Obituaries Obituaries are updated and archived on JNonline.us . Devoted Jewish Leader And Champion Of Education V ivian Berry contributed might- ily to humanity as a whole as well as working to increase the vibrancy of the Jewish community in America and Israel. She worked constantly to further Jewish learning and her beneficence has advanced learning and communities in Michigan, Florida and throughout the world. Mrs. Berry, 93, of West Bloomfield, died May 8, 2008. She stated that Judaism was her life and that commitment was reflected in the standard of goodness that she created. Gratz College recognized the leadership that Mrs. Berry assumed in Metropolitan Detroit and in Palm Beach, Fla. In Detroit, she served on boards of Hadassah as vice president, of the Detroit Women's Division, of both the American Jewish Congress and the Jewish Welfare Federation and as a member of the Detroit Committee for the Maintenance of Separation of Church and State. She was honored twice by the Women's Division of Israel Bonds. With great distinction, she led the sis- terhood of Detroit's Congregation Shaarey Zedek. There, she opened the way for new generations of women by successfully MAX DREW, 84, former Detroiter, died May 4, 2008, at Cleveland Clinic Southpointe Hospital after many years of bat- H3o>vsr thing dementia. OR Mr. Drew was born in Stolin, Poland, on May 12, 1923. His father was murdered by robbers when Max was only 2, leaving his mother, Miriam, to raise six children. An older brother, Abraham, immigrated to Palestine before the outbreak of World War II. In 1939, when Poland was invaded by the Nazis from the west and the Soviets from the east, Max was taken along with the other young boys of Stolin into Russia where he was trained as a tool and die maker. He was transferred to many places in the former Soviet Union including Armenia, Azerbaijan and Baku. In 1941, when the Nazis invaded the remainder of Poland, his family — mother, four brothers and a sister — were exterminated by the Nazis, something he did not learn about until C44 May 15 • 2008 lobbying for con- gregational voting rights for women, being the first woman to serve on a congregational com- mittee and eventual- ly becoming the first woman to be called to the Torah when such roles were the exclusive purview of men. As a founder and past chairperson of the Michigan Vivian Berry branch of the Women's League for Conservative Judaism, she established a standard of activity for the legion of Jewish women who have followed her example. With her beloved husband, the late Louis Berry, she honored Conservative Judaism in the Jewish Theological Seminary with her devotion to its mission and received the Jewish Theological Solomon Schecter Award and the Eternal Light Award. Mrs. Berry's dedication to society knew no boundaries. In Detroit, the establishment of the Louis and Vivian Berry Health Center of Sinai-Grace Hospital has lengthened the lives of an untold number of people representing the full diversity of society. She also served on the Detroit executive com- mittee and the national advisory council of the American Friends of the Weizmann Institute of Science of Rehovot, Israel. In Palm Beach, she devoted herself to the community. As chairperson of the Palm Beach National Women's Division of United Jewish Appeal, she established a model for emu- lation. Her commitment to the future reso- nates strongly in her own life. Her deep appreciation for family and community is rooted in the story of her maternal grandfather who fled Czarist Russian to build a new life in America. Vivian Berry is survived by her daugh- ters and sons-in-law, Joan Provizer of Farmington Hills, Barbara and Dr. after the war. In 1942, he was drafted into the Soviet Army, where he fought the Nazis. He killed many Nazis during the war rising to the rank of lieutenant through field commissions. After the final battle for Berlin, he crossed over to the American zone and made his way to Bergen-Belsen concen- tration camp, which had been liberated and turned into a displaced persons camp to search for his family members. It was there he found out all the Jews of Stolin had been exterminated. Mr. Drew remained in Bergen- Belsen, where he met his wife, Sara, (nee Finkelman). They were soon mar- ried and moved to the nearby town of Hanover, Germany. Their son Joe was born in 1948. An aunt who had immigrated to Detroit in the 1920s sponsored them to come to America. In 1950, they did. Upon arriving in Detroit, he worked at Dodge Motor on the assembly line, in construc- tion, with beef and dairy cattle and finally in the trading of tool steels and nickel alloys. A second son, Floyd, was born in 1953. In 1957, the family became naturalized United States citizens. Mr. Drew was an active member of B'nai B'rith, the American Red Magen David for Israel and the Israeli Cancer Society. After 40 years in the nickel alloy busi- ness, the Drews retired to Boynton Beach, Fla., where he was an active member of Temple Torah Synagogue. In 2004, he was diagnosed with dementia and was cared for at home by his devoted wife, Sara, until 2007. At that time, he and Sara moved to the Cleveland area to be closer to their son Joe and daughter-in-law Barbara. During the last five months of his life, Mr. Drew was a resident at the Montefiore Nursing Care Center in Beachwood, Ohio. Mrs. Drew lived across the street in the Sherri Park apartments, from where she visited him every day. He will be sorely missed by all who knew him as a man who struggled to provide for his family, a man who gave much charity and support to every Jewish community where he lived during his life, and a lover of Israel. Stephan Morse of Franklin, Marcy and Michael Feldman of Huntington Woods, Selma and Jack Schwartz of Bingham Farms; son and daughter-in-law, Harold and Barbara Berry of Bloomfield Hills; grandchildren, Dr. Jeffrey and Kari Provizer, Marc Provizer, Traci and Jeffrey Kaye, Jennifer and Robert Mattler, Rachel and Ben Geller, Ronit Feldman, Noah Feldman, Joanna Feldman, Betsy and Jeffrey Heuer, Rebecca and Michael McMaster, Lawrence and Sharon Berry, Elliott Berry and Campbell Harvey, Miriam and Peter Seagle; great-grand- children, Noah, Jacob and Eliana Provizer, Morgan, Ari and Erin Mattler, Joshua and Isabelle Geller, Matthew, Katie, Jacob and Megie Berry, Louis McMaster, Jeremy and Hilary Heuer, Olivia and Elizabeth Seagle. She was the beloved wife of the late Louis Berry and the late Louis Tatken; loving sister of the late Leah Kaplan; dear sister-in-law of the late Dr. Albert Kaplan. Interment at Clover Hill Park Cemetery. Contributions may be made to Yad Ezra, 2850 W. 11 Mile, Berkley, MI 48072; www. yadezra.com; Congregation Shaarey Zedek, 27375 Bell Road, Southfield, MI 48034, www.shaareyzedek.org; or to a charity of one's choice. Arrangements by Ira Kaufman Chapel. 0 He is survived by his loving and devoted wife of 63 years, Sara; sons, Joe and Floyd; daughter-in-law, Barbara (nee Hoffmann); grandchildren, Emily, Lindy, Benjamin and Nick. Services held at Berkowitz Funeral Chapel in Cleveland Heights, Ohio. Internment followed at Mt. Olive Cemetery, Solon, Ohio, section 104, row G. LOUIS ELLENSON, 101, of Southfield, died May 8,2008. He is survived by his son, Gary Ellenson of Southfield; daughter, Sandra McCurdy of Nashua, N.H.; grandchildren, Rachel and Mark Davis; sister-in-law, Ida Ellenson. He was the beloved husband of the late Edith Ellenson; loving brother of the late Harry Ellenson, the late Vivian Jackson, the late Joe Ellenson, the late AI Ellenson. Contributions may be made to a char- ity of one's choice. Interment at Adat Shalom Memorial Park. Arrangements by Hebrew Memorial Chapel.