THE JEWISH NEWS COMMEMORATIVE ISSUE 194 2-19 92 Rabbi Leo Franklin, left, and Rabbi Sherwin Wine. Yeshiva Beth Yehudah, Young Israel and the Jewish Corn- munity Council. He also was an ardent Zionist and held numerous national and local posts reflecting that interest. Dur- ing the 1930s, he served as president of the World Mizrachi Organization, or religious Zionists, and en- couraged Zionist support among Jews throughout Detroit. Jewish Joint Distribution Committee, the Hebrew Im- migrant Aid Society, the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, the Jewish Theo- logical Seminary, the Israel Tennis Centers Association, the Detroit Round Table of Christians and Jews, and Bar- Ilan University, among others. to local causes even amid the excitement and furor that came with the founding of the State of Israel. When others around him suggested alter- ing the budget to send more to Israel, Mr. Sobeloff voiced his famous call: Don't change percentages, raise more money. A longtime supporter of the Technion, Mr. Sobeloff also Isidore Sobeloff was the man many say defined the founded the Resettlement At union meetings, Isaac Litwak for what he believed were eager pledges with the call, "I can't hear you, illimpo ,brother.'* David Hermelin, a promi- nent local businessman, is ac- tive in numerous Jewish and civic organizations, both locally and worldwide. He has served as interna- tional campaign chairman of the State of Israel Bonds, chairman of Operation In- dependence, national vice chairman of the United Jewish Appeal executive com- mittee, vice president of the World ORT Union, president of the Jewish Home for Aged in Detroit and vice president of the local Federation. He also has been active as a member of the board of directors for the American nature of Detroit's Jewish Federation. Executive direc- tor of the Federation for 30 years, Mr. Sobeloff accepted the position in 1937. The first question he was asked upon his arrival: "Do you speak Yiddish?" Mr. Sobeloff supported the idea of the Federation representing all sectors of the Jewish community and wanted it to be the central arm of Detroit Jewry. A fam- ed fund-raiser, he worked to change the image of the Federation from a charity to a social service organization. He believed strongly in see- ing that funds were directed From the top: Isaac Litwak, Rabbi Morris Adler and Joyce Keller. Service with Fred Butzel. Isaac Litwak was a labor leader during the 1930s, '40s and '50s whose actions af- fected thousands of Jewish workers. Mr. Litwak, whom author Sidney Bolkosky described as "feisty and intransigent," first organized the Detroit Laundry and Linen Drivers Association in 1934. The laundry business was a powerhouse 50 years ago, and Litwak's group gained addi- tional strength when, at his urging, it joined Teamsters Union Local 285. The workers became in- volved in numerous, often violent, strikes, at which Mr. Litwak himself was often at- tacked. Once beaten bloody, Mr. Litwak "washed the blood off and went back to the picket lines," Mr. Bolkosky re- counts in Harmony and Dissonance. A friend of Teamsters head Jimmy Hoffa, Mr. Litwak secured pay raises for workers under his wing, including a 1937 raise from $18 to $95 weekly for • drivers. Mr. Litwak brought union support — both among Jewish and gentile workers — to Jewish causes, including Israel and the Federation. At union meetings, he made ap- peals for funds, answering what he believed were meager pledges with the call, "I can't hear you, brother." ❑ MARCH 27, 1992 15