FOR A BRIGHT OUTLOOK FOR THE HOLIDAYS Highlight the beauty of your rooms with the right chandelier; pendant, torchier or lamp. STOREWIDE SALE SAVINGS UP TO 30% 71111=•= ORCHARD LIGHTING CENTER First In Fashion Lighting 28801 Orchard Lake Rd., Farmington Hills, MI (313) 553-8540 No matter how you turn the globe The Jewish News keeps you posted on Jewish happenings everywhere! Call 354-6060 TODAY and order your subscription. NO7 30 FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1988 CLOSE-UP worse. I used to take my wagon and go down to the depot three blocks away and pick up this package which always was waiting for me with every other train. My mother used to do everything but curse. She used to say, "I don't know what we're going to do." Finally, the meat came and it was really bad. So she took this meat and threw it into the garbage can, took off her apron, walked across the street to Grahek's, the butcher. The Grahek brothers had two butcher shops and they were marvelous people, and good friends of ours. My mother went in. He said, "What can I do for you, Mrs. Bourgin?" She said, "I'll have some meat." He look- ed, and his eyebrows went up. She took the meat back, prepared it, and served it to us. The heavens didn't fall in, nobody got sick, and from then on we ate good meat. The whole kosher thing collapsed. I got a great deal of my Jewishness from my mother's sense of being Jewish. It was a question of having character. You were a Jew because you were different. And, by God, in Ely that was underlined. First of all, my mother wouldn't permit me to bring home any girl who wasn't Jewish. And the only girl in town who was Jewish was about five years younger than I. Because we were pushed together constantly, we despised each other. We were the wrong ages, anyhow. So I could never bring any- body home. That was a real problem for me, because it meant I grew up really with an exaggerated sense of what girls were. Also, you were really made aware that you were Jewish. Kids at school treated me a little bit differently. They knew I was apart from them. When in high school, my best friend and I were swimmers, and we went on canoe trips and swam five-mile lakes. He came to me one day and announced that we couldn't see each other again because his parents decided he was going into the ministry and he couldn't associate with Jews. That kind of thing shook you up periodically. My brother, very early in the game after he began to practice law, decided to run for mayor on an anti-mining company ticket. He felt the mines should do more for the people. During that little campaign in that small town, somebody strung up a banner at the main intersection, saying WATCH OUT FOR JEWS. It caused quite a stir in the town. My father ran the store until he educated all of us, and then he moved away to Virginia, which is this town of 12,000, 50 miles north, where my brother David then practiced law. My brother the professor wasn't doing all that well at that point. So my father and my brother started another clothing store that my brother ran in Virginia. My brother, a very bright and active lawyer, was a considerable figure in Virginia. My brother was a big contributor to the synagogue. But in time, synagogue activities became primarily social instead of religious. The whole attempt was to keep the kids there by having games and a lot of other folderol. My brother lost his sym- pathy and ended his contributions, but before that happened, there was this con- stant succession of funerals up to Duluth, and the same thing happened there that happened with meat from Cohen the butcher. The funeral parlors in Duluth, knowing that people from the range had no other recourse, would schedule them at the end of the day and sell them the worst plots at the most money. Finally, we all came home from one of those funerals where we buried the person in the dark, and we came back to Virginia and my brother said, "This is enough. I'm going to start a cemetery in Virginia." Virginia had a very nice local cemetery. He went to the city and he got a plot of land and had it consecrated by a rabbi. Then he spread the word among the townspeople. They had a meeting at the synagogue, and everybody decided they would be buried there. The next person who died was buried there. But the next person who died, the family sent him to Duluth. After that, everybody went to Duluth. There was this one Jewish body in Virginia. I told my wife that what I really want is to be cremated and I want my ashes spread by airplane over Burnside Lake, near Ely, which is the most beautiful lake in the world. I spent my youth there. I'll probably wind up at the cemetery in Wash- ington, D.C., in Georgetown at Rock Creek. My father's buried in Los Angeles, and my mother in Duluth, and my brother in Virginia. Every time I go back there I shake my head and walk from his grave over to all those Jewish graves. 0 Howard Simons, author of Jewish Times, spoke at Detroit's Jewish Book Fair this week at the Maple-Drake Jewish Community Center,