I PEOPLE I For your viewing pleasure William Blackwell of the "Edna Hibel Corporation," will be at Ginopolis On The Grill, 27815 Middlebelt Road, (at 12 Mile Rd.) Farmington Hills, Michigan Sunday, December 17, 1989 Available at this showing only. from 1:00 pm to 6:00 pm. ...Imported Soapstone Boxes ...Framed Reproductions ...Music Boxes ...Collector Plates ...Porcelain Dolls Grossman Gallery, Inc. Franklin, Michigan Make your Holiday shopping easy - There is a price for everyone! At this time you may view _all new lithos by Edna Hibel, as well as many of her older pieces, including pastels and artist proofs. Please join us for Hors d'oeuvres, champagne and- showing. Kindly R.S.V.P, (313) 851-6637 Fred and Becky Grossman PETER MAX American Red Cross Blood Services Southeastern Michigan Region E• jewelry <• accessories 0 ■ apparel (j) ■ furniture ■ bridal registry O ■ wish list ■ executive gifts "ASIA" Danielle Peleg Gallery Crosswinds Mall 4301 Orchard Lake Rd., Ste. 103 West Bloomfield Hours: Mon.-Sat. 10.6 Thurs. 10.8, Sun. 12.5 626-5810 $' WANTED $ Herman Miller and Knoll Furniture 1940s - 1970s (w) 398.0646 (h) 661-4236 Designs by Charles Gassam Ask for Les $ TOP CASH PAID TREND Applegate Square SPECIALIZING IN 1 —CUSTOM LAMINATED FURNITURE—I • Wall Units • Tables • Dining RooMs • Custom Bedrooms C.C.C. Cabinetry 72. FREW, Dzatguti5,198.9, 941-3050 Holiday and Cruise Wear Arriving Daily Open Sunday 12-5 Men's & Boys' 52-4244_,/ Mishpochology Reveals Even A Tie To Detroit CARL ALPERT Special to The Jewish News G enealogists and mish- pochologists have of- ten _queried me as to the source of the name Alpert, and all sorts of theories have been adduced. The question stimulated me into research of my paternal origins, with the result that a whole new and exciting world opened before me — a world which embraces a shtetl in Lithuania, the draining of swamps in the Emek, a mass Nazi massacre, and even the new immigration to Israel from the Soviet Union, not to speak of more than a dozen cities in the United States, all involving immediate members of my family, some of them previously unknown to me. Included is Phyllis Bean of Detroit, from whom we would like to hear. Missing details were filled in for me by Nissan, a first cousin I had never met, the last surviving member of the family from the old country, who recently arrived in Haifa from Kowno. The story is mine, but how much modern Jewish history is packed into it! I have no doubt that every reader, if he were to search and inquire and preserve memories of those still alive, could also reconstruct his own family story. The secret can be told. The original family name was Devenishky, taken, I am told, from the little town of Devenishki near Vilna. In the Russian census of 1898, the town had a pouplation of 1,877, of whom 1,283 were Jews. The family spread throughout the area, taking up residence, among other places, in Aisheshok, where one of them became head of the yeshiva, and in Butrimantz which, sadly, has entered Jewish folklore as the home of horse thieves. Lithuania had been spared pogroms which erupted in Russia at the turn of the cen- tury in Kishinev and elsewhere, but the resltess children of Moshe and Shayne Soroh (Sirota) Devenishki turned their eyes to the Goldene Medina overseas, and one by one, five of them made their way to America, settling at first in Boston and Philadelphia. Of the six siblings, only one, Rachel, remained behind. There was no one to look after elderly, ailing grandma Soroh, and Rachel took on the task. Others of the aunts and uncles had gone to Palestine, helped drain the swamps of the Emek and founded kib- butzim like Tel Yosef and Geva where, for the most part, their descendants still live. When the old folks passed on, Rachel was left alone in Butrimantz. She was married three times, surviving three husbands, and had a child by each. One, cousin Hadassah, went to Palestine in 1935. Another Jack, went to America, and the third, Nissan, remained, studied at the Kowno Polytechnicum, and then entered the Lithua- nian army, which was absorb- ed into the Red Army when Rachel's siblings were saved from that fate because they had the courage, the initiative, the daring to venture off to America. the Russians swept into that country. He was wounded, but did not fall into the hands of the Germans. • The Nazis came next, and when they eliminated the Jews of Butrimantz on Sept. 9, 1941, Rachel was among the victims. Nissan remembers the date because in the years that followed, after the war, he made annual pilgrimages to the town and to the mass grave, over which a monument has been erected. A sober thought: Rachel's siblings (and their descen- dants), were saved from that fate because they had the courage, the initiative, the daring to • venture off to America. Among them were my father Max and his brothers, Wolf and Israel, in Boston; his brother Meyer, later of Los Angeles; and his sister, Hinde (Ida) who became a Gross and raised a family in Philadelphia. There have been four generations since then, and some of us have gone from America to Israel, where we have met up with Rachel's children, our first cousins, Hadassah and Nissan, and resumed contacts with the offspring of her nieces and nephews in the kibbutzim. Nissan had nothing for which to return to