To Life! SPIRITUALITY Passionate About Prayer Adat Shalom celebrates Cantor Vieder's enduring role. Kimberly Lifton Special to the Jewish News hen Mark Schostak took his son, Josh, to Adat Shalom Synagogue last winter for one of his final bar mitzvah lessons with Cantor Larry Vieder, he assumed he would drop him off and pick him up when the les- son was done. His plans changed when he tried to leave the cantor emeritus' office. "No, Mark. Sit down:' Cantor Vieder said firmly in his thick Czechoslavakian accent. Without hesitation, Schostak took a seat. "Josh was shocked:' Schostak recalled. "He told me later that he never saw me respond so quickly before. I explained that out of respect to Cantor Vieder, because of who he is and what he represents, I did what he asked me to. You don't say no to Cantor Vieder." Tough, but just as loving, Cantor Vieder, 82, has been teaching Adat Shalom mem- bers for 45 years that their voices are extensions of the heart. In that time, he has helped many learn how to pray with meaning — the same way he learned to pray. "My job is to reach out to the heart of the worshipper;' Cantor Vieder explained. Earlier this week, at a tribute dinner, the Farmington Hills synagogue paid homage to Cantor Vieder as a teacher, role model and inspiration to many generations of Adat Shalom families. The synagogue unveiled the new Cantor Larry Vieder foyer, an honor made possible by the Schostak Family Foundation. W 18 A Hard Life Officially, the cantor has been retired for more than a decade. But that status has not kept him away from his home away from home — Adat Shalom Synagogue. For the eight months a year, he lives in Michigan, he goes to Adat Shalom every day. He saves his relaxation time for the winter months, when he and wife Gitta retreat to South Florida. "What can I say about Larry?" Gitta said, smiling like a newlywed. "I love him, and I adore him. We are always together, and I can't imagine not being with him." Their life together in Detroit is far dif- ferent from their separate lives in Prague after World War II. The families of both were wiped out during the Holocaust, and each was still ridden with pain when they met. Cantor Vieder lost everyone — two sisters, four brothers and his parents. Gitta and her sister, Nina (now Adler), were the only survivors in their family. A mutual friend fixed them up. She was pretty and gentle; he was handsome "and very thin:' Gitta said. He owned a general store several hundred miles away from where they met. They each wanted to rebuild their families. He knew dating would be difficult. After their first meeting, he invited Gitta to escort him to a wedding. He told her he liked her, and that he was too busy with work to travel often to see her. Would she marry him, he asked? She would like to marry him, she said. But she could not leave her sister — they only had each other. "I'll take her, too:' he said. "I was glad she had a sister. She had nobody, and I had nobody. Now we had a family." Three weeks after their first meeting, the Vieders were married. It was April 14, 1946. He was 23 and she was 20. Cantor Vieder wrote their ketubah and chanted the sheva brachot during a wed- ding ceremony with just two witnesses, Nina and a friend. Nina lived with them in a small Czechoslovakian resort town after November 3 2005 „TN