THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Yiddish Theater Loses a Stalwart Performer By MOSHE RON The Jewish News Special Israel Correspondent TEL AVIV — It is hard to get accustomed to the idea that Szymon Dzigan is no more amongst us and will not appear anymore on the Yiddish stage. Death overcame him in a moment when he was full of energy and plans for the fu- ture. He planned a special Sholem Aleichem perform- ance on the occasion of the '120th birthday of the most _ —amous Yiddish writer. He put his whole heart and soul into this performance. Maybe he knew somehow what would happen after it. He knew that his physical power had become weaker, but his acting on the stage was still filled with young fire. In the midst of his second Sholem Aleichem perform- ance on Hol Hamoed Pesach at the Ohel Shem hall in Tel Aviv, Dzigan collapsed and was unable to continue. Dzigan's death is not only a disaster to his fam- ily, but also to all the Jews from Eastern Europe. He had accom- panied these Jews with his jokes and humor throughout their suffer- ing. His jokes were ac- cepted in the camps like a piece of bread: one enjoyed them and forgot the hunger. Dzigan, together with Is- rael Szumacher, spent five years in Soviet camps and knew the bitter reality. But he never lost his courage and humor. Even at the Ichiliov Hospital in Tel Aviv after his collapse, the doctors enjoyed his humor. With Dzigan's death, political Yiddish satire has passed away in Israel. In his mouth every critic of our political and social life sounded like the reproach of a mother to her child. Dzigan loved Israel. He was completely attached to Israel and its people. His sa- tire aimed at the weak points of our reality, in order to remove and correct them. He was so popular among the leaders of the country. He was a fre- quent guest of Cabinet members and when he came to the Knesset in Jerusalem, he was a cen- tral figure. Important Israeli leaders appealed to him to tell cer- tain jokes on the stage, be- cause his jokes had a strong impact on people — from the common man to the aristo- cratic drawing rooms. Dzigan, who was deeply rooted in Polish Jewry, could not tear himself away from it. He carried the Yid- dish word all over the world — the bit of Yiddish comfort which had been left after the Holocaust. He often said that his entire stage ac- tivity, his humor and travels all over the world through Jewish com- munities, have served as a shield for him to live with the idea that Polish Jewry had died in the Holocaust and will never live again. Deep in his heart he car- ried this wound which could never be healed. Szymon Dzigan was buried April 16. His cof- fin lay in state at the Sholem Aleichem House in Tel Aviv. Many thousands filed past his coffin with tears in their eyes, from dignitaries to the common people. It was the first time in Is- rael's history, that the president of the state came to the funeral of a Yiddish actor. Habima actor Shimon Finkel and the chairman of Leiwik House, chief editor Mordechai Zanin, in their eulogies spoke about the heavy loss to our culture. The World Union of Yiddish Journalists, the manage- ments of Leiwik and Sholem Aleichem House, artists, editors and writers made all arrangements for the burial and the special memorial meeting for the day of Shloshim. They also decided on set- ting up of ' a fitting tombstone over his grave. He was buried near his longtime theatre partner Israel Szumacher and the founder of the first Yiddish Revue theatre "Ararat," the poet Moshe Broderson, at the Kiriat Shaul cemetery. The tombstone will be a memorial to the great Yid- dish theatre talent Szymon Dzigan. Friday, May 16, 1980 1 CREATIVE TABLES, ETC. • custom made just for you • laminates, glass, lucite, marble • tables, all units, credenzas, etc. • delightfully fine workmanship • delightfully low prices We Come To You! Muriel Wetsman 354-4126 Vicky Leebove 851.0789 t_ 1980 R.J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO CO. WO' :.'•••<••••••••>- JPAS"Gate of Nicanor' New Folktale for Children PHILADELPHIA — "Gate of Nicanor" (Jewish Publication Society) tells how a wealthy Jew named Nicanor 2,000 years ago commissioned the master craftsmen of Alexandria to create a very special set of doors. These doors, Nicanor's contribution to the rebuilding of the great Temple in Jerusalem, would be set in the gate of the innermost court of the Temple — a place so sacred that only the high priests were allowed to enter. The story of the doors — known to this day as the Gate of Nicanor — and of the near-tragedy of their ransport to Jerusalem, is 11 1Whe subject of this book. The pious Nicanor spent his entire fortune on the onstruction, but. what abulous doors the craftsmen made! Fashioned elaborately of gold and silver, and depicting in 12 enormous panels the sym- bols of the tribes of Israel, the doors were so heavy that 100 men could barely lift them aboard the ship that would carry them to the Holy Land. During the sea voyage, a fierce storm raged, and the sailors were forced to throw most of their cargo overboard in order to keep the ship on course. One of Nicanor's magni- ficent doors had to be sacrificed. When the sea finally became calm and the ship reached its des- tination, Nicanor lamented that he had only one door to give for the gate in the Temple. How the lost door miraculously washed ashore to rejoin its partner is the turning point of this splendid folktale, an an- cient story from the Tal- mud, now retold for con- temporary children and adults. Illustrated in two colors, "Gate of Nicanor" is a story of faith and adventure. The author, Eric A. Kimmel, is an associate pro- fessor of education at Port- land (Ore.) State Univer- sity. His previous books for children include "The Tar- tar's Sword," "Mishka, Pishka & Fishka" and "Why Worry?" '-fis articles on children's kooks related to Jewish themes have ap- peared in Response, the Horn Book and Children's Literature in Education. Lively enth I Crisp refreshing taste in a lowtar. Salem Lights BB Director WASHINGTON—Irving Herman of Evanston, Ill., has been appointed associ- ate director of development for Bnai Brith Interna- tional. Warning The Surgeon General Has. Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous toYour Health. LIGHTS: 11 mg. "tar", 0.8 mg. nicotine, LIGHT 100's:11 mg. "tar", 0.9 mg.nicotine, a ■ i. per 6g'arette, FTC Report DEC. '79