36 Friday, February 28, 1986 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Jewish," he said. "Their situation was so precarious. They've held on against such tremendous odds. I came back from Cuba thinking, 'If they can keep their Jewishness alive, what can I do?' This feeling was reinforced when I went to Russia in 1981." In the late 1970's, Aron was a member of a New York chavurah. Now a resident of the Fairfax section of Los Angeles, he occasionally joins the store-front minyan around the corner from his home' and regularly attends a shabbat minyan less than a mile away. The New York group allowed him to photograph its rituals; the Los Angeles group forbids photographs. hen Aron first began to take his photo- graphy seriously, he realized he had to overcome his fear of "pointing my camera at strangers. It's almost an invasion of their private space." Old ladies on the Lower Eqpt Side have hit Aron over the head. Disciples Sf chasidic rabbis have yelled at him not to photograph their spiritual leader. But as Aron's courage increased, so, too, did the tolerance of his subjects. A torah scribe on the Lower East Side repeatedly spurned Aron's requests to photograph him. But one day, recalled Aron, he saw the photograph he wanted to take just as he was about to leave. "With the slightest hesitation," he said, "I took advantage of the situation. At one point, Rabbi Eisenbach raised his eyes over his glasses, then quickly looked back to his work. For several weeks afterward I was bothered by the incident. I finally made a print and took it to him, holding my breath, of course. He looked at it for a very long moment and then smiled and said, 'It's very nice. Thank you.' " And in a Leningrad synagogue, Aron reached for his camera, then paused when he feared that he might offend those who were praying. Some objections, in fact, were raised when Aron finally mustered the courage to take a few pictures. But when the Russian Jews learned that Aron was an American, their objections gave way to a desire to have their story told. "One old man came up to me," said Aron, "and said, 'Please, take my picture. Show my face. Tell everyone I am still here.' " Aron did just that. And more. By telling the world that an old Jew still prays in a Leningrad synagogue and that young Jews go to the Hudson River for tashlich on Yom Kippur and that Orchard Street on the Lower East Side is still teeming with merchants and noisy hagglers, Bill Aron is also telling the world that the Jewish spirit is thriving. His photos signal that the Jewish family, far-flung and forever squabbling, has a stunning and sometimes bewildering cohesion, one that confounds its enemies and that continually rejuvenates and binds an ancient people that flourishes — somehow — in the corners of the earth. Fairfax Kosher Market, Los Angeles. Bargaining for fish, Lower East Side. SEX CRIMERERS.11 ?VIES PRODUCE /h. rfiC Canal and Essex Streets, New York. V" TSSEXPalA16'