----- LOOKING BACK Remembering Father LORIA L. CHARNES pecial to The Jewish News ow does one gauge the true character of a man — evaluate his complishments, assess his orth, applaud his strengths, fend his weaknesses? specially if he is your father. Like notable stalwarts of is generation, my father, of lessed memory, made no at- mpt to conceal an ardent af- tion for his country. He was onest and straightforward in • 1 expressions. His love for America was werful — a passionate ison, binding and sincere, n the very beginning. An 'ir of the heart that span- _ over half a century, never dined in devotion, waned fervency, or became jaded y disinterest or more vorable glances elsewhere. It was an immigrant's doration of his country and 11 that America so valiantly ood for. He held glorious opes for this nation — his by doption — and displayed corn and contempt for de- actors who would discredit r malign his beloved land. For him, patriotism was an nsophisticated, spontaneous motion. Yet he knew you ouldn't prove it by buying chlock with the great seal of he USA embroidered on a ofa pillow qr collecting lastic bowls with scenes of ashington crossing the elaware. His was a simple reverence r what he profoundly believ- d were valid symbols: the tatue of Liberty, Congress, ur court system, the residency, an unfettered ess. a youth, he had lived 3r a harsh, oppressive 'me, endured the tyranny e Czar, suffered the hor- (tnd savagery of pogroms. lad witnessed the murder is older brother, when Charnes is a freelance ,.er in Oak Park, Ill. - they were gunning down Jews. He was spared. He had the features and col- oring of a typical muzik — a Ukrainian peasant. Instinc- tively, ingeniously, he had overcome frightening, for- midable foes. He had out- witted Cossacks, Bolsheviks, border guards. There was the grim remem- brance of mounting panic while alone with his 15-year- old sister. Word had raced through the village that troops were approaching. He knew what happened to young Jewish girls. It was too late to run. Commanding her to crawl under the quilts, he grabbed a wet rag for her head. Moments later, when the soldiers broke through the door, he faced them mournful- ly. "She has typhus. She will die soon," he cried. This time it was the soldiers who fled in terror. He was familiar with the repressive demands of a dic- tatorship, the corrosive effect of power by those who wield it: And so it was only natural that he nurtured a sense of reverential mission about our country. Democracy to him was not dead or dormant. He had breathed the air in this pro- mised land — this goldene medina — and it was true. The American Dream lived. He had arrived as an im- migrant with no tangible assets, merely ambition, self- discipline and boundless determination to forge ahead. Within two decades of being processed at Ellis Island, he sent his firstborn to the state university. He didn't speculate that maybe his children would go to college. It was a foregone conclusion; they all went, and the youngest received a Ph.D. When his family was grow- ing up, conversation at the dinner table rarely contained trivial gossip. Employing astute insight, he would ex- pound on national and world affairs. In between cabbage borscht, potato latkes and political pronouncements, his children learned that liberty is too delicate, too easily damaged, to tinker with. He instilled in his offspring a fierce sense of the fitness of things — what was right, what was wrong, what was beyond question, inappro- priate. He was an affirmative Jew, in harmony with his religion. 'lb be a Jew in a big city is one thing; to be a Jew in a small town was frequently an un- common experience. Each week he drove miles for kosher meat. Often the chickens he brought to the shochet suffocated in the trunk of the car before they could be slaughtered. Called at final, frantic moments to complete a min- yan, he drove without com- plaint. Who paid attention to the weather? When he had business in the city, he would return with an ethnic feast: pungent bags of pumpernickel, corned beef, salami, halvah, lox, herring and dill pickles. He served as his own ecumenical league for the Christian community. One Christmas, he presented the Lutheran pastor with a gift, accompanied by the admoni- tion: "Remember, Reverend, when you preach your ser- mon, be careful what you say. You're wearing a Jewish tie around your neck." On the High Holidays, even during the Depression, his store was locked, with a pro- minent sign announcing: "Closed Because of the Jewish Holidays." Observing tradition, preserving his heritage and passing his precious legacy on to his children assumed paramount importance. He could never understand the cavalier attitude, the on- going indifference countless Americans displayed toward civic affairs. Why do they read the stock market reports and sports section before the editorial page? Why did they skip the editorials altogether? He was puzzled by a neigh- bor's statement: "I don't get the papers." Repeatedly, he would pro- test in despair, "If only I could spell, I would write a letter to the editor." It may sound like an exag- geration of filial esteem, an overblown notion of the im- THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 79 ENERATION He had his faults, but there were basic truths that we recall and try to duplicate.