I Spirituality Soul Of The Shul Beth Ahm's energetic ritual director calls it a career after 52 years. W o to by Ang ie Bean David Sachs Senior Copy Editor ith his trademark white hair and white shirt, Rev. Joe Mermelstein has been the most col- orful figure on the bimah for the past five decades. As the longtime ritual director at Congregation Beth Ahm in West Bloomfield, Joe could be blunt and gruff — yet very outgoing and lovable. A prodigious scholar who memorized the Tanach (Bible) by age 9, Joe has been a persistent, but patient teacher of thousands of b'nai mitzvah throughout the community. He is also an exuberant prayer leader, an unabashed kibbitzer and a warm, engaging friend. And for a remarkable half-century, Joe and his wife, Ruth, were the glue that held their shul together. For 52 years, Joe has led the daily services, read Torah, assisted mourners at shivahs and at the Beth Abraham Cemetery in Ferndale and basically helped keep the syna- gogue running day to day. Ruth assisted, providing refresh- ments for every minyan and Kiddush. But when Joe retired Sept. 13 on his 85th birthday, he did so as a widower — his beloved Ruth died last year. "My life has had a lot of humor, hard work and teaching; and I was always busy assisting the rabbis and the can- tors — anything that came up," said Joe. "And I feel very depressed by losing my dear Ruth." Rev. Joe Mermelstein in the Beth Ahm sanctuary "I have a deep affection for the man — his warmth, openness, honesty, charisma and On Sunday, Oct. 21, Beth Ahm will scholarship': said Howard Davis of West mark the end of an era with 12:30 p.m. Bloomfield, who davened in the minyan daily luncheon honoring Joe and Ruth's life- with Joe while mourning the loss of his father time of service to the congregation. in 1960 and his mother in 2002. "I had never "We are really going to miss Joe," said heard megillah read the way Joe read it at Rabbi Steven Rubenstein. "He has been Purim. It was exciting, it was moving, it was a model for what a religious life should penetrating be — which is consistent. He and Ruth Joe specialized in teaching b'nai mitzvah anchored people's lives" their maftir portions and haftorot. Despite his The Mermelsteins arrived at the heavy accent, Joe's high-spirited and unrelent- Orthodox Congregation Beth Abraham ing personality struck a chord with children. on Linwood in Detroit in 1955. Since It's estimated he's shepherded about 3,500 chil- The late Ruth Mermelstein both Joe and Ruth were Holocaust dren into adulthood. He had the ability to work survivors who lost most of their own with all kids, especially those with learning dis- families during the war, they embraced the congregation as abilities and special needs. their new family and the congregation returned their love "I had students in all the synagogues," said Joe. "I had in kind. Ruth and Joe became part of the extended families space in Birney School in Southfield and Norup School in of many members of the synagogue. Oak Park. I had whole blocks of kids who came to me to In their years serving the synagogue, the couple also cre- learn. There were bar mitzvahs all over town. There were ated their own family of four children, which now extends times I was teaching from noon till 10 at night. I never across the country to include 18 grandchildren and 15 turned down anybody for teaching a bar mitzvah." great-grandchildren, all of whom embrace the Orthodox The loss of Ruth has left a huge void in his life. Judaism of Joe and Ruth. "My wife was a great help. She told me when I did right Over the years, the Mermelsteins have worked with six and when I did wrong." rabbis and 32 presidents. Beth Abraham moved to Seven Beth Ahm board member Risha Ring of Farmington Mile and Greenlawn in Detroit in September 1955 and in Hills grew up at the synagogue. "Ruth was a sweet nurtur- the 1970s merged with two other Detroit shuls, Beth Hillel ing mother." Ring said. "Her joy was feeding people. and Beth Moses, to establish the Conservative Beth Ahm on "When my kids would go to Beth Ahm they would run Maple near Inkster. through the social hall, grab a cookie, give Ruthie a kiss and Luncheon Tribute wish her a good Shabbos. When I was a youngster, I did the same thing at Beth Abraham on Seven Mile." Ruth was a survivor of Bergen-Belsen concentration camp in Germany. Joe, a native of Czechoslovakia, describes his own survival as a series of miracles. Once, as a slave laborer, the Germans would not shelter him in a bunker during an Allied bomb attack so he dove into a ditch. The bunker then received a direct hit leaving Joe the only survivor. Another time, he was scheduled to be executed the next morning but survived by switching iden- tities with a man who had died during the night. Still later, he survived during a time when bunkers were being built by fooling the Germans into thinking that he was a master carpenter. In 1945, Joe wound up in Mauthausen death camp in Austria. "There were more dead people than alive;' he recalled. "We had no food, and I was dying, too. Then we were freed by the Americans in May 1945." Joe's faith never wavered during his ordeal in the labor and death camps. "I put my tefillin on every day, very fast," he said. "When we traveled to work, we davened. I did the best I could." Although Orthodox in his personal practice, Joe adjusted in his job as the Conservative congregation became more egalitarian. "Things changed, but I was always there to help': he said. "When there were problems, I tried to face what I could and help what I could." Moving On In the months before leaving, Joe groomed several lay members to lead the daily minyan including Nancy Kaplan and Bob Levine, both of West Bloomfield. Professor Howard Lupovitch of West Bloomfield is the chief Torah reader. Joe also thinks the shul is in good hands with Rabbi Rubenstein. "He is a great rabbi, a great speaker and a BIG davener," said Joe. "He has a beautiful voice. He knows what he is doing. His Friday night services are better than any cantor's. "I'm just tired, not retired. I'll be here for teaching and helping. If they need me, I'll be there. In addition to being a significant part of the Beth Ahm family, Joe has also become a fixture at the Jewish Community Center in West Bloomfield where he exercises and participates in aerobics, yoga and spinning classes under the guidance of instructor Arlene Agree. "I feel she has had a big part in my being here," he said. He bursts with pride at his achievement and does not hesitate to dis- play his strength and fitness. To celebrate his retirement, friends and congregants are asked to submit stories and memories that will be com- piled into a memory book for Joe. With 52 years of loving memories, it should be a very thick volume. I 1 To attend the 12:30, Sunday, Oct. 21, luncheon at Beth Ahm or to submit a Mermelstein memory, contact the synagogue at (248) 851-6880. The cost of the luncheon begins at $36. October 4 • 2007 33