Obituaries are updated regularly and archived on JN Online: www.detroitjewishnews.com A Hatred of Injustice DAVID SACHS n Editorial Assistant al Shapiro, unable to pay for college during the Depression, wound up riding the rails westward as a hobo. Starting in New York and traveling across America, he witnessed the plight of desperately poor people, especially African Americans. In San Francisco, striking longshoremen persuaded him not to take a waterfront job — winning him over to the union cause that would define the rest of his life. Harold L. Shapiro, 83, a labor activist and civil rights champion in Detroit for five decades and a political mentor of the late Detroit Mayor Coleman Young, died Sept. 21 of cancer. Survivors include his wife, Esther Shapiro, long-time head of the city's consumer affairs department. Daughter Andrea Shapiro said, "One of the most remarkable things about my father, besides all of the struggles that he led for workers, was his very, very strong commitment early on to civil rights. He inherited a very strong humanitarian ideal from his parents. He had a visceral hatred of bigotry and injustice." Mr. Shapiro was instrumental in inte- grating labor leadership after World War II and helping African Americans reach political power in Detroit. "Hal was a white eagle who now has flown into the sun," said former UAW official Dave Moore, an African American. In the late 1940s, Moore worked with Mr. Shapiro to found the National Negro ISADORE "CHINKY" ASH, 81, of Oak Park, died Sept. 26. He is survived by his wife, Rosalyn Ash; son and daughter-in-law Steven and Vicky Gaines of Livonia; daughter Susan Tuttleman of Cincinatti; grandchildren Grant Gaines, Logan Gaines, Ashlee Tuttleman. Contributions may be made to Alzheimer's Association, 17220 W 12 Mile Rd., Ste.100, Southfield, MI 48076. Services and interment were at Hebrew Memorial Park. Arrangements by Hebrew Memorial Chapel. FRANK E. BAGDADE, 93, of Farmington Hills, died Sept. 20. Mr. Bagdade was a self-employed accountant and a graduate of the Detroit College of Business. He was a member and secretary-treasurer of the Louis Marshall Lodge of B'nai B'rith and a member of the Keiden Lodge. He was also a past member of the Accountants Guild. Mr. Bagdade is survived by his wife, 10/1 1999 138 Detroit Jewish News Labor Council, which sought to integrate the upper echelons of trade union leader- ship. Their efforts helped get Coleman Young elected the first black member of the executive board of the Wayne County CIO Council. "Hal was a white man who was willing to take positions regarding black folks that were unpopular at the time," Moore said. Mr. Shapiro later helped rally union support for Young's election in the 1960s as a delegate to the Michigan constitu- tional convention and as a member of the state Senate, then, in 1973, as Detroit's first African American mayor. Mr. Shapiro was born in the small, upstate New York town of Jeffersonville. He met his future wife in the early 1940s. "By the time I met him in New York City, he was working in a textile plant," Esther Shapiro said. "Upon seeing the inequality between men and women, he organized the plant and led them on a strike." In 1944, the Fur and Leather Workers Union hired Mr. Shapiro to organize locals in Detroit. "From then on, his whole career was as an international labor representative," she said. Based in Detroit, Mr. Shapiro orga- nized many diverse groups, including meat cutters in the Midwest and cannery workers in Texas border towns. He helped African American women get pay equal to white women locally at Frigid Foods. The Shapiros were also in the forefront for racial equality. "My mother and father were founding members of Michigan Friends of the South in the 1960s," said daughter Elyse Bagdade; son and daughter-in-law Daniel and Sarita Bagdade of West Bloomfield; grandsons Jeffrey and Michael Bagdade; brother Benjamin Bagdade; sister and brother-in-law Frances and Harry Eilen. Mr. Bagdade was the dear brother of the late Michael Bagdade. Interment was at Clover Hill Park Cemetery. Contributions may be made to a charity of one's choice. Arrangements by Ira Kaufman Chapel. JOSEPH BERNSTEIN, 87, of Glencoe, Ill., died Sept. 18. Mr. Bernstein was an attorney, real estate developer and philanthropist in the Chicago area. One scholarship he created was at the Feinberg Graduate School of the Weizmann