the Machpelah Cemetery Association as representa- tives of their respective con- gregations. The remaining 13 shares were distributed to other members and officers of the congregations in accordance with the articles of associa- tion. Although he represented Shaarey Zedek on the ceme- tery board, Oppenheim re- mained a trustee after his congregation withdrew from membership in the associa- tion and released its interest in Machpelah, the plaintiffs said. I - NARY THOMAS Fine Clothes•For Over 36 Years 24750 TELEGRAPH At 10 Mile Next to Dunkin' Donuts Open Daily to 6, Thursday to 8 SUNDAY 11 to 4 Oppenheim, who died in 1943, was succeeded in the trusteeship by his sons. The latter, named as defendants in the suit, are Royal, Theo- dore and Edwin, as well as Oppenheim's son-in-law, Al- wyn Freeman. The Oppenheims have said they are simply carrying on the work and great interest of their father in maintaining the cemetery. Over the years, David Oppenheim's involve- ment in the management grew in proportion to the congregations' dwindling par- ticipation, the defendants say, adding that they are only interested in keeping the nonprofit cemetery run- ning in a responsible fash- ion. Now, representatives of the two synagogues that or- iginally participated in the formation of Machpelah -- they are known as Beth Jacob-Mogain Abraham and Bnai Israel-Beth Yehudah because of mergers in re- cent years—claim the right to direct the cemetery. They contend that, un- known to them, the Oppen- heims perpetuated t h e m- selves in trustee roles and that in 1940, under a new statute, "caused the life of the cemetery association to be extended in perpetuity by filing articles of reorganiza- tion." In the latter, the names of the defendants appeared as "de facto" directors, the suit charges. John Rogers, attorney for the plaintiffs, said that while the Opperiheims did not vio- late the letter of the law, they violated its spirit. Notice of the change was not given directly to others with an in- terest in the cemetery asso- ciation but was simply posted on the cemetery wall, he said. The defendants have held trustee elections "with only themselves present and only themselves notified of such • COMPLETE ART, TYPE & COPY WRITING SERVICES_---- GRAPHICS 43 430 W. 8 Mile Road, Ferndale, Michigan 48220 Studio Phone: 547-4684 BUSINESS FORMS ENVELOPES MEMO PADS PAMPH LETS TICKETS FLYERS CARDS LETTERHEADS FORM LETTERS NEWSLETTERS PROGRAMS BROCHURES POSTERS NEWSPAPER ADS Do Yourself a Favor Change to Natural Gas NOW! Heating, Cooling & Electric Co. 557-5233 Immediate Installation Available accordance with Orthodox tradition, as intended by the founding congregations. It is admitted that burial rights of their members have been recognized by the Mach- pelah Cemetery Association, as drawn up in the original agreement. However, Silver- stein said, the two congrega- tions must regain control over management to end the current practice that does not require burial in accord- ance with traditional Jewish law. Rabbi Leizer Levin, presi- dent of the Council of Ortho- dox Rabbis (Vaad Hara- bonim), confirmed that the Machpelah Cemetery Asso- ciation, through the Oppen- Record Settlement of Soviet Jews • • Reported by Hi as Service in '73 NEW YORK—The number of Soviet Jews who requested United HIAS Service assist- ance to emigrate to the United States and other Western countries rose sharp- ly in 1973, reported Gaynor I. Jacobson, executive vice president of the worldwide Jewish migration agency. "Jews are accelerating their demands to leave the Societ Union," he said. "Thirty-five hundred to 4,000 are leaving each month. As the numbers going to Israel increase, we're experiencing a parallel increase in U. S. migration." "The vast majority of the 36,000 Jews who left the USSR in 1973 went to Israel. Of these, 1,500 were brought to the U.S. by HIAS. This represents a significant in- crease over the 450 emigres HIAS resettled in the U.S. in 1972," he added. Many of the Russians ar- riving here are being re- united with stateside rela- tives after long separations. Their movement to the United States has been speeded up by an order of former Atty. Gen. Elliot Richardson, who, last July 31 invoked parole authority for Russians in Rome. Not all of HIAS-assisted migrants from the Soviet Union — a total of 1,658 for 1973 — came to the United States. Nearly 160 settled in other Western countries in- cluding Canada and Aus- tralia. An additional 1,100 migrants are awaiting de- parture in Rome. Resettlement of Jews corn- ing to the U.S. is carried out in cooperation with local Jew- ish