Miriam Weiss contemplates a chicken she will prepare for her husband, the shokhet, in Budapest, Hungary. along with Brian Blue, a non-Jewish pho- tographer, set out to learn more about his roots. They traveled, funded only by "Strom and Blue," armed only with a pen, camera, tape recorder and violin and with no set itinerary or agenda except "to take chances. If someone said don't go there, we went there." They traveled by train between cities and by foot within cities, starting with two cities in the Soviet Union, Kishinev and Odessa, and making their way across Eastern Europe from Poland to Czechosla- vakia to Hungary to Yugoslavia to Romania to Bulgaria. While they did bring a few names and addresses with them, mostly they went from town to town seeing who they came across. They would always start by going to the main synagogue when it was time for services. "That was our automatic in. We were able to find out who was who, ask questions, find out where to go. Because I knew how to daven and because I spoke Yiddish, the doors opened for me." The synagogue was the place to start, said Strom, because except for Yugoslavia, the synagogue is still the center of Jewish life for the Jews of Eastern Europe. "Older Jews, those 40 and above, all know how to daven. Even those who don't go to daven, still come to meet people, for functions, the kosher kitchen. And for younger people, the synagogue serves as a meeting place. Eastern Europe is still very influenced by the old Orthodox ways, by the religious, Chasidic ways." Strom understood those ways, which is why the Jews he met "understood why a young American Jew was so interested in them. They called me Yitzchak. I'd say my name is Yale and they'd say what does Yale mean? You're Yitzchak." It helped, too, that Strom spoke their languages. Both of them. "Yiddish is the language of the mind, klezmer is the language of the heart. I know songs they know. I would go to a shul and first we'd talk. And when they didn't want to talk anymore, I'd ask, 'Want to hear some music?' and they'd say fantastic. They would listen and start singing and A boy at Shabbat services in Beit Aaron synagogue in Budapest.