ALAN HITSKY Associate Editor S ophie Tribuck Sulkes has lived in Detroit most of her life, been heavily involved in Jewish causes and is a Shah- bat prayer leader at her home, Hecht- man Jewish Apartments. , But one of the great regrets in her life of 88 years was that she never had a bat mitzvah. That changed recently when Mrs. Sulkes joined a reunion °filer son's adult bar and bat mitzvah classes in Florida, and recited the Torah bless- ings, the Torah portion and the Sh'ma — without rehearsal. Her son Al, a Detroit Central High School and University of Michigan graduate, has lived in Florida 29 years. He and his wife Loyce have been involved with Temple Israel in Tallahas- see since 1990, and he has taught adult education classes and helped 18 men and women become b'nai mitzvah. "Every time I taught one of these classes, mother always said to me that she wished she could become bat mitzvah," Sulkes said. Mrs. Sulkes and her husband Joseph retired to Florida in 1972. Mr. Sulkes had been an active Mason and Shriner in Detroit and a president of Beth Aaron Synagogue. Mrs. Sulkes was a lifelong member of Na'amat, B'nai B'rith and Hadassah, and in Florida was sisterhood president at Clearwater's Beth Shalom Synagogue. Mr. Sulkes died in 1978 and Mrs. Sulkes remained in Florida until 1992, when she returned to Detroit and moved into Hechtman in West Bloomfield. But each year, she visits her family in Tallahassee for the High Holidays. In October, just after Yom Kippur, Mrs. Sulkes joined the 18 alumni of her son's bar and bat mitzvah classes at a reunion at the Sulkes' home. During the reunion, Sophie Sulkes was called up to the Torah. She used the Torah pointer that had been a gift from her son's first adult b'nai mitzvah class in 1992. "There wasn't a dry eye in the place," Al Sulkes said. "It was a mov- ing event and mother was surrounded with love and affection from everyone who was present." Al Sulkes, who manages the Vac- cines for Children program for the Florida Department of Health, said his mother was born in Russia in 1910 and came to Detroit in 1920. She worked as a saleslady in down- town Detroit and taught Hebrew Sophie Sulkes' long-awaited bat mitzvah. school in Flint. One of her favorite recollections is her involvement in bringing future Israeli Prime Minister Golda Meir to Detroit for a speaking engagement in the 1920s. Mrs. Sulkes, who says she went to the old United Hebrew Schools "way back," was delighted about her bat mitzvah. "There are so many older women in my son's congrega- tion who are becoming bat mitzvah, and I wanted to do it, too." Now that she's back home at Hechtman, she has taken up where she left off every Friday night, lead- ing her fellow residents in lighting the Shabbat candles, making Kid- dush over the wine and Hamotzi over the bread. ❑ 12/11 1998 Detroit Jewish News 55