Jewish Genealogy Bears Fruit Detroiter and family descendants from Belarus are reunited in Israel after 40 years. SCHELLY TALALAY DARDASHTI Jerusalem Post R uth (Yendick) Vosko, 78, of Farmington and her airline pilot son, Mark Vosko, 50, of Henderson, NV, arrived in Israel March 2 to meet the Beersheva family with whom all contact had been broken since 1938. The excitement on both sides was enormous. With my column in the Jerusalem Post, I was among those that ,made it happen. One of the most wonderful aspects to Jewish genealogy is the opportunity to help reunite families who have been separated for decades. This family's reunion can be traced to the power of the Internet: networking of individual genealogists in Tel Aviv, Detroit, San Diego and Atlanta (to name a few); and connections between Jewish genealogical societies around the world, including Tel Aviv, Michigan and Beersheva. Working together and through the Web site JewishGen, we connected the two families in only two weeks. In mid January, I received a phone call and letter from Beersheva resident Oleg Pronin, who had emigrated from Mogilev, Belarus, about 10 years ago. He contacted me on the suggestion of his former Mogilev neighbor Aleksandra Talalay of Karmiel, who happens to be my cousin. While visiting Aleksandra, Pronin related a story his late mother had told him adding that he wanted to find his relatives in Detroit, if possible. She suggested he contact me. Oleg's mother, Ita Samuelovich Pronin, was the daughter of Shmuel Davidovich Induch, the son of Aron Moshe (sometimes known as Hillel Moshe) Induch. ha's aunt Zlate Peshe was the daughter of Aron (or H&J) Moshe, and her siblings were Joseph, Shmuel, Shayna Freidl and Chaya Sora. The family had originally lived in Chaussy, a small town in Mogilev, Belarus. Ita, who died in 1984, told her son that her aunt Zlate Peshe had emigrated from Chaussy to America in 1924 to join an older brother, Girsh (Joe Yendick). Zlate was very beautiful and had won a beauty competition. Eventually, she married a Mr. Pinsky, "the richest man in Detroit who owned an automobile business," according to Pronin's mother. Until 1938, Zlate lived in happiness and they were blessed with three daughters. That year, a terrible tragedy occurred. Mr. Pinsky and his driver were killed in an automobile acci- dent and Zlate suffered leg injuries. After recovering, she married again. When World War II began, Oleg Pronin said all contact was ended with the family in America. Pronin said to me, "I want to know what happened to Zlate and her family. I want very much to find her. Please help me." He made an offer I couldn't refuse as a researcher and also as a fellow Mogilev descendant. , Finding Pinskers Now, this Brooklyn-born girl knows little about . Detroit. So I turned to the JewishGen discussion group and posted a message with the subject "Detroit expert- ise required." Within a day or so, I had received multiple answers, even before I could search Internet resources available to me from Tel Aviv. Marc Manson, who was then president of the Farmington Hills-based Jewish Genealogical Society of Michigan, offered his encyclopedic knowledge of March 3 at the Paradise Negev Hotel in Beersheva, Israel: Svetlana Pronin, Mark Vosko, Ruth Vosko, Oleg Pronin, Schell), Talalay Dardashti and Irina 'Ira" Pronin. 7/26 2002 42