• Cooler Than He Realizes Dr. Karol Zakalik became an overnight hockey fan after treating injured Red Wings and meeting the team. LYNNE MEREDITH COHN StaffWriter T he least interesting thing about Karol Zakalik is that he is one of a team of doc- tors treating injured Red - Wings Vladimir Konstantinov and Sergei Mnatsakanov. Really. What's more interesting is his story about fleeing Poland in the late 1960s, then trying to learn English, fit into the stereotypical American dream and meld into the mainstream of Oak Park. In Poland, he says, "I was the Jew; here I was a Pollack." "We were basically undercover" in Poland, says the 41-year-old recently divorced neurosurgeon. "We heard there might be another undercover Jew in the neighborhood ... [got] matzah from abroad, kept it secret." Born in the city of Szczecin in northwest Poland, Zakalik's parents hid the family's Jewish identity from young Karol until he was about 7 or 8. He learned about it, he says, "from kids calling me `Jew.'" In seventh grade (1968), his family joined the last wave of Jews to leave Poland. Anti-Semitism inspired by the 1967 Six-Day War in Israel motivated the last big exodus of Polish Jews. A normally reticent, constraining gov- ernment finally established a policy to expel "Zionists or other foreign ele- ments" from the country, he recalls. Zakalik's dad lost his job, and the fam- , ily got permission to leave. A couple weeks' pitstop in Vienna was followed by the move to Detroit, where the Zakaliks had family who had settled here in the '50s. In America, they observed Judaism more than in Poland, "but I think we are handicapped by lack of education," Zakalik says. When they arrived in Detroit, the Zakaliks had to meld into the main- 11 / 7 1997 84 "I hate to admit it, but I'm stream — that included learn- not a big sports fan," he ing the language, style of dress says shyly. and the overriding characteris- When the Red Wings play- tics of being American. They ers and coaches — all big signed up at the Jewish names and easily recogniz- Community Center, and able in Detroit — swarmed young Karol went to Camp the hospital after the limou- Tamarack. sine accident last June, Somehow, he managed to Zakalik says they had to become entirely American in introduce themselves to the about five years. By college, doctor. Zakalik had learned enough Since then, however, he has of the American way to gain become an overnight hock- admission to Inteflex, the ey fan. It had something to 0 University of Michigan's do with the video of last accelerated combined under- season's Stanley Cup cham- graduate and medical school pionship, which he agrees program. He finished med was a unifying factor for school in 1980, followed by the city. an internship at Henry Ford "The players are regular Hospital, residency at the guys, they represent an University of Vermont, study- American dream," Zakalik ing neurology and neuroradi- says. "Something appeals to ology in Montreal and people about a regular guy Denver, then a fellowship in who goes out, does his job pediatric neurosurgery at the and doesn't whine." University of Toronto When Zakalik is not Hospital for Sick Children. performing emergency The cases he sees are often surgeries or tending to the most dire: brain and spine patients, he lives in tumors, aneurysms, water on Bloomfield Hills but likes the brain. The door to s0,* to mountain bike on out- Zakalik's tiny office is wallpa- Dr. Karol Zakalik's o ce door is covered with drawings by his of-the-way trails. Or he's pered with drawings by his youngest patients. reading the New York Times youngest patients, some of ("religiously"), attending which say, "I love you Dr. than happy. symphony or opera performances or Zakalik." "The worst moments are when you traveling out West. "Originally, I didn't want to have do all this work and the results are He's also thought a lot about anything to do with surgery because it unsatisfying — the patient either died what it means for a Jew to be a doctor. was mechanical ... and they were or developed a severe complication. "Why are there a lot of Jewish gung-ho macho. It didn't seem to me Those are tough times because you doctors? Rabbis talk about tikkun to be what being a doctor was all put so much-into it and intellectually olam [repairing the world], helping about." you know not everything can end in a others ... being empathetic, doing But then he did surgery rotations success, but emotionally ..." unto others — one rabbi once asked and found he liked working with his • And yes, there is the Red Wing what the meaning of Torah is in one hands. "I liked the challenge of doing player known as Vladdie and team sentence: `Do unto others as you surgery, putting everything together." masseur now known simply as Sergei. would have them do to you.' Doing He describes his work as "a series of Zakalik operated on one and put a the right thing, being good, mixes in epiphanies," although Zakalik admits small tube into the brain of the other, with being Jewish," he says. ❑ that sometimes the outcome is less to monitor pressure. • 9