Some of the tombstones are fashioned today: Leo and enry Ford was broken; others are covered with Rebeckah, Wolf and Isadore. certain of one Their lives seem ancient his- thing: Jews were not sharp, fine weeds, with the tory, too — even those, like patriotic and you names of the deceased virtually couldn't find a one unreadable. It is as though the Joshua Grabowsky, who were earth is slowly pulling all the part of such definitive events as fighting in the war. A Detroit weekly stones under its dark skin, and World War I. A man's brains splattered on called him a liar. Just look, no one is there to complain. A stretcher-bearer's face; Their names seem old- the paper said, at Joshua Grabowsky. Mr. Grabowsky was a Detroit native, the youngest of three sons (with a sister who had been on the stage), a handsome and thoughtful young man who liked buying presents for his nieces. Mr. Grabowsky, the paper noted, was serving with Company A of the 16th Engi- ELIZABETH APPLEBAUM ASSOCIATE EDITOR neers. Today, Joshua Grabowsky lies under a worn tombstone at the long-forgotten Free Sons of Israel section at Woodmere Cemetery in southwest Detroit. It is the most neglected Jewish cemetery in the city — a sad garden of stone filled with the graves of 34 unnamed infants, men and women whose descen- dants have long since left the city, brothers and sisters who perished of diseases for whom prevention is today a quick shot in the arm. Located in Section North E of the cemetery, the graves are sheltered by a maple tree and a pine, whose intricate cones lay fallen, their dark tips scratched and torn, throughout the ceme- It Is the most neglected Jewish cemetery is Detroit. tery. A little-known Jewish cemetery in Detroit is home to forlorn tombstones. Cf) LU CC w w 48 His shook shoulders slipped their load, But when they bent to look again The drowning soul was sunk too deep For human tenderness. World War I, British soldier Isaac Rosenberg wrote in 1917, was a "foul and endless war," a time when the air was "loud with death" and men with "choked souls" wept and the dark air "spurted with fire." In 1917, Joshua Grabowsky had one year to live. His one remaining relative in the city, his niece Lenore Grabowsky, was a girl when Joshua died. She remembers ,E 7 , 3 only a little about him: That a Detroit newspaper (which one, i-T; she doesn't recall) wrote about gs Joshua, as a challenge to Henry Ford's anti-Semitic charge; that before going off to war he left money with his sister, to be used for gifts for his five young nieces; that he was nice looking; that he had a girlfriend who later married somebody else. "My mother was very fond of him," she says. Joshua Grabowsky was born on March 31, 1885 and killed in action Oct. 30, 1918 at Charny, in the Verdun sector of France. He was buried in France, then his body was returned to be buried in Detroit. A service was held at Temple Beth El. Two years before Mr. o