Community "I lost my whole family," Cantor Vieder says. "I was the only soul left. I built up a new family. That is my reward. I thank God for my beautiful family." The office of the retired cantor appears as busy with present-day tumult as with remnants of the past. The photos are reminders that he taught Detroit Cantors Ralph Goren from Shaarey Zedek, Earl Berris from B'nai Moshe and Southfield cantor Barry Ulrich. His walls are covered with diplomas and plaques. Pictures of family and congregational friends hang near a framed gift reading, "World's Greatest Cantor" and a citation marking the establishment•of the Hazzan Larry Vieder Scholarship Fund by the Cantors Assembly in 1996:blending the most significant areas of his life. Photos of bar mitzvah students smiling, reading Torah, posing with their cantor, are not just reminders from the past. Friday is still Cantor Vieder's day to visit Hillel Day School of Metropolitan Detroit, where he teaches the newest candidates. Delighting in his work with youth, the cantor says others call him to ask, "'How do you get kids to learn?'" His secret is, "Be nice. Encourage them to do as much as they can. You can't force children." He advises parents, "Leave it up to me. When he goes up there (on the bima) you'll be proud of him — or her. Women read Torah here, and they count in the minyan," he adds. Marc Kay, associate director, education and youth for the synagogue says, "Even from the beginning, he had a strong sense that the future was in the involve- ment of youth, teaching them to pray and lead services. It shows in his own children and grandchildren in their torial Concert" honoring e Cantor Larry Vieder, will ewish Chamber Choir of .ts under the direction of Cantor . *.t>i performance by Cantor Vieder, the country will perform. Henrique Ozur Bass of om, Md.; Cantor Barry ury Jewish Center, Woodbury N.Y.; sa Pomerantz-Boro of Tifereth Israel e, San Diego, Calif. More participants are Cantor Lori Corrsin of **pie Israel, West Bloomfield; Cantor Raphael Frieder of Temple Israel, Great Neck, N.Y.; Cantor Howard Glantz of Adat Shalom Synagogue, Farmington Hills; and Y'Shaya. Grama of Congregation Rodeph Shalom, Bridgeport, Conn. Also on the program are Cantor Jacob Ben Zion Mendelson ofTernple Israel Center, White Plains, N.Y; Cantor Harold Orbach of Temple Israel, West Bloomfield; Cantor Morton Shames of Temple Beth El, Spriqfield, Mass.; Cantor Faith Steinsnyder of Temple Beth El, Spring Valley, N.Y.; and Cantor SteVen Stoehr of Congregation Beth Shalom, Northbrook, Ill. Concert chairmen are Cantors Glantz and oehr, and Joel Gershenson" and Gerrie Sollish. Tickets are available at no charge. For informa- on, call (248) 851-5100. Spirituality United Synagogue Youth leadership involvement." Referring to Cantor Vieder as the respected and revered grandfather of the synagogue, Kay describes a recent Passover service. As the congregation read quiet- ly, he says, "From way, way in the back of the sanctuary a couple of first or second graders sang the words out loud." Cantor Vieder, from the bima, "heard them and joined in, singing with them. He is always responsive to what kids are doing, making them feel good about Judaism." The shomer Shabbat (Shabbat observant) cantor and his wife now live across the street from the synagogue, close enough to walk to services. Yet the four-bedroom house where the couple raised their family can be seen through his office windows, with a path running from the synagogue parking lot to the home, where many Shabbat guests were welcomed through the years. In retirement since 1993, Cantor Vieder says his . workweek has been reduced to four or five days instead of seven. Recalling the previous week, he tells of offici- ating at an unveiling, a baby naming, a funeral and a wedding, all on the same Sunday — "This is retire- ment?" asks the man, who also organized and runs a minyan of Detroiters who hold Friday-night services during their winter vacations in Florida. The cantor soon will begin preparations for High Holiday services, a duty now shared with Cantor Glantz. "He is probably busier and more called upon and more beloved than a great deal of non-retired, non- emeritus charznim [cantors]," says Cantor Glantz. Honored to co-chair the event for Cantor Vieder, he