Institute of Science in Israel. Mr. Bernstein is survived by his wife, Emily Bernstein; daughters and sons-in-law Judith Bernstein and William Pope of Columbus, Ohio, Debra Bernstein and Barry Siegel of Bloomfield Hills, Bonnie and David Lasky of Northbrook, Ill., Sheila and Harold Shapiro Andrea. "They did a great deal of fund- raising and providing legal aid during the civil rights movement." Since the 1940s, Mr. Shapiro also helped raise over a half million dollars for social justice grants through the Buck Dinner Committee. In the political arena, he helped Rev. Charles Hill in his unsuccessful campaign to become the first African American elected to the Detroit City Council. He assisted the congressional campaigns of U.S. Rep. John Conyers and former Congressman George Crockett. After retiring from union activity, Mr. Shapiro was appointed by Mayor Young to the Detroit Police Commission. He served from 1983-88 and 1993-95. Said Esther Shapiro, "One of Hal's first actions on the police commission was to draw up guidelines for police conduct on picket lines." Elliot Gross of Pound Ridge, N.Y.; eight grandchildren; sister Marcelle Orman of Dallas. Interment was in Chicago. Contributions may be made to a charity of one's choice. Placed at the request of the family by Ira Kaufman Chapel. SANFORD CHARLES BRODSKY, 57, of West Bloomfield, died Sept. 23. Mr. Brodsky was a radiopharmaceutical salesman, consultant and territorial manager for Du Pont Pharma. He was also a 32nd Degree Mason and a member of the Society for Nuclear Medicine. Mr. Brodsky is survived by his wife, Barbara Brodsky; son Martin Brodsky of Pittsburgh; daughters and son-in-law Audrey and Darren Goldberg of Virginia, Nicole Brodsky; mother Becky Brodsky of Southfield; brothers and sister-in-law Julius Brodsky of Illinois and Bernard and Sharon Brodsky of Arizonia. He was the loving son of the late Morris Brodsky. During the McCarthy era, Mr. Shapiro, as leader of the activist Fur and Leather Workers Union, was called before the House Un-American Activities Committee. Afterward, he would expose the bullying nature of the committee by playing recordings of his testimony at union rallies. Remembering life in her family grow- ing up, Andrea Shapiro recalled that "there were always people in the house — N,vorkers, artists, intellectuals, actors. Anyone coming through Detroit who was active in progressive and trade union caus- es usually wound up at our house. It was very exciting." Son Mark Shapiro described his father as very intelligent, deeply thoughtful and a sometimes poet. A poem Mr. Shapiro wrote to his wife was incorporated into the pro- gram of his memorial service, held Sept. 26 in Detroit. Speaking of his yearning for social justice as well as love, the poem said in part: "Can a lover sing of love when hate is high?" It concluded with the desire to "break men's chains and set us free, to love and live the way we hoped to be." Mr. Shapiro is survived by his wife, Esther; son and daughter-in-law, Mark and Ann Shapiro; daughter Andrea Shapiro; grandchildren Nick Shapiro, Peter Shapiro, Matthew O'Connor and Evelyn O'Connor; sisters Ruthe Gottfried and Florence Meyer; and sister-in-law Jeanne Guiser. Contributions may be made to the Metro Council of Newspaper Unions-Strike Defense Fund, 3300 Book Building, Detroit, MI 48226; ACLU Fund of Michigan, 1249 Washington Blvd., Suite 2910, Detroit, MI 48226; or Henry Ford Health System Hospice, 1 Ford Place, Suite 2A, Detroit, MI 48202. El Interment was at Adat Shalom Memorial Park. Contributions may be made to the Karmanos Cancer Institute. Arrangements by Ira Kaufman Chapel. ELAINE CANVASSER, 77, of Farmington Hills, died Sept. 26. Mrs. Canvasser was a past president of the Hampton Chapter of Women's American ORT, a member of Hadassah and Congregation B'nai Moshe. She is survived by her husband, Charles Canvasser; sons and daughters-in-law Richard and Phyllis Canvasser of West Bloomfield, Dr. Bruce and Inez Canvasser of Aurora, Ore.; daughter and son-in-law Sue Ann Canvasser and Jeffrey Howard of Bloomfield Hills; grandchildren Stacy Ekelman and fiance Dale Goldberg, Meera Canvasser and Katie Howard; mother Ruth Albert; sister and brother-in-law Bernice and Alfred Deutsch of West Bloomfield. Interment at Clover Hill Park Cemetery. Contributions may be made to a charity of one's choice. Arrangements by Ira Kaufman Chapel.