A Different Kind Of Seeing Mathematician, observant Jew and lover of life, Abe Nemeth marches on, guided only by gumption. LYNNE MEREDITH COHN STAFF WRITER be Nemeth has never been able to see. But the 78-year-old mathe- matician has seen a lot in life — from growing up on Manhat- tan's Lower East Side to trav- eling the globe in an effort to expand opportunities for the at Grand Central Station," then take a bus from White Plains, N.Y., to Purchase," he recalls. And to top it off, the train to White Plains left Grand Central from a different track every day. "The day before I was first scheduled to make the trip, I went all alone. I knew the subway systems very well. I spent all day walking back and forth from train station to bus and learned my way." There was still no way to write math in Braille, "so I developed my own private system," he says. One day, a blind physicist asked Nemeth if he had a table of integrals. Nemeth handed him the Braille version. The physicist was "so impressed, he went to the Braille Uniform Type community father taught me all about my religion. He told me it's better to light a candle than curse the dark." The day before Nemeth got married the first time, he recited the Haftorah at his aufruf "by heart." Hebrew Braille came about around the time Israel became a state, Nemeth says. A blind rabbi, Harry J. Brevis (a native Detroiter who lost his sight), promoted the system. First, the Hebrew Bible was put into Braille; Nemeth and his father were "giv- en the job of proofreading the Book of Psalms" and the minor prophets, he re- calls. In 1955, Nemeth was hired to teach mathematics at the University of Detroit. blind. He invented a Braille code for mathe- matics, which bears his name. And on the High Holidays, he reads a Haftorah — from memory — at Adat Shalom Syna- gogue in Farmington Hills. "The hardest thing about not having sight is the negative attitudes of other peo- ple," Nemeth says. 'They assume, if you're blind, you're not intelligent and you don't hear too well. I have learned alternate ways to do all the sT__ things I need to do. For me, blindness is just a nuisance." Today, Nemeth lives in Southfield, with his second ,2 wife, Edna. She has three chil- 2 dren, eight grandchildren and three great-granddaughters, but he has no children of his own. Nemeth met his first wife in 1943. After she died, he met Edna, and the pair married in 1971. Abe Nemeth spent his child- hood speaking Yiddish and playing in the New York streets with playmates like Zero Mostel (the principal ac- tor in Fiddler on the Roof). He attended New York City pub- lic schools and lived during the week at the New York Jewish Guild for the Blind, a residence for non-seeing children and adults. "I always had a secret am- bition to be a mathematician," Nemeth recalls. At Brooklyn College, he signed up for all the math courses he could take, "but my advisers discouraged me from majoring in math" be- cause at the time there was no Braille code for mathematics. Abe Nemeth's grandfather told him: "It's better to light a candle than curse the dark." "I, being a compliant blind person, listened to them," says Nemeth, cooperative effort between the U.S. and He taught at U of D for 30 years, first who majored in psychology. He went on England. He asked me to write up a re- teaching math, then heading up a com- to obtain a master's degree in psychology port. They liked what they read, approved puter science department that he inau- gurated. In 1985, he retired. from Columbia University, but continued my code." Both Nemeth and Edna were involved In 1952, the Nemeth Code became the taking math classes at night at Brooklyn standard Braille alphabet for writing in faculty life at U-D. Her first husband College. But Nemeth could not find a job as a math in the United States. It has been re- was a professor of metallurgy, and both psychologist, so he enrolled in a math doc- vised three times, and is now used in couples were involved at Adat Shalom. Their first spouses passed away around Canada and New Zealand as well. toral program at Columbia. Before there was a Braille code for He- the same time, Nemeth recalls, and the Nemeth first taught math at Brooklyn and Manhattan colleges, and later at the brew, Nemeth was chanting the blessings clergy at Adat Shalom arranged the match. Purchase, N.Y. campus of Manhattan Col- in his Orthodox childhood home. "Since I know Hebrew very well, I know "I could not go to Hebrew school, yeshi- lege. "I had to take two subway lines, change va or Talmud Torah," he says. "My grand- almost all the prayers by heart," he says. Currently, Nemeth is working for the Jewish Braille Institute, putting into Braille Rabbi Jules Harlow's version of the Conservative prayerbook, Siddur Sim Shalom. "Braille is very bulky — my job is to put into one volume, for one occasion," so blind individuals don't have to lug multiple books to shul on each occasion. Nemeth has built up quite a reputa- tion over time. President George Bush ap- pointed Nemeth as one of his 1,000 points of light, a program recognizing out- standing individuals. Governor John Engler appointed Nemeth to the Michigan Conunission for the Blind, and later made the Democrat the commission's chairman. But after two years, Nemeth resigned, saying "politics is not my cup of tea." "I met with many state legislators. They are still trying to pass a bill re- quiring teachers to teach Braille to blind children — 26 states already passed [it]. To teach, teachers have to learn Braille," which is why they oppose the measure, he says. He is a member of the research and development committee of the National Federation of the Blind, and he has developed a talking scientific calcula- tor. After the Nemeth Code was developed, its creator got a call from the State Department, asking whether he wanted to go to the Soviet Union. Ap- parently, the Russian gov- ernment wanted to learn about the code, and in 1972 they paid for Nemeth and his wife to travel there. "Four years later, I got another call from the So- viet Union. They wanted: to know how a blind per- son can access the screen of a computer," he says. Trip No. 2 came in 1976. He has traveled the world, had what he describes as two successful marriages, and he still finds a little humor in every situation. Asked whether his non-sight senses are extra perky due to his blind- ness, Nemeth takes the opportunity to in- struct. "We have a large amount of redundant capacity built into us," he replies. "My senses are better educated, not more sen- sitive." ❑