96 Friday, May 3, 1985 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 22 Year of Memories BY JEFFREY GUYER Staff Writer eople with university degrees in clinical psychology, marriage coun- seling and social work don't usually sit around their living rooms smiling and reminiscing about their early days in the Detroit Jewish community as they discuss a self-diagnosed emotional trauma. Rabbi and Mrs. James Gordon, however, find nothing wrong with it. "Determining what goes and what stays and the packing are traumatic experiences," says Mrs. Gordon. "But it won't be as traumatic moving into Israel as it will be moving out of our community." The Gordons came to Detroit in 1963, when Rabbi Gordon became the spiritual leader of Young Israel of Oak-Woods. He is only the second rabbi to hold the post in the synagogue's 33-year history. But realizing there are other things in life, the Gordons are pulling up stakes and making aliyah at the end of August. "It's time," Rabbi Gordon says. "Two of our sons have made aliyah and our grandchildren are in Israel. Our daughter just married an Israeli. So the family aspect was a big factor. "Another factor was that we wanted to be able to go and still be active and young enough to enjoy it. I wanted to go at a time when I could still contribute to the life in Israel, and not when I'm not actually physically able anymore." Contributing, though, will not be the same as the 22-year contribution the Gordons made in Detroit. "I hold a master's degree in clini- cal psychology and marriage counsel- ing from the University of Detroit," Rabbi Gordon says. "Unfortunately, there is a shortage of marriage coun- selors in Israel. So I'm looking into the possibility of finding something in that line of work." Benyas-Kaufman Making aliyah will not cut the Detroit ties for Rabbi and Mrs. Gordon Mrs. Gordon, vice president of education of American Women for Bar-Ilan University, has been a social worker and quality control auditor for the Michigan Department of Social Services. Like her husband, she will be in a different "line of work" when they settle in Israel. "I'm retiring and spending time with my children and grandchildren," she says. "I think I've made my contri- bution to the community as far as a social worker is concerned. I'll prob- ably end up doing some kind of volun- teer work while I'm there. It's really impossible to live in a community in Israel and not be involved. I think now that whatever work I do will be volun- teer work." In honor of the contribution the two have made to their community and their synagogue, Young Israel of Oak-Woods is holding a testimonial dinner Sunday night at what Rabbi Gordon has called "one of the longest existing synagogues in one spot — without moving." Over their two decades in Detroit, Rabbi and Mrs. Gordon have wit- nessed change and growth at Oak- Woods and the community at large. "It was a totally different kind of congregation when I came here," Rabbi Gordon says. "Young Israel of Oak-Woods at that particular time was not what one would consider a typ- ical Young Israel congregation. It was the first synagogue in Oak Park and, therefore, was made up of membership from a number of congregations in De- troit where the people were moving to Oak Park. "Of course there was a nucleus of people who identified with the Young Israel movement and they were in- - strumental in seeing to it that it be- came affiliated with the National Council of Young Israel." The nucleus, though, was sma compared , to the group that beg. Young Israel of Greenfield, says Rab Gordon. It took a little more time. "Things did not really come gether in terms of the character of C I membership," he remembers, "un after the riots, when there was a tr mendous influx of people from Detrc into the suburbs, which changed tl character of the membership. That also when the membership reached i peak. "Actually it coincided with tI year we added on the building. TI riots were in July 1967 and we ded cated the new building in April 196, So two months later you had the rid , in Detroit which immediately creat a move of great numbers of Young I rael of Wyoming people." It is that make-up of the memb€ ship that Rabbi Gordon sees as tl greatest difference between the You'. Israel he came to in the early 1961 and the one which he is leaving at ti end of this summer. "Young Israel of Oak-Woods 1,N7 made up of many non-observa), people, people who utilized it as tl, most convenient synagogue in tl area, and there were those with particular affiliation with Young rael. Things were. very different whf I first came here," he says. But just as the cohesiveness of congregation began . to change wi time, changes have continued in opposite direction, says Rabbi Gord "In the last four or five years we' experienced a triple kind of deci tion. There are those who the mighty takes to His minyan. So with their families having marri and moved away, have moved apartments or down south. And thi the highway (I-696 construction) h decimated a good part of our congre tion. The highway has affected 0 Woods more than other synagogues. number of houses around here h people in them who were members Oak-Woods. Their houses were tak away, so they were physically tra planted elsewhere." Mrs. Gordon, though, points other possible origins of the decline "It all started with the youi' Continued on Page 66