viffigamwtoswittisommotota. I33). • ; • u131, ,‘ 01 1 1 4 Friday, January 17,11986 i1/1.1 ti '10 3HT THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS There are none, according to Jewish law. Surveys indicate that there are 400,000 in the U.S. Robin Margolis has founded a national group for those who feel in limbo. BY MIMSI KROMER MILTON Special to The Jewish News . Skeletons in the closest, family feuds, hidden identities, prescient -dreams, ac- cidental discoveries that sunder lives. These sound like the ingredients of pure fiction, heavy on the melodrama. But for Robin Margolis, this is no make-believe story, it's her life, and, she suspects, it's not so very different from others. Margolis was born into a small. town, Midwestern, "aristocratic" family whose paternal lineage could be traced back to the American revolution and 17th century French Calvinists. Her paternal grand- father was a banker and her father a career naval officer. Both her parents were staunch Republicans. The family, she says, "had high Episcopalian attitudes and was about as WASPy as you could get without being a Cabot or Lodge." As for dealings with Jews, "you didn't discrim- inate against them, you were just better than them. Crude anti-Semitism was a mark of bad breeding." Margolis' father, who wrote a doctoral thesis on Soviet con- centration camps, never once discussed the Holocaust or German camps •in his horn& His interest was strictly intellectual. In contrast, the other side of the family was shadowy. Margolis' maternal grand- parents lived out of town. They were seen rarely, and then only on closely super- vised visits. Margolis and her brothers were raised as Episcopalians by a mother who said her own up-bringing had been secular. But in- explicable oddities cause a wondering child confusion and pain. Why, Margolis asked, was her mother being baptised in secret along with her four-year-old brother? Why was her mother's !good friend, a Jewish Hungarian foreign service wife, suddenly banished from the house? Why did her . mother always have terrible scenes each Christmas? What caused the worsening depressions that made her mother sleep most of the day? What on earth was her mother thinking when she proffered the information that marriage to a Jew would be condoned by the family? Given these clues, it comes as no sur- prise to learn that Margolis' mother was a Jew who denied her identity. But for Margolis and her immediate family, the birth certificates, marriage licenses and other papers found in a household hiding place last year, gave proof of a lie that had been lived in their midst. The discovery came soon after the death of Margolis' mother. Margolis, personally, was pleased with her new heritage. Asa young person, she says "the Old Testament seemed more believable and logical" to her than teach- ings of the Trinity. After college, many of her friends were Jewish, and when they swapped fantasies, Margolis says, she always got howls with hers: "To be born again as the only child of an upper-middle- class liberal, Democratic, family in New York ' City." So Margolis accepted her Judaism with joy, assumed her mother's maiden name and began preparing for a bas mitzva. But her father and brothers had a harder time of it. They made comments such as, "Why so much hiss over just a little. Jewish blood?" and proposed that Margolis' mother probably had not known she was Jewish until late in life, when. her parents died. The family, which Margolis describes - as "a flying wedge of guilt," is in an uproar over Margolis' planned book about her mother, - calling it "revenge on a dead woman." They have threatened lawsuits if their names are diiclosed. With her Christian faMily in turmoil, Margolis set out to locate her Jewish fam- ily, whom she traced through a Canadian synagogue. The welcome, after 42 years of separation, was less _ than- exuberant. "They are very proud," explains Margolis, and "they feet betrayed, too. I'm like an illegitimate child." Her newly-found relatives are also dismayed by the idea of the book, ashageci of a family° member who deserted the 'faith. Even though she travels to New York to see Jewish rela- tives every six weeks, Margolis wonders if they'll ever accept her. "I'm very emo- tional, bookish, and stubborn, like my Jewish family, but I leok like my Christian family I'm straddling two cultures, I'm an amalgam," she says. A friend of Margolis' who understands the loneliness of that ; position is Leslie Goodman-Malamuth. While Margolis relates her story with great emotion and visible strain, Goodman-Malamuth re- mains calm. Only the bitterness and occa- sional use of black humor reveal the depth of her feelings. She grew up. in a small, California town with no visible Jews. Although she knew her father was Jewish and the family kept its Jewish name, they had no religious affiliation. "The feeling about being Jewish," Goodman-Malamuth remarks, "was the same as about having epilepsy -- nothing to be ashamed of, but..." Like her father,\_ two brothers ,,married gentiles. Goadman-Maltuituth became "Amish identified" at the i*ive,rsity of Berkeleg, where 65 percent glf tie Class was Jewish. Although discouraged by her family, she says- she "felt a tremendous liffiriity for Judaism...I envied my ficiends who bitched , \