federations and Jewish family and children's ser- vices in 44 communities in 22 states and the District of Columbia. (In Detroit, it's the Jewish Resettlement Service. Last year, 50 settled in Detroit.) Statistics for the first nine months of 1973 show the arrivals ranging in age from one month to 80 years and over, the largest number, 56 per cent, between 21 and 50. A majority, 58 per cent, come from the Ukrainian SSR, which includes such Jewish population centers as Czernovitz, Kiev and Odessa; 23 per cent come from the Russian S o v i.e t Federated Socialist Republic, including the cities of Leningrad and Moscow. Seventeen per cent of the assisted arrivals were highly skilled professionals. A similar number were classi- N fied as technicians and white- I Fuel Oil Prices Rising Call Manny Mittelman `election' and through self- appointment thereby," the plaintiffs charge. Though requested, the de- fendants "have not rendered any accounting of the assets, income and disbursements, nor any report of the opera- tions of said defendant Mach- peleh Cemetery Association, to the plaintiff congregations or its members . . ." But what galls the plain- tiffs most, said Abraham Silverstein and Meyer Levin, presidents, respectively, of Beth Jacob-Mogain Abraham and Bnai Israel-Beth Yehu- dah, is the fact that the Op- penheim family has failed to establish that burials at the cemetery be performed in a t collar professionals. Blue collar workers account for 13 per cent, unskilled 10 per cent. The remaining 35 per cent are not in the labor force. Tefilin Burial a Chilly Rite WASHINGTON, (PTA) — A representation of Judaica permanently rests at .the South Pole in a hole three feet deep in snow that never melts in the Antarctic cold and is thus preserved for the ages. Roy Millenson of Bethesda, Md., has placed there the Phylacteries (tefilin) h i s Parents gave him for his Bar Mitzva at the old Adas Israel Synagogue here nearly 40 years ago. The synagogue, now a national momument, is being converted by the Jewish Historical Society into a museum and library in time for America's bi- centennial as a nation. Millenson, an observant Jew , told the Jewish Tele- granhic Agency of the inci- dent upon his return from Antarctica where he had gone with a congressional delegation to inspect the Na- tional Science Foundation's station at the South Pole. He is a staff member of the foundation's subcimmit- tee of the Senate Labor and Public Welfar'e Committee and an aide to Sen. Jacob K. Javits (R.-N.Y.). The tefilin, Millenson said, "Have become worn over the years and my rabbi said the proper way to dispose of them was by burial. The Antarctic trip came along and I took them with me. I said two prayers — the Csheheheyame and the `Shema' — and covered them with snow. As far as I know, mine were the first Hebrew prayers ever said at the South Pole." The tempera- ture at the time was 14° below zero. `Light in Darkness' The first time that Adam saw the sun go down and an ever-deepening gloom enfold creation, his mind was filled with terror. God then took pity on him, and endowed him with the divine intuition to take two stones—the name of one was Darkness and the name of the other Shadow of Death — and rub them against each other, and to discover f i r e. Thereupon Adam exclaimed with grate- ful joy: "Blessed be the Creator of Light."—Talmud, Avodah Zorah, 8b. ; heim family, pays $5,000 a year for a Vaad representa- tive to "supervise ritual" at Machpelah. This representa- tive is at every funeral "to stay and see that the casket is fully covered," said Rabbi Levin. The Vaad observer does not participate in the service. Silverstein said that if con- trol of the cemetery were to be returned to the two con- gregations, "all Jews" could be buried there, with the families' understanding that Orthodox burial practices would be followed. either the Council of Ortho- dox Rabbis or the Jewish Community Council. One pr o b l e m, attorney Rogers concedes, is in get- ting sufficient background data on the origins of the cemetery, since the founding members are deceased. He said he hoped that those with information germane to the case would come forward. The attorney for the de- fendants, Alan Goldstein, told the Jewish News the plain- tiffs' brief was full of "old- wives tales and unfounded charges" and refused to com- ment further. He insists that cemetery personnel must be Orthodox THE DETROIT JEWISH NEW to ensure proper adherence to Jewish burial law. "A 14—Friday, January 18, 1974 Vaad supervisor just isn't enough." 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