I CLOSE-UP I JUST ARRIVED...BRAND NEW STYLES! Jewish Father NICOLETTI & NATUZZI Continued from preceding page IMPORTED LEATHER 5c1 %F , SAT. & SUN. ONLY • JUNE 17 & 18 1. it a \ A L ir WINMPIONew d V A t TrO~/ 4 ) Ira 1,(4000"7 - ' -- ' s '‘- dr - - - . -, A ■ Iwo— Father's Day A COMPLETE SHOWROOM OF THE FINEST LEATHER FURNITURE SHERWOOD O/ WAREHOUSE A i 8fleiNVODd 8t,1008 CLEARANCE CENTER // FARMINGTON HILLS N L, , INDUSTRIAL CENTER i o 24734 CRESTVIEW CT. FARMINGTON HILLS DAYS OF SALE 476-3760 PRIOR 354-9060 HOURS: SATURDAY 10 5 SUNDAY 12 5 - MARV SAYS CUSTOM WALL MIRROR SPECIALISTS ( IMMEDIATE DELIVERY - NOMINAL CHARGE SAVE FROM , 20% TO 50%* TUB & SHOWER ENCLOSURES MIRRORED BIFOLD OR SLIDING DOORS INSULATED 1 GLASS REPLACED • TABLE TOPS • STORM DOORS & WINDOWS • PATIO DOOR WALLS REPLACED • STORMS & SCREENS REPAIRED MOBIL AUTO GLASS SERVICE Interior Design Ruth Schwartz, A.S.I.D., I.F.D.A. • FURNISHINGS • COLOR COORDINATOR • INSTALLATIONS —SPECIALIZING IN ONE-OF-A-KIND ART OBJECTS— II 'FOPS SI .•.41.: 411 ,q; SOUTHFIELD: 24777 Telegraph 353-2500 Other locatioos: Wayne and Lincoln Park FRIDAY, JUNE 16, 1989 Residential — Commercial Z81 ', 7;ig,Z7 ■ 111 ■ 11 ■ 111•11=1 ■ 26 "CREATE the possible when you thought it was impossible..." • ACCESSORIES Mr GLASS & AUTO TRIM El Mr CUSTOM WALL MIRRORS TIRES & ACCESSORIES VISIT OUR SHOWROOM 'Suggested List Price - TEN MILE ROAD FOR CONSULTATION CALL 352-2264 Dad made them at the office. So, again, as in Europe, the Jewish father defaulted the home to his wife. He distanc- ed himself from his children not, as before, in the name of God, but in the name of suc- cess. He became "the quin- tessential" middle-class father, says Brandeis Univer- sity professor Larry Fuchs, "who brings home the bacon, which is not an inappropriate metaphor for the Jewish father in America." Missing now from Jewish fatherhood, said Fuchs, is a sense of the father "as so- meone who knows what he believes in, the father as a rabbi in his own house." Perhaps there was a subtle awareness of this among the children of these first- and second-generation Jews. "A father should be treated like a king," instructs the Book of Proverbs; "Even a rabbi should rise [in the presence of his pupils] when his father enters," compels the Talmud. But the American Jewish father is certainly not treated as a monarch; and whether a rabbi stands when his father enters a room may be more a matter of sheer manners than filial respect. In fact, went one school of thought (the Philip Roth school), why should anyone stand up for someone who served his family in a "ferocious and self- annihilating way?" "My father," sighed Mr. Roth's world-class whiner, Alexander Portnoy, "served my mother, my sister Han- nah, but particularly me." Once the guardian of tradi- tion, the teacher of Talmud, the Jewish father had become, according to Portnoy, a servant — a frustrated but dutiful servant. Eventually, the mother's prominence in the Jewish family transformed her into the butt of jokes and a subject for fiction and movies. Most of these works were written by Jewish men. If these authors had "taken potshots at their fathers," said sociologist Mon- son, "they would have in- directly been taking potshots at themselves." The flourishing of jokes about Jewish mothers, sug- gested Rabbi Mordechai Liebling, executive director of the Federation of Reconstruc- tionist Congregations and Havurot, may "reflect a lot of rage by Jewish boys and men against mothers because she has so much power. Jewish males, especially fathers, feel they are powerless." Faye Moskowitz, a novelist and short-story writer living in Washington, said she has "been thinking about why I haven't written more about my father. Every Jewish woman writer does. In the eyes of my generation, the mother had more prominence because she had more prox- imity." "Any Freudian," said Moskowitz, "can explain why male authors write so much about their mothers." She add- ed that "a woman writer will write about mothers to set out their own identity." While most of the Jewish father's traditional role erod- ed under the pressures of making it in America, much remained of their age-old at- titudes toward sons and