PHOTO BY JULIE EDGAR The men Con VW) re annullies A high holiday was celebrated on the Hill. Hil Larry Horwitz: Congressional assistant and shammes. JULIE EDGAR STAFF WRITER e believes the year was 1965. A Congress buzzing with fresh-faced Democ- rats grappled with legis- lation that would have a profound impact on soci- ety: voting rights, Medicare, minimum wage, and the war in Vietnam. Herbert Tenzer was among the newly elected who helped President Lyndon B. Johnson shep- herd in his Great Society programs that aimed to reverse decades of poverty and abolish seg- regation. Mr. Tenzer, who died in 1993, for two terms represented a district out- side New York City. He was 59 years old, the retired chairman of Barton Candies, and one of 15 Jews in the House of Representatives. Two Jews served in the United States Senate — Democrat Abe Ribicoff of Connecticut and Republican Jacob Javits of New York. In 1965, Larry Horwitz was a 24- year-old "political junkie" who joined the staff of freshman Congressman John Conyers Jr. of Detroit. As some- thing of a veteran — he had been in Washington for three years, working as a legislative and administrative as- sistant to a senator and two con- gressmen — he helped newcomers learn their way around Capitol Hill, including Mr. Tenzer's staff across the hall. He had seen quite a bit outside of Washington, too. Mr. Horwitz, a Southfield resident and executive vice president of the Economic Alliance for Michigan, had left his hometown of Los Angeles to study political science at Harvard University. He interned in Washington while he was a stu- dent, but school went by the wayside. His heart was in the swelling grass- roots civil-rights movement, not acad- emia. In the spring of 1964, Mr. Horwitz drove through the South, landing in Jackson, Miss., where he worked for the Mississippi Freedom Democrat- ic Party. Eerily, he had driven through Meridian, Miss., the night three young men, two of whom were Jews and one of whom was black, were beaten and shot to death on their way to help reg- ister black voters. Mr. Horwitz says he learned, upon arriving in Jackson, that three young men on their way to Jackson were missing, but it took weeks to learn of their fate. Traveling through the state as a young white male with out-of- state license plates was frightening as it was; Mr. Horwitz didn't tell his par- ents about being in Mississippi until he left. Mr. Horwitz, 55, eventually re- turned to Washington to work for Mr. Conyers, the first black congressman to serve on the Judiciary Committee. It was unusual for the House to be in session on holidays, but in 1965 a critical vote was scheduled on Rosh Hashanah eve. According to the his- torian's office of the U.S. House of Rep- resentatives, members voted to consider home rule for the District of Columbia that day, but Mr. Horwitz remembers only that the vote involved domestic policy. And, he recalls, it was important enough for House Speaker John W. McCormack to visit each of his fellow Democrats with entreaties to vote. But Mr. Tenzer, who was Orthodox, did not plan to be there. Neither did the other Jewish congressmen. Mr. Horwitz remembers that Southern Democrats were opposed to the legislation, so the vote of the Jew- ish Democrats, particularly Mr. Ten- zer's, was key. Mr. Tenzer, a member of the House Judiciary Committee, was a "mainline" Democrat" and "very well-known, very active." "Their absence would have killed the bill," Mr. Horwitz says. The Jewish members of Congress were torn between their professional and religious obligations. "Their loyalty to the party, com- mitment to the cause — how would this look? Tenzer's view — and he con- sulted with his rabbi — was that they had an obligation to fulfill their re- sponsibility as public officials. "And as long as they observed Rosh Hashanah, there was no specific site required. If they had a minyan, they could have a service. It wouldn't vio- late Jewish law to leave the service and go vote. Since Tenzer decided it was OK, everybody else decided it was OK," Mr. Horwitz says. It was decided that they would hold the Rosh Hashanah service in the non- denominational chapel adjacent to the House floor in the U.S. Capitol build- ing. Mr. Tenzer "hustled up a minyan," recruiting the young man across the hall. "An ark was brought in, yarmulkes, prayer books, and i as a young ad- ministrative assistant to another con- gressman, became the shammes, passing out books, t2llit, getting can- dles. "While the service was going on, votes were being taken. When the , bells would ring, members would evac- uate. Some would go first, others would go later so we wouldn't lose the minyan," Mr. Horwitz recalls. He describes the service as "eclec- tic — Reform, Conservative." The par- ticipants were slightly uneasy, having to celebrate without family and with- out a rabbi. It also was "disjointed" because members were casting their votes. "This was a peculiar service peo- ple floating in and out," Mr. Horwitz says. But the congressmen had ful- filled their duties, albeit in unortho- dox fashion. "I've spent most of my life working with people of conflicting backgrounds to get them to work together. What was memorable to me (about the Rosh Hashanah service) was this is what was worked out to meld these re- sponsibilities," he says. Pleased that the bill passed, Mr. McCormack dropped in on the service, put on a yarmulke and took a seat. "He came into the service as his way of expressing appreciation. He was a very ardent Catholic. "He sat there, participated in the service and thanked the members. The service went on and somebody brought a bottle of wine and said Kid- dush," Mr. Horwitz says. "I'm con- vinced McCormack had a yarmulke on his head many times in his life." Mr. Horwitz, a past chairman of the American-Arabic and Jewish Friends of Metropolitan Detroit and a member of Congregation T'chiyah in Detroit, is husband to clinical so- cial worker Naomi Pinchuk and fa- ther to Judith, 14, and Beth, 11. He says he was and still is a "practical idealist." ❑ •