A gramd Now Wored Agimg JN America He's amazed he can wear a yarmulke. She cannot stop raving about America. osif Sakin looked more like a proud graduate about to receive his diploma than a 79-year-old new American. Wearing his World War II beret and his best suit, the retired optical engineer grasped the outstretched hand of the judge. He shook it fervently as he ac- cepted his certificate of American citi- zenship. Mr. Sakin and his wife, Bella Izakson, 69, who shyly gushed over their status as Americans, later sought the judge's autograph and posed for pictures with him and a volunteer from the Jewish War Veterans who helped coordinate the ceremony. The couple, who live in a one-bedroom apartment in Oak Park, cannot stop talk- ing about how much they love America. They rave about how great this country is, how nice its people are, and how plen- tiful the food is. "America is a very beautiful country," Ms. Izakson said. "It gives everything for immigrants: apai tment, food and help." Still, they live a modest life, surviving mostly on government assistance pro- grams. While they miss certain aspects of the former Soviet Union, Russian-lan- guage media help them stay in touch. Aged and faded black-and-white snap- shots from years past and a country now foreign are mixed in an album with col- or photos of more recent holidays and family functions in the United States. Special pictures, like a snapshot of the couple's first night in America, are framed and proudly displayed. Mr. Sakin and Ms. Izakson came to this country from Leningrad six years ago, joining relatives in the Detroit area. "For 50 years, my father, who left Rus- sia at the age of 16, looked for these rel- atives and never found them," said Bonnie Torgow, of Southfield. Mr. Sakin is her father's nephew. In 1988, six months after her father died, Mrs. Torgow received a letter from the couple, originally sent to her father's old Detroit address. Mrs. Torgow wrote back and asked them to consider moving to the Detroit area. She told them to apply for citizen- ship and said her family would sponsor them. Mr. Sakin and Ms. Izakson's son came to the United States with his parents, but after three years in Michigan, he, with his wife and child, was lured to Con- necticut by a promising job offer. Because Mrs. Torgow's family paid for their relatives' trip to the United States, it only took six months from the time the couple filled out an.application until they arrived here. "When they first got here, I took them to Farmer Jack. They couldn't believe the food in the supermarket," Mrs. Tor- gow said. "Yosif was amazed by the free- J EWISH N EWS y CC F- LU C:1 LU 51 dom of religion allowed here, that he could wear a yarmulke and that his grandson could go to a Jewish day school." In the Soviet Union, Mr. Sakin and Ms. Izakson's grandson was beat up be- cause he was Jewish. His kindergarten teacher once told him not to tell people he was Jewish. Today, Mr. Sakin attends Sabbath ser- vices, conducted in Hebrew and Russian, at the Jewish Community Center. On weekdays, if there are not enough peo- ple for a minyan, Mr. Sakin gets a call. Leaving the Former Soviet Union was hard for Mr. Sakin, who was worried about what America would be like. "All my life I was in Russia," he said. "My work was there, every- thing was there, and I left it. When I came to America and saw the good here, I didn't have any regrets." His wife added: "It's painful when you are born in a country and people tell you that you don't belong there." Although most of their family is living in the United States and Israel, Mr. Sakin and Ms. Izakson have a granddaughter, from their Top: A walk to a nearby park is common for Ms. lzakson, Bertha Merzon and Mr. Sakin. The three spend almost every day together. Bottom left: Ms. lzakson takes her ESL classes at Northgate Apartments. She walks from her apartment across the street for the class. Bottom right: Mr. Sakin, a retired optics engineer, works daily on equations and formulas. Previous page: Bella Izakson and Yosif Sakin beam with pride the day they become American citizens.