Honoring The Dead Kevod HaMet society seeks dignity for those in unmarked graves. SUSAN TAWIL Special to the Jewish News r f S he died at birth and no one talked about her, but somehow Jay Korelitz of West Bloomfield found out about his Aunt Anna. Ninety years post-mortem, he honored her memory with a memorial service and a gravestone over her previously unmarked grave. Inspired by the experience, Korelitz is now launching Kevod HaMet (Honoring Our Deceased), a project to erect gravestones on metro Detroit's unmarked Jewish graves. He hopes the project will catch on nationwide, but it's quite an undertaking. Jonathan Dorfman, director of Farmington Hills' Dorfman Chapel, esti- mates that there are 3,000-4,000 Jewish unmarked graves in the tri-county area alone. Korelitz spoke with Dorfman initially to help make arrangements for erecting his aunt's gravestone; now Dorfman is helping spearhead the new organi- zation. ,04 4/30 2004 52 AT B1H i913 DAUGHTER OF JAMES SISTEROF NIORR , ITIRY HER MEMORY I-1 KR -R . ifflE 10 BE B BLESS\VIC A gravestone finally marks the grave ofAnna Korelitz, who died as a baby over 90 years ago. "Everything hould be proper and dignified," Dorfman says. "It's the right thing to do." The story began when Korelitz was "tooling around the Internet," as he puts it; and he came across the Irwin I. Cohn Michigan Jewish Cemetery Index, a link on the Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit's Web site. According to archivist Matilda "Tillie" Brandwine, who began the Cemetery Index Project in 1991, the link is the most popular "hit" on the Federation site. It was named for the late Irwin Cohn (father of Federal Judge Avern Cohn), whose foundation sup- plied the funding for this database of Detroit's 32 Jewish cemeteries. The index, still in process, cur- rently contains nearly 67,000 names. Included with each listing are usually the name of the cemetery where the deceased is buried and the plot and section number as well as dates of birth and death. When Korelitz, out of curiosity, typed his last name into the site's search engine, among his known deceased relatives was also listed an Anna Jay Korelitz rests near the Korelitz, buried in the grave covering that was on Turover section of the grave of his Aunt Anna Korelitz, who died as a baby Workmen's Circle Cemetery in Clinton and was placed in an Township. It listed the unmarked grave. gravesite, row and plot number, but no date. Because "Korelitz" is a relatively uncommon name, he felt the unknown Anna must be a relative. That very day, he drove out to the cemetery to locate the grave. "There it was," he says grimly. "A baby's grave with no headstone or marker in an old section with about 10 other unmarked baby graves." - Eerily, although hers is not in a family plot, Anna's grave is only about five plots away from a dif- ferent "Tante Chana" (Aunt Anne) — Anne Korelitz, first wife of Jay's Uncle Morris, who died in 1944, and who would have been Anna's sister-in-law. Jay Korelitz remembered that his father, Harry, who died in 1984, had mentioned a sister who died at birth, but refused to answer any questions about her. Korelitz surmises that this must have been his Aunt Anna, and that she died in 1913. Most likely, because of financial circumstances, Anna's parents saw to a proper Jewish burial for their baby, but were unable to afford a gravestone. Setting Things Right "I knew what had to be done," Korelitz says. He contacted Dorfman Chapel and told them the story. They, in turn, contacted Chesed Shel Ernes (Hebrew