WWI I 1-1-Z1VA H ERQES 'What's he thinking?' " The second time he brought his photo album. Near the end., the man could no longer speak. He suffered with dementia. He wouldn't watch television or listen to the radio. Nurses had to move him constantly so he wouldn't get bedsores. He was 38 when he died. For eight months, Mr. Elkus went each week to see the sick man. As to why he took time to visit someone he had never known, someone who often did not even know he was there, Mr. Elkus says simply, "Could you imagine sitting alone for 24 hours, day after day, and no- 'Jody coming by?" One of Mr. Elkus' earliest pro- iects was serving with the Jew- ish Family Service Special Friend program. He volunteered as a big brother for a Jewish boy from a troubled home. For sev- n-al years each week, he took 'le boy bowling and to movies w id to baseball games. If fall is for JARC and Bor- man Hall, winter may be Mr. busiest season. That's when he volunteers at Sinai, the "People are people. They're just like you and me." Coalition on Temporary Shelter (COTS), Meals on Wheels and at a downtown soup kitchen. And through his clothing store, the Shirt Box, Mr. Elkus collects used clothing which he donates to COTS, a drug reha- bilitation facility, and other or- ganizations. Last Thanksgiving, he dropped off some of the mer- chandise to COTS, which pro- vides temporary shelter to the homeless. Mr. Elkus was dis- tressed by the large number of women and children at the fa- cility; one of the newest resi- dents was a 3-week-old child. "You and I could easily be like that," he says of the homeless. "We could lose everything, and who would take care of us?" He also takes time for Jewish seniors living in the inner city. He'll go on Jewish holidays to visit the men and women who he says "have really been for- gotten." Mr. Elkus never hesitates to get his friends involved in his charitable activities. "I'm constantly hitting people up for money," he says. And he tries to inspire them to volun- teer by showing his own enthu- siasm for the projects. At the same time, he's quick to insist he is by no means ex- ceptional, saying, "Many of my friends do more than I." One comment for which he has little patience when seek- ing volunteers: "I'd love to help, but I just don't have the time." 'We all have time," he insists. "It's just a matter of getting your priorities straight." Mr. Elkus gives his father credit for inspiring his interest in volunteer projects. His father, Phil, is active in the Yad Ezra kosher food bank and at Con- gregation Beth Shalom "I often look at myself and say, am so fortunate,' " Mr. Ek- lus says. "I think it's part of my duty as a Jew to pay some of that back." ❑ THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 67