V•A•11 The Gift of Givi bemie Chase has spent a lifetime giving to other. And the will continue. KIMBERLY LIFTON Staff writer Bessie Chase 70 FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1989 The greatest thrill I ever experienced came 8 1/2 years ago when I saw for the first time the Statue of Liberty. Oh! How thrilled I was to see her greet me into her wonderful country. With tears in my eyes, I saluted her. Bessie Chase, 1929 I hese words, carefully selected by a young Soviet immigrant for a newspaper "thrill letter writing" contest, illustrate emotions that Bessie Chase — then Bessie Fox — will never forget. Placed in a scrapbook filled with photographs and other mementos from her life, the winning passage — published in 1929 in the now defunct Detroit Daily — is a constant reminder of the struggle of the Jewish people. "It reminds me of the time we came over here," says Chase, 78. "When we came to the United States, no one helped. We were poor. We started life all over. "We take care of our own," she says: `If we don't, no one will." Like her mother, who Chase says spent a lifetime helping others, Bessie Chase is a giver. A 45-year member of the David-Horodoker Women's Organization, Chase has guided the group as president — and now presi- dent emeritus — to help raise several thousands of dollars annually for the mentally retarded, emotionally han- dicapped and the needy. Among her mitzvot, Chase for the past 30 years has been organizing pic- nics for Jewish patients at Northville State Hospital. She also coordinates monthly programs through the Jewish Vocational Service for in- digent, elderly inner-city residents who live in halfway homes and facilities for the mentally retarded. And twice a month before Shab- bat, she and a handful of other volunteers visit seven Jewish elderly residents at the Livonia Nursing Home. Sometimes Chase brings kipot for the men and bakes cookies to share with the non-Jewish residents. "I don't like to twiddle my fingers:' Chase says. "I'm on the go all of the time." A visit from Bessie Chase brings a smile to Celia Denby, who has liv- ed in nursing homes for 51 years. A pat on the shoulder gives inspiration to another resident, Herman Kauf- man, who recites the kiddish for his visitors. And a small gift of writing paper for Benji Rosender allows him to sketch pictures for weeks. "She is devoted to so many," says Robert Singer, a retired engineer who works with Chase as a volunteer. "She does it because she has a good heart. Bessie is the organizer." e r list of volunteer ac- -.1 complishments is as long as a professional resume. For her kindness, she has been nominated for the Heart of Gold award, given annually by the ci- ty of Detroit. Despite arthritis of the back and leg pain, Chase devotes 40 to 50 hours each week in services to the corn- munity. Her work, friends from the David-Horodoker organization wrote for the Heart of Gold nomination, "is the glue that holds together all the different personalities in each group she works:' On the many boards Chase serves — including the Co-operative Council of the League of Jewish Women, David-Horodoker, the League of Jewish Women, the Kadima Associa- tion for Jewish Residential Care and the Jewish Vocatonal Service — the name Bessie Chase is a household word. "I just want to help. It is as sim- ple as that. It is my personality," she says. "I don't want any pats on the back." Chase regularly visits shut-ins with Rabbi Solomon Gruskin. They bring candles for Shabbat to help them lead Jewish lives. With Sinai Hospital volunteers, she participates in "Service With Love" by telephon- ing two senior citizens each Friday to wish them a good Shabbat. K