Metro A Life Of Involvement Harry Kirsbaum Special to the Jewish News T P ho to by Ha rry K lrs baum Judge Paul D. Borman receives Federation's highest honor, the Butzel Award. Israel and some other cousins to the United States',' Borman said. "My father was very involved with the World War II refugees — greenas' (the nickname came from the green immigration cards). We would have picnics at Lola Valley Park and take out a truckload of food and invite all the (greenas.'" Tom's brother Al joined the business in the 1920s; in 1959, they took the company public as Borman Foods (Farmer Jack). "My father gave stock to all of his and my mother's family before they went pub- lic," Borman said. "They were loving and giving and caring." wo framed Detroit Jewish News cover stories hang on the door leading to Judge Paul Borman's bench in Detroit's federal building. One story is obvious: "Borman Takes the Bench:' Sept. 23 1994. The other story — "A Long Way From Home," March 10, 1995, about the Jewish Children's Home — arouses deep-seated passions in Borman and explains, in part, why he will receive the Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit's most prestigious honor, the Fred M. Butzel Memorial Award, Public Service at the organization's annual meeting Sept. In the 1960s, Tom Borman and Mo 23. Brandwine started the local chapter of "My association with Federation began AIPAC, the American Israel Public Affairs when I was 10 days old, when I was placed Committee. In 1962, when President John in the [Federation-supported] Jewish Kennedy wanted to make a statement of Children's home Borman said from a support about Israel, Tom joined locally couch in his sprawling office. "I was there with Rabbi Morris Adler of Congregation for about 13 months; then I was adopted Shaarey Zedek and other AIPAC leaders by the two most wonderful people. My from around the country in Washington to commitment goes back 68 years." listen to the presidential speech. Federation CEO Robert Aronson called Paul Borman tagged along on a trip Borman a passionate and committed com- that would force him to rethink his career munity advocate who "gives tremendously plans. of himself to the general community and Newly graduated from the University of to the Jewish community, in a big way." Michigan Law School, Borman's original Borman, raised in northwest Detroit's intent was to join the Peace Corps. Palmer Woods and now living in "[They] wanted to send me to Peru to Birmingham, was an only child adopted teach money lending; I wanted to go to by Tom and Sarah Borman who came to Africa to help starving people," he said. the United States as immigrants — Tom In Washington, Borman strolled past a in 1914 from Russia, Sarah in 1917 from building that housed the U.S. Civil Rights Poland. Commission. "I walked in, asked if they "For both of them, their whole lives had any openings and they said, `Yes.."' , ' Borman said of his were nothing fancy' Borman started in the Administration parents. of Justice Section, going to Mississippi And his tastes, too, are unpretentious — seersucker suit, powder blue shirt, navy to investigate voting and segregation offenses. blue Lady Justice "There was membership total hate for tie and antique the federal gov- gold watch with ernment down a black leather there he said. band. After a year, Borman grew Borman went to up in a house- Yale Law School hold concerned — Emery Klein to obtain a with giving, not master's degree in law. getting. His father founded Tom's Markets His first job after graduation in 1964 and was able to bring the rest of his family was as an assistant U.S. attorney working to the United States. in the criminal division for U.S. Attorney "After World War II, my father and Larry Gubow, a good friend of his father's. mother brought over some cousins to "Paul D. Borman is a gift to the Jewish people; he is a real mentsh." Federal Judge Paul D. Borman in his downtown Detroit chambers Gubow would eventually become a federal judge and serve from 1968 until his death in 1978. Borman now occupies Gubow's court- room. He can see Gubow's portrait from the bench and still uses a pen that Gubow gave him as a bar mitzvah gift in 1952. In 1966, Borman became vice president and house counsel in the family business, Borman Food Stores, but the race riots in 1967 pulled him back into the public realm. After the Detroit riots, he became special counsel to Detroit Mayor Jerome Cavanagh until 1969. He followed this with a decade as a law professor at Wayne State University in Detroit from 1969-1979. He set up an urban legal program at Wayne Law School as well as clinical education programs where law students would assist people with problems. He became the chief federal defender, U.S. District Courts, in the Eastern District of Michigan from 1979-94. In 1994, Borman put his name in for one of three federal judge vacancies. On Sept. 2, 1994, he was sworn in as a U.S. Involvement on page 14 September 20 • 2007 13