Obituaries are updated daily and archived on JN Online: www.d.etroitjewishnews.com MINNIE APPLEBAUM, 96, of ffnai Moshe's Cantor Louis Klein held tremendous meaning for the Gunsberg family. Associate Editor "Dick was in the synagogue choir and we went out with Cantor Klein he familiar strains of the and [his late wife] Sonia. The cantor "Victors" would suddenly was a wonderful man with a wonderful appear in his repetition of sense of humor. He was the Amia'ah the shul. He drew peo- on that Shabbat each ple to him," said November when Ohio Gunsberg. State played the Robert Roth, a past University of president of B'nai Michigan. Moshe, began learning It was part of the from the cantor as a character of the con- child in Oak Park and summate musician, while sitting next to him about whom one of on the synagogue bimah his junior choir mem- for 10 years as an officer bers recalled: "As an 8- of the shul. Roth, Rabbi yea:--old, I thought Elliot Pachter and others about how God Cantor Louis K1 ein credit Cantor Klein with would look and sound helping the synagogue and I always thought through the transition from Oak Park about Cantor Klein on the High to West Bloomfield. Holidays, with his white hat, white "Sonia had died and he was consid- robes, and that voice." ering retirement," Roth said. B'nai The analogy would have tickled Moshe had a succession of rabbis and Cantor Louis Klein, Congregation "he was the glue that was left." B'nai Moshe's cantor for 40 years. The The cantor's European training number of young people at his funeral "just can't be duplicated anymore, Tuesday at the West Bloomfield syna- Roth said. "He was able to facilitate a gogue would have brought a smile to bridge to God — his knowledge, voice his face. and the way he prayed helped people Cantor Klein died Sunday after suf- to develop spiritually" When the can- fering a stroke last week while visiting tor sang the "El Mole Rachamim" his family in Texas. memorial prayer at a funeral, "his voice Young people — his son Maurice, embodied what the prayer meant," daughter-in-law Sally and their chil- Roth said. dren, the Venemar junior choir on the In his eulogy Tuesday, Rabbi High Holidays, other children in the Pachter compared Cantor Klein's 40 synagogue, and his bar and bat mitz- years at B'nai Moshe to the 40 years vah students at B'nai Moshe and Hillel Moses led the Israelites and the 40-year Day School — were the cantor's great reign of King David. All three men joy. "brought unity and comfort to the A close second were his adult con- people," leading with strength, guid- gregants. In recent years he was hob- ance and song, Rabbi Pachter said. bled by two broken hips that necessi- And laughter. "He loved to tell a tated three surgeries, and he moved to joke," said Rabbi Pachter. "He would Fleischman Residence, still close to his start to smile, and begin to laugh B'nai Moshe. Long-time friends/con- before he got to the punch line." gregants — Nellie Friedman, Bernard One of the cantor's favorite punch Klein, Marcel and Magdalene lines, though he wasn't joking, was, Thirman and many others — drove "I'll make you a tape!" Hundreds of him to appointments, to shopping and bar and bat mitzvah students, from to shul. The Thirmans hosted the shiva B'nai Moshe and Hillel Day School of this week. Metropolitan Detroit, learned their "He was so special," recalled Renee tropes from the smiling taskmaster who Gunsberg. "He always came to our recorded their Haftorah so they could house like a member of the family." learn at home between visits to the Her husband, Richard, died earlier this master. year. The fact that Cantor Klein led In later years, he assembled a cadre one of the shiva services at their home ALAN HITSKY T " 3/5 1999 138 Detroit Jewish News of lay cantors who wanted to learn, to sing and to sometimes substitute for B'nai Moshe's cantor. They included Dr. Joe Lewis, now at Congregation Beth Shalom, and B'nai Moshe leaders Len Wanetik, Dr. Jerome Horwitz, Ira Harris, Marc Sussman, Steve Rabinovitz and Milton Resnick. Several of them sang briefly Tuesday at the funeral, under the direction of Cantor Earl Berris. At their last meet- ing, just before his trip to Texas, Cantor Klein worked with them on the Megillat Esther. "We celebrate Purim by telling a story, chanting and helping others," said Rabbi Pachter. "Isn't that the way the cantor led his life?" Other participants at Tuesday's funeral included Rabbis David Nelson of Beth Shalom and Stephen Weiss of Shaarey Zedek, who read psalms, and an honor guard of Masons. Cantor Larry Vieder of Adat Shalom chanted a prayer and Cantor Chaim Najman of Shaarey Zedek spoke on behalf of the Cantors Council of Detroit, which honored Cantor Klein last year with its Lifetime Achievement Award. Cantor Klein, who was 82, was a past president of the Cantors Council and a past officer of the Cantors Assembly of America. He was awarded an honorary doctorate last year by the Jewish Theological Seminary. A native of Romania, the cantor trained before World War II in Belgium and Poland, where he met Sonia. They fled to England with a niece before the war. They came to the United States in 1956, and he held a part-time position in Brooklyn for two years before being hired by B'nai Moshe in 1958. A year later, the congregation moved from Detroit to Oak Park. Cantor Klein is survived by his son and daughter-in-law, Maurice and Sally Klein of Plano, Texas; sister Yudis Klein of Israel; and grandchildren Samuel, Marcus and Laura. Contributions may be made to the Cantor Louis and Sonia Klein Music Fund at Congregation B'nai Moshe, 6800 Drake Rd., West Bloomfield, MI 48322; or the Cantor Louis and Sonia Klein Scholarship Fund at Hillel Day School, 32200 Middlebelt Rd., Farmington Hills, MI 48334. Interment was at Hebrew Memorial Park. Bloomfield Hills, died Feb. 26. Mrs. Applebaum was a member of the David-Horodoker Women's Organization. She is survived by her sons and daugh- ters-in-law, Leonard and Beverly Applebaum of Bloomfield Hills, Eugene and Marcia Applebaum of Bloomfield Hills; grandchildren Ronna and Rick Earnest, Lorie Applebaum, David Applebaum, Lisa Applebaum and Pamela and Todd Wyett; great-grand- children Rebecca Wyett, Molly Wyett and Jordan Earnest; sister Sadie Schwartz. Mrs. Applebaum was the beloved wife of the late Joseph Applebaum. Interment at Clover Hill Park Cemetery. Contributions may be direct- ed to the Karmanos Cancer Institute, 18831 W. 12 Mile Rd., Lathrup Village, MI 48076 and the Eugene and Marcia Applebaum Parenting Center, 4200 Walnut Lake Rd., West Bloomfield, MI 48323. Arrangements by the Ira Kaufman Chapel. SOPHIE ARONSON, 89, of West Bloomfield, died Feb. 21. Mrs. Aronson was the daughter of the late Rabbi Joseph Halevi and the late Michlah Eisenman. She was the lov- ing wife of the late Rabbi Benjamin Aronson. After residing in Detroit and Indianapolis, Mrs. Aronson and her husband spent 21 years of retirement in Jerusalem. She resided at Hechrman Apartments in West Bloomfield for the past four years. She is survived by her daughters and sons-in-law, Judy (Harry) Gordon, Beverly (Rabbi William) Lebeau; son and daughter-in-law Michael (Vivian) Aronson; 10 grandchildren and five great-grandchildren. Services and burial were at Sanhedria Cemetery in Jerusalem. ALFRED BERKOWITZ, 83, of Birmingham, died Feb. 25. Mr. Berkowitz attended Northern High School and studied pharmacy at the Detroit Institute of Technology. During World War II, he served in the Pacific and managed a pharmacy in a mili-