Profiles ;•;: r SU, ' a&m.litWaUst.kazits..gt Remember When • • From the Jewish News pages for this week 10, 20, 30, 40 and 50 years ago.; A Gentle Soul +e•YZI: Family tried to hide Israeli roots to protect their journalist son. One was Rachel Knopoff, now a Manhattan Beach, Calif , physician, who remem- bers Pearl as "thegreatest ntil the very last moment, guy I have ever known. I the family of murdered had a huge crush on him, journalist Daniel Pearl and so probably did most never lost hope that he of the girls in the troop. would be released by his Pakistani He was the funniest, kidnappers and return safely. smartest, nicest guy I ever Dr. Judea Pearl, and his wife, met." Ruth, said in a statement last week Attorney John Liebman that they simply could not believe served as adviser to the that anyone could harm a soh they Explorers. "They were an described as "such a gentle soul" and extraordinary, highly moti- as "the musician, the writer, the sto- vated group of kids," says ryteller, the bridgebuilder." Liebman, who recalls Pearl Pearl's parents and his sisters, as "obvioasly highly intelli- Tamara and Michelle, remembered gent, with a fine sense of him as a "walking sunshine of truth, humor and easy to get humor, friendship and compassion." along with." The family's unflagging hope was At Birmingham High in best illustrated in an e-mail message Van Nuys, Calif, whose the father sent to members of a local current student body Israeli choir on Feb. 21, only a few observed a minute of reporter Daniel Pearl. ourna Slain Wall Street hours before the U.S. State • silence in honor of their slain Department confirmed the brutal slay- alumnus, Pearl "was the teen- reporter. ing of the Wall Street Journal ager everyone wanted to be," After nearly a month of torturous observed the Los Angeles Daily News. "He was the smart, funny waiting, Judea Pearl told fellow musicians of the LA-Shir choir, kid who was a cultural counterpoint to the mall-hopping, which he founded, that "We have learned to cope with the ups materialistic 'Valley Girl' world of the 1970s and early 1980s." and downs of the situation ... We are confident that he will return to us and fairly soon. When that happens, we will all celebrate his homecoming event with Handel's 'Hallelujah.'" TOM TUGEND Jewish Telegraphic Agency v•I• "*•,, The family's grief was shared by a circle of Daniel Pearl's close friends, many of whom went to school with Pearl in the Los Angeles area. One recalled participating in a Passover seder at the Pearl home. "The Pearls are not affili- ated with a synagogue, but they are deeply attached to their heritage and very cognizant of who they are," said Gary Foster, the family spokesman. Israeli newspapers reported that Daniel Pearl had cele- brated his bar mitzvah at the Western Wall in Jerusalem. A San Fernando Valley rabbi who is also a practicing psychol- ogist has been counseling the Pearl family. A private memorial service at the family home in Encino was held last week. Some of Daniel Pearl's closest friends were fellow back- packers between 1978-1981 in an Explorer post, a co-ed affiliate of the Boy Scouts of America. Related commentary: page 32 After graduating from the Technion-Israel Institute of Technology in Haifa, Judea Pearl and his wife Ruth, an electrical engineer, moved to Princeton, N.J., for graduate studies and to work at a research center. Their son was born there in 1963. In 1970, Judea Pearl joined the computer science faculty at UCLA, and in the following decades he earned a reputa- tion as a leading researcher in artificial intelligence. He was elected to the National Academy of Engineering in 1995 "for developing the foundation for reasoning under uncertainty," and earlier spent a sabbatical year at the Weizmann Institute of Science in Israel. Just before his son's abduction, Judea Pearl was notified of a $10,000 award from the London School of Economics for a recent book on his path-breaking studies. During the month following Daniel's kidnapping, there was deep concern that publication of his family's Israeli roots would further endanger his life. Foster, the spokesman, INSIGHT on page 30 "`"•;.' ,A,* "uA,.• The Jewish communities of Detroit and Minsk, Belarus, gather at Holocaust Memorial Center in West Bloomfield to hold memorial services for the more than 9,000 Jews who were murdered in Minsk during World War II. tz; An exhibition of a show of Israe li archeology at New York City s Metropolitan Museum of Art, delayed because of a dispute over "security risks from radical elements," gets under way as the dispute is resolved. Jack Robinson, chairman and chief executive officer of Bloomfield Hills-based Perry Drug Stores, is honored in New York City with the B'nai B'rith American Traditions Award. •:••kw,, K.E.N•:;:q. $ i•; 4 1.1.itirrs NZ ' Detroit's Karl Zipser, son of Mr. and Mrs. Burton Zipser, will be the first Cub Scout in Michigan to receive a new award, the Aleph, given for religious experience. The University of Michigan hon- ors Raoul Wallenberg with its first annual lecture series in his name. A member of the 1932 graduating class of the U/M College of Architecture, Wallenberg was responsible for the rescue of more than 50,000 Jews who would have been exterminated in camps in Hungary. Famous Father Friends Mourn Aii0,404, 1*.. • • \ • • — \ • , ' Id\ \ %••„'‘,\ Oranges from Israel, which gained world fame under the name Jaffe, are now available in food markets in Detroit. In a new mark in interfaith rela- tions, Avraham Harman, Israel's ambassador to the United States, is guest at the University of Detroit and gives a speech on peace in Israel. 03 . \t 's' - -, - ,,,,,k,, s- \\„,‘, sx,- •,, , '' ' S. Z : -,,,,---; `v ,' '%! ;,:„. '*S` \ •\,,,,,,, NNs ''z, 'k •:1, , The first bi-monthly service of the newly formed Suburban Temple, later Temple Emanu-El, is held at the Burton School in Huntington Woods. — Compiled by Holly Teasdle, certi- fied archivist, the Rabbi Leo M Franklin Archives of Temple Beth El. IN 3/1 2002 29