Obituaries Obituaries are updated and archived on thejewishnews.com Outer And Inner Beauty David Sachs Senior Copy Editor I n the early 1970s, Frieda Goldman, a widowed business owner in her mid-40s, was passing through a Southfield restaurant near her home. The restaurant's owner intercepted her — he had someone he wanted her to meet. The restaurateur led the lovely Frieda to the table of the debonair Jewish News col- umnist Danny Raskin — who happened to have just lit up one of his trademark long cigars. As the tall Danny rose to greet the statuesque former model, he slid the band off his cigar and onto Frieda's ring finger, declaring, "Now we're engaged." "Later, they were wed in a ceremony at which my father, of blessed memory, officiated:' said Rabbi Daniel Syme of Temple Beth El in Bloomfield Township in Frieda's eulogy this week, referring to the late Rabbi M. Robert Syme of West Bloomfield's Temple Israel. "Thus began the beautiful marriage of two beautiful people that extended almost 36 years:' said the rabbi. Danny and Frieda traveled together, on Caribbean cruises, to California, to Israel — and, of course, to Las Vegas, where Danny enjoyed the restaurants and the shows and Frieda loved playing blackjack and shooting craps. "They went to the theater and concerts, and they went to more black-tie social events in one year than many of us attend in a lifetime noted Rabbi Syme. "They loved to dance in one another's arms — so much in love." And Danny and Frieda's whirlwind romance con- tinued until her death on Jan. 1, 2010. The West Bloomfield resident, whose health had been declining in recent months, was 82. Alfrieda "Frieda" Van Haverbeck was born in Detroit in 1927. She helped pay her way though beauty Frieda Raskin college by modeling high- fashion clothing. She graduated with high honors and opened her own salon in the Fort Wayne Hotel in downtown Detroit. Over the course of 15 years, it grew into three locations, includ- ing the LaSalle Salon at Seven Mile and Schaefer. She was wed to Harold Goldman for 11 years until his death in 1964. As a widow, she joined Winldeman's department stores, to initiate its wig department. Her reputation grew, and after five years, she started her own wig business — and later, with daughter Pam, her own jewelry business. Her husband, Danny, who celebrated his 90th birthday last year, continues to serve the Jewish News as restaurant and society columnist, as he has since the paper's inception 68 years ago. 'A Sweet Person' Frieda supported animal rescue societies and adored her own dogs, Coco and Gigi. She loved to play Bingo, and was considered a world-class shopper, especially when with her sister Jeanette Epstein. "We were so close, and Frieda was such a sweet per- son:' said Jeanette. "We were closer than sisters — we were truly friends." "Frieda was smart:' noted Rabbi Syme. "She was a woman of inner strength and optimism — one who always seemed to know exactly the right thing to say. "And with her outgoing personality, her great sense of humor, her love of people and entertaining, Frieda drew many oth- ers to her." For Frieda, family was central to her very being. Between her children, Pam, Gregory and Lary, and Danny's son Scott, she cherished the blended families. "Frieda loved life with a passion:' said Rabbi Syme. "This woman with a heart of gold, with both outer and inner beauty — she lived large with laughter and with family. "She was indeed one of those rare indi- viduals who keep our world fresh, vibrant and new." Frieda Raskin is survived by her hus- band, Danny Raskin; daughter, Pamela Smith; sons and daughter-in-law, Gregory and Elizabeth Smith, Lary Goldman; Danny's son and daughter-in-law, Scott and Bonnie Raskin; grandchildren, Bradford Smith, Kelsey, Devin and Shoshona Smith, Sean Goldman, Heather Buschmann, Matthew and Hannah Raskin; sister, Jeanette Epstein. She was the wife of the late Harold Goldman and the loving sister of the late Mary Stanek and the late Michael Van Haverbeck. Interment was at Adat Shalom Memorial Park. Contributions may be made to Kidney Foundation of Michigan, 1169 Oak Valley Drive, Ann Arbor, MI 48108, www. nkfm.org or to a charity of one's choice. Arrangements by Ira Kaufman Chapel. move to Michigan to be near Lily and her new family. Linder acclimated quickly, learning to drive and teaching herself English, which became her seventh language. She trav- eled to Paris and New York to relearn her mother's vocation and then returned to realize her dream of opening her own day spa, the first of its kind in Metro Detroit. With the help of her husband, who had worked for the cosmetics company Helene Curtis in Israel, and her daughter and son-in-law, Linder's vision came to life. Mira Linder's Spa in the City, located in Applegate Square in Southfield, was the place where local socialites came to be seen and to be pampered. Linder trained her staff, which included many Russian immigrants, in the art of skin care using the latest European products and techniques. Linder's belief that women could be beautiful at any age was exemplified by the book she wrote when she was 68 years old; Beauty Begins at Sixty: The Best is Yet to Come: A New Age Beauty and Health Workbook for the Dynamic New Time of Your Life. Published in 1989, the book was co-written by Linder and the late Suzanne Kennedy Flynn, an editor for Harper's Bazaar. "My mother taught me that there's always a way out; don't take no for an answer," said Lily. "She was a real survivor, a very glamorous and memorable person." Linder is survived by her daughter and son-in-law, Lily Alexander and Dr. Waldemar Pruzanski of Toronto; grandchildren Margaret (Ron) Riley and Katherine (David) Daniels, also of Toronto; and great-grandchildren David and Alec Riley and Madeline and Jasper Daniels. Interment was at Clover Hill Park Cemetery. Donations may be made to Jewish Family Services Fund for Holocaust Survivors, 14041 Icot Boulevard, Clearwater, FL, 33760, (727) 479 1800, www.gcjfs.org or the Baycrest John Alexander Foundation, 3560 Bathurst Street, Toronto, Ontario, M6A 2E1, (416) 785-2875, www.baycrest.org/donate . Arrangements by Ira Kaufman Chapel. ❑ Her Spa In The City Ronelle Grier Special to the Jewish News F rom a Siberian prison camp to the elegant salons of Paris and New York, the story of skin care doyenne Mira Linder reads like a Russian novel. Her life, which was marked by trag- edy, drama, extraordinary courage and enduring love, came to an end on Dec. 30, 2009. She was 88. The saga began in the small Polish town of Gostynyn, near Warsaw, where Mira and her brother, David, were born to Sara and Zelig Godes. Zelig, was a self-taught architect; but it was Sara, an aesthetician known throughout the community as an artful practitioner of European skin care, who most influenced her daughter's future career. As the two worked side-by-side, Sara dreamed of sending her daughter to Belgium to study pharmacology. But her plans were thwarted by World War II and the Nazi occupation of Poland. Sara and Zelig, who were later killed during the Warsaw Ghetto uprising, arranged for their children and several other family members 54 January 7 • 2010 JN to go to Russia for safety. Instead, the beau- tiful 18-year-old Mira was treated as an enemy and sent to a Siberian labor camp. In his eulogy, Rabbi Daniel Syme of Temple Beth El in Bloomfield Township said it was there that Mira's spirit was strengthened and her iron will was forged. The bright spot in the Siberian darkness was David Linder, whose job it was to deliver mail to the prisoners. He came across a lovely young woman chop- ping wood and offered to give her a letter from her parents in exchange for Mira Linder a kiss. The two prisoners formed a strong bond; and after their release, they moved to the USSR, where they began a marriage that lasted until David's death 34 years later. After the birth of their daughter, Lily, the Linders moved back to Poland and then to Israel, living in a tent until the family got established. After Lily left Israel with her husband, native Detroiter John Alexander, to Detroit, David and Mira decided to Obituaries -