says, "The fact that it is for Larry makes it a pleasure. I don't know what I would do without him as a col- league, or as a friend. He knows the ins and outs of the cantorate." From his birth name of Meyer ben Tzion to Ladislav, a more mainstream name taken in earlier adulthood, to his very American name today of Larry, the cantor says his life has been all about faith. "What would I gain if I did not keep faith?" he asks. "They closed our schools but I never forgot what I learned." His rise to success included performing with the likes of Hugarian Cantors Heller of Siget and Yehoshua Wieder of Misholz, and watching former students become Torah readers and rabbis. Cantor Vieder still says the tribute bestowed upon him is a surprise. And he steadfastly maintains, "I don't need an honor." Cantorial Service Cantor Vieder is an ex-officio, executive board member and past vice chairman of the tri-state region of the Cantors Assembly, past president of the Detroit Cantors Council and holds an honorary fellow degree of the Cantor's Institute of the JTS. Other honors include a Doctor of Music Honoris Causa and a Citation of Honor from JTS and the \loyal Award from the Cantors Assembly. Memberships include the Jewish Community Center of Metropolitan Detroit, Holocaust Memorial Center in West Bloomfield, United States Holocaust Memorial Center, B'nai B'rith Tikva Lodge, Israel Cancer Society, Friends of Hillel Day School, American Jewish Congress, National Foundation for Cancer Research and Simon Wiesenthal Center in Los Angeles. He also was a char- ter member of the Disabled American Veterans. ❑ 5/19 2000 74 Veteran Talent Music of Cantor Shalom Kalib will be heard during cantors' convention. dat Shalom Synagogue's Cantor Emeritus Larry Vieder will bring special connections to A Detroit's Jewish musical community when he per- forms at the "Shit Joy" concert, presented in his honor on Wednesday, May 24. His song selection, "Birchat Kohanim," is the composition of Cantor Reuven Boyarsky, the father of the late Esther Allan, who with her husband Norman, was an integral part of Adat Shalom for many years. Cantor Howard Glantz, the congrega- tion's cantor, delights in the association, recalling during difficult years in Mat Shalorn's history. "Many said Norman [Allan] saved the synagogue financially and Cantor Vieder saved it . spiritually." In choosing his music, Cantor Vieder selected an arrangement by a local colleague, Cantor Shalom Kalib of Farmington Hills, who is cantor of Congregation Beth Israel in Flint and profes- sor emeritus of music at Eastern Michigan University. He recently completed volume one of a 20 - year project, documenting the synagogue music of Eastern European Jews, from the 1880s through the Holocaust era. He is a walking encyclopedia of cantorial his- tory and repertoire, says Cantor Glantz of Cantor Kalib. Performing the arrangement with Cantor Vieder will be the Adat Shalom Men's Chorus, directed and accompanied by Martin Liebman. The choir includes Lawrence Allan, grandson of Cantor Boyarsky; Cantor Larry Vieder's sons Mark and Sanford Viecler, who grew up at Adat Shalom; and Cantors Ralph Goren of Congregation Shaarey Zedek, Earl Berris of Congregation B'nai Moshe and Barry Ulrich of Southfield. Cantor Kalib was flattered to also be approached by Zarnir Chorale of Metropolitan Detroit to pre- sent a May 23 workshop on 50 years of the cantor's music during the Cantors Assembly convention. Benjamin Cohen directs the six-year-old Zamir Chorale, a community-wide Jewish chorus. It will be joined at the workshop by these featured soloists: Cantors Moshe Taube of Pittsburgh, Louis Danto of Toronto and David Lefkowitz of the Park Avenue Synagogue in New York. Cantor Lefkowitz will chair the workshop and provide commentary. The chorale's president, Lawrence S. Katkowsky, says, "Rarely, if ever, has world-class Jewish music composed by a Detroit-area artist (been) performed by a quality Detroit-area Jewish musi- cal organization." The workshop will be recorded in hopes of being released as the Zamir Chorale's first CD. — Shelli Liebman Dorfinan, staff writer The free workshop will take place 1:30 p.m. Tuesday, May 23, at the Hyatt Regency Hotel in Dearborn. For a guest pass, call Gerrie Spalter at (248) 357 - 5544. N. N.