Metro efl ' Mtn vxr:t tre ,t1 ywur 1 High Holiday Mitzvah Volunteers accompany seniors to cemeteries, but the experience lingers. ROBERT A. SKLAR Editor %TN 9/17 2004 24 he's 95 now but the memory of her late husband still burns brightly in the heart and soul of Martha Hencken. The West Bloomfield resident doesn't often get to visit his gravesite at Hebrew Memorial Park in Clinton Township. She got to visit it on Sunday morning, Sept. 12, as part of Kever Avot, an annual communal event of Temple Israel and Ira Kaufman Chapel. The event helps seniors recite Kaddish at the gravesides of family and friends during the High Holiday season. This year, 113 Temple Israel volunteers assisted 62 Jewish seniors picked up by bus at nine assisted care and independent living complexes. Eleven cemeteries were visited. "Often, seniors lack the means or ability to get to the cemeteries at this time of the year, when we traditionally remember our loved ones who have passed away," said David Techner of Southfield's Kaufman Chapel. "Kever Avot provides the neces- sary combination of resources to Jewish seniors in . the community to reflect on the past while creat- ing new memories." Martha Hencken is the mother of two, grand- mother of four and great-grandma of nine. She called Kever Avot, Hebrew for Graves of Our Ancestors, "a wonderful project." "It's special and convenient," she said. "I went last year, too." Bernard "Ben" Hencken was her second hus- band. He was a pharmacist who ran Don's Drugs, a Detroit landmark on West Seven Mile for many years. She and Ben were married 15 years at the time he died at age 95 in 2002. She described him as remarkable: "a gentleman and a gentle person, in every way. Martha moved to the Lillian and Samuel Hechtman Apartments on the Eugene and Marcia Applebaum Jewish Community Campus so she could visit Ben every day during his final two years. He was living then at the nearby Marvin and Betty Danto Family Health Care Center. In a dvar Torah for the volunteers, Rabbi Harold Loss of Temple Israel talked about how a feeling of family permeates Kever Avot. "It's often the begin- ning of new relationships that last throughout the year," he said. Martha called her volunteer chaperone, Debbie Frommer of West Bloomfield, "a lovely lady who helped me also find the graves of Ben's daughter, Joan Kalen, and Joan's daughter, Andrea. "I want her to come to Hechtman to visit me." Frommer expects to do just that. "She opened her heart to me and wanted me to be a part of her life. I'll definitely go see her," Frommer said. "She's just amazing. At 95, she talks about going over to Danto to help the elderly who can't help themselves." Frommer has worked Kever Avot for three years.