ki 4 4 5- ittit 6alleilt t r Ellis Island Wall Of Honor Pays Tribute To Immigrants By MIRIAM WEINER immigrants found themselves in the Ellis Island, the gateway for ground floor baggage room, where immigrant ancestors of nearly 100 they deposited their belongings million Americans, is the site for a before climbing the stairs to the new museum scheduled to open in Great Hall for the dreaded medical 1989. The Ellis Island Immigration examination which would determine Museum will be the nation's leading if they stayed or returned. institution dedicated to American For the immigrant who passed immigrants and is expected to draw the medical inspection, the next 1.5 million visitors a year. With 100,000 square feet of exhibit space, hurdle was the legal inspectors who asked about 30 questions in it will be New York's third largest museum. Each exhibit will highlight a particular aspect of the immigration experience. In recognition of our country's heritage as a people of By GARY ROSENBLATT many pasts, a special exhibit in the Editor museum called The American The 1893 Rand McNally Immigrant Wall of Honor has been Guide to the Catskill Mountains created to pay public tribute to the of Sullivan County, New York, varied origins of all Americans. reported that Tannersville was "a The American Immigrant Wall great resort of our Israelite of Honor, on which immigrant brethren, who love to gather forebears' names can be inscribed where they can be together." with a donation to The Statue of What better way to describe, Liberty-Ellis Island Foundation, Inc., albeit formally, the phenomenon will be a centerpiece of the of the Catskill resorts, alias the museum. It will be located just off Jewish Alps, where city Jews the Great Hall and adjacent to the came to enjoy the fresh air and historic Registry Room. A unique abundant, home-cooked food. area devoted to an exhibit of names And to laugh. of all national origins, it will be a By the 1940s, what had once collective display, representing the been grazing land was filled with individual family heritages that hotels, resorts and created the history of America. boardinghouses, with more than It is the first opportunity to 500 of them employing place the name of an immigrant entertainers. Virtually every ancestor or an individual's family famous Jewish comedian of the name on permanent public display last generation got his start in the at a national monument. Catskills either as a stand-up The museum will use innovative comic, like Henny Youngman, displays that feature historic artifacts Milton Berle and Myron Cohen, and photos, interactive devices, or as a tummler, a Yinglish word computers and taped reminiscences for one who creates a tumult. of the immigrants themselves. The tummler was a social Upon arrival at Ellis Island, director/clown whose job it was to sacrifice taste and discretion to distract the guests and get a laugh. Their ranks included Mel Brooks, Sid Caesar, Joey Bishop, Jerry Lewis, Jan Murray, Alan King and Buddy Hackett; and Wednesday, Jan. 4 collectively they created that wild, The Jewish Experiences for Families creative, crude brand of ethnic Committee at Congregation Beth Shalom will zaniness known at Borscht Belt have a general meeting at 7:30 p.m. Jan. 4 humor. at the synagogue. The rise and almost-fall of Friday, Jan. 13 the Catskills is a microcosm of The Birmingham Temple will have a Tu the American Jewish experience B'Shevat family service at 7:30 p.m. Jan. 13 at the temple. Students of the temple school in the 20th century. The area will present a program of songs, dances, began to attract summer visitors poetry, drama, trees for Israel and Zionist in the early part of the century, tributes. hard-working Jews who could Friday-Sunday, Jan. 20-22 afford $20 or $25 a week to get Congregation Beth Shalom's J.E.F.F. the wife and kids out of the grimy committee will have a Tu B'Shevat family New York City heat and into the celebration Jan. 20-22 at the Butzel fresh air of the country. That's Conference Center. Theme for the weekend English. Among the questions: What is your name? Where were you born? Where are you coming from? Where are you going? Have you been in the United States before? Do you have any relatives here? Where do they live? Who paid for your passage? The answers to these questions are of vital interest to family historians who want to know what the family name was in the old country and who are intrigued by the vast amount of data contained in these historic documents and interviews.. For information about The American Immigrant Wall of Honor, contact The Statue of Liberty-Ellis Island Foundation, Inc., 52 Vanderbilt Ave., New York, NY 10017. (212) 883-1986. The Rise And Almost-Fall Of The Jewish Alps i tit tit teo &, #'6 loisitt c ' is "Finding Your Jewish Identity." L - 12 FRIDAY, DECEMBER 23, 1988 when the boardinghouses began to flourish, followed, on their success, by larger hotels like the Concord, the Nevele and Grosinger's. During the days there were swimming and card games and dance lessons and in the evenings — especialy weekends when the man of the house traveled "up to The Mountains" from the city to join his family — there were stage shows best known for their broad, burlesque- style humor, with a Jewish twist. This was "us vs. them" kind of humor, a modern-day shtetl brand that combined Yiddish language and American expressiveness. It unflinchingly mocked the Jewish effort to assimilate and become part of the middle class, but it did so with affection. After all, the comedians themselves were in the same boat. The heydays lasted through the 1940s and 1950s, when modernity encroached upon the quaint, heimish style. The New York State Thruway made the area more accessible, airline travel was becoming available to the middle class, and television began to spread the magic of Borscht Belt humor across America. Jewish humor became safer and mainstream, though Alan King notes, "Jewish humor didn't change. The country changed." So did the Catskills. Many of the smaller boardinghouses and hotels could not compete. Comics flew in for a one-night or weekend performance rather than work for the whole season (the summer). The trends accelerated in the 1960s, '70s and 80s, as Jews assimilated and became less ethnic, less interested in a pervasively Jewish atmosphere. And with Zero Population Growth, there were fewer, and smaller Jewish families to vacation together. Air fares allowed middle class people to fly to Bermuda or Europe for the same money they might be spending in a plush Catskills resort. As a result, there has been a decline among the Catskills resorts, symbolized by the closing of Grosingers' several years ago. Owners began to talk about the need for gambling to rejuvenate the region, and the billboards along Route 17 urged citizens to vote for casinos. More recentlly, the owners banded together to create a new advertising campaign de-emphasizing the Jewish flavor of the resorts. There are fewer kosher hotels and less ethnic cuisine. When Grosinger's reopens next spring, it is scheduled to have a kosher restaurant as well as a variety of other kinds of eateries. But kaddish for the Catskills is premature. A visitor can still find Jewish enclaves and hear echoes of countless Jewish jokes in the cool, clear air of the evenings, still find "Israelite brethren who love to gather where they can be together." Grand Canyon, Raft Trip Scheduled A Kosher Canyon Run, a 13-day, white water rafting trip through the Grand Canyon, is planned for July 18-30. The trip, which will be accompanied by a rabbi and cantor, will include the singing of Jewish songs, study, services, Israeli dancing, Shabbat observance and kosher food. Cost of the trip is $1,495. A $200 deposit is required. The trip is limited to 21 persons. For brochure and details, write Roby James, 7024, Sylvia Ave., Reseda, Calif. 91335.