To Life! SPIRITUALITY Strong Faith Manny Mittleman is the rock of Young Israel of Oak Park. Lynne Meredith Schreiber Special to the Jewish News anny Mittelman, who turned 80 this spring, • has seen six rabbis come and go at Young Israel of Oak Park (YIOP). But he remains a constant fixture in the congre- gation, taking over when the rabbi, gabbai (sexton) or other . leaders are absent. The octogenarian has a palpa- ble faith, which has only grown stronger since his liberation from Auschwitz 60 years ago. "If a person lived through what we lived through, the easi- est thing to do is to say, `God, go where you came from, throw off the yoke," says. Mittelman. "It put in me faith stronger than when I came in." Indeed, Mittelman has built a life he is proud of. He has six children, 22 grandchildren and 13 great-grandchildren. His heating, cooling and electrical business has thrived since 1960. The key, says Mittelman, is to fill every minute in the day "because it lets you forget you have prob- lems and gives you a sense of accomplishment!' "Nothing in this world that happens is catastrophic:' he says. "We have to maintain our yid- dishkeit to the point where we should be a beacon of light to the world. It's important that we maintain our religion to prove to all these Jew-haters that you're never going to erase us." M that were silent on Shabbat. "Jewish life was very much alive there remembers . Mittelman. "The Slovakian gov- ernment was Catholic, so they enforced the rule that every Jew has to belong to a congregation." He grew up in a three-room house with a stable and a gar- den. The family churned its own butter and made cheese. As wine merchants, they kept a small cel- lar from which other families purchased their Shabbat wine. Although Mittelman attended Catholic schools, peyot dangling beside his ears, he studied Torah at 6 a.m. and sang in the choir at the majestic Main shul. At age 13, he went away to yeshiva, where he studied until age 17, when he was taken by the Nazis to Majdanek concentration camp. He and three siblings sur- vived 37 months in the camps; . his parents and other siblings were killed in a Polish ghetto. After the war, Mittelman returned to his village where he was reunited with his siblings. They wanted to emigrate to Israel, but Mittelman had tuber- culosis. He spent three years in hospitals and sanitoriums before being cured. • In a Swiss hospital, he met Bessie, the Viennese woman who would become his wife. They married in 1950, and Mittelman became a kosher milkman in Zurich. They lived the good life, with a maid and three children, before the Swiss government learned they had an unused visa to America. That's when they "kicked us out:' he says. "I had been the envy of all the refugees. We got $15 a month for incidentals, and I made $150 a month from my job." . In The Beginning Emanuel Mittelman was born in Michalovce, Czechoslovakia, the fifth of seven children. His vil- lage was home to 5,000 Jewish families, with store-filled streets Strong Faith on page 20 December 8 * 2005 19