4P-4fP,IP,IP IP, dP.N.P.4IPY ■P■■■■IP, dl.4 ■ 4P, dP,iP^.0, IP,NN40. BALABUSTA WITH CLOUT Southfielder Pearlena Bodzin keeps busy building a Jewish home and a community. ALAN HITSKY Associate Editor p U Pearlena Bodzin: "My nature is to get involved in things." earlena Bodzin's life has changed. After all, her children are away at college, and she is now keeping a longtime pro- mise to husband Jason that she will travel to some of his medical meetings. You would think her vol- unteer career might be slow- ing. You would be wrong. Just visit her kitchen- office for a while and make small talk, if you can. Don't mind the constant interrup- tions from the telephone or the oven. It is just Pearlena Bodzin's way of doing busi- ness. Volunteering, helping others, is something she grew up with. "I used to schlepp with my mom on Cortland for the March of Dimes," she recalls. "And I started volunteering when I was in B'nai B'rith Girls. My parents lived that kind of life, and we were always in- volved with the shul." Her parents, Harry and Etta Wilson, are still that way. Members of Young Israel of Southfield, Mrs. Wilson "still makes soup for all the neighbors and my dad still teaches Judiasm." Vol- unteering, Pearlena Bodzin says, has always been part of her family. "I married into it, also." But making volunteering a "career" began for Mrs. Bodzin through her children. She became active at Con- gregation B'nai Moshe, chairing the youth commis- sion and the town -hall speaker series, serving as president of the sisterhood, serving on the synagogue board and now as recording secretary. She also represents B'nai Moshe at the local council meetings of Mazon - the Jew- ish Response to Hunger. "We need to learn each other's cultures. We need to learn to live, work and play together. It's a slow process, but I'm optimistic." Her children's schools have also felt her presence. When son Gordie started at Akiva Hebrew Day School, Mrs. Bodzin started, too. Her active role at the school began as the Rosh Chodesh (beginning of the Jewish month) hot-dog lady, prepar- ing and serving hot dogs. "There is a whole generation of Akiva kids who remember me for thatjob," she laughs. Through the Jewish com- munity's Family-To-Family Project, the Bodzins are paired with a Soviet Jewish family that recently im- migrated to Detroit. Mrs. Bodzin helped her Soviet counterpart enroll her son at Akiva. "It was like enrolling my own child all over again," Mrs. Bodzin says. "We stood in the parking lot and cried." When daughter Beth was a senior at Southfield-Lathrup High School last year, Mrs. Bodzin served as president of the Parent Teacher Student Association and co-chaired the all-night senior party with Rose Lynn Schlussel. "I don't know about the kids," she says, "but Rosie and I had an absolute blast." Mrs. Bodzin claims to be having a hard time ad- justing to the empty nest. "A lot of my activities were geared around the kids," she says, "and I don't think they have a PTA at the Univer- sity of Michigan or Michigan State." Despite her protests, Mrs. Bodzin is managing to keep busy. She has just been named to the City of Southfield's Total Living Commission and is serving as president of the Kenwyck Residents Association, a three-street neighborhood group bordered by Con- gregation Shaarey Zedek, the Southfield Post Office and 11 Mile Road. "When Beth graduated from high school, I decided to put my energies somewhere else," she says. "The Total Living Commission is a bun- ch of good people trying to keep the neighborhoods stable. Is it working? To some extent, yes. "We have trouble getting into the schools. We need to learn each other's cultures. We need to learn to live, work and play together and get to know each other. It's a slow process, but I'm op- timistic. Of course, I'm always optimistic," she says. "I never want to give up." Mrs. Bodzin was also in- volved with the Jewish community's Neighborhood Project — "but they always have their meetings on a night when I'm already hav-