Metro DETROIT JEWRY'S HIGHEST HONOR Edward Charles Levy Jr. Born: Detroit, Nov.14,1931 Parents: Edward C. Levy and Pauline Birndorf Levy Wife: Julie Ruth Honigman, married 46 years, died 2001; Linda Dresner, married in 2005 Daughters: Ellen and Carol; and Barbie who died in 1985 Education: Detroit Public Schools, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Employed: Edw. C. Levy Co., Dearborn, president and CEO Board memberships: AIPAC, Karmanos Cancer Institute/Detroit, Michigan Rountable for Diversity and Inclusion, Center for Strategic Studies/Tel-Aviv University, Children's Hospital of Michigan, Washington Institute for Near East Policy, Citizens Research Council of Michigan, Mackinac Center for Public Policy, National Slag Association Hard work and passion for Israel fuel Butzel Award winner Ed Levy Jr. Harry Kirsbaum Special to the Jewish News E d Levy Jr.'s character can be summed up in two stories that took place when he was 8. He told his father he wanted a car. "You're just a little fellow; there's not a whole lot you can do:' his father said. "But you can sweep peoples leaves, shovel their snow, help clean out their garage and, instead of spending that money, your mother will start a savings account at the bank and you can save it." Within two years, he was working two newspaper routes, but kept asking to work for his dad, who owned the Edw. C. Levy Co., a construction materials corn- pany that used slag from steel plants to manufacture road base materials. Finally, at 12 years old, he got his wish — a summer job working six days a week for a dollar a day. It was half what he was earning on his routes, but with much more opportunity for advance- ment. On his 16th birthday, Ed Jr. wrote a $1,650 check to buy a brand new 1949 Ford. "Proudest day of my life he said. As a child, Ed Levy Jr. was diagnosed with a mild form of petit mal epilepsy that was eventually corrected through 18 September 23 * 2010 diet. He was at a summer day camp and didn't want to play sports with the other kids because he felt awkward. He was sit- ting in the large crafts building at camp when the teacher asked him what he wanted to do for a project. "Why don't I build a model of Tel Aviv?" he said. Using a map, he took stones and white wash and mapped the entire city on the ground. "All this came to me naturally, and I can't even remem- ber how," he said. Respect for hard, honest work and a love for Israel is what drives Ed Levy Jr. These passions are among the reasons why the 78-year-old "mentsh" was hon- ored as this year's recipient of Detroit Jewry's highest communal award, the Fred M. Butzel Memorial Award, before nearly 400 community members at the Sept. 15 combined Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit/United Jewish Foundation of Metropolitan Detroit annual meeting at the Jewish Community Center in West Bloomfield. "I have an aversion to anyone paying any personal attention to me he said from the kitchen table of the modern art- filled Birmingham home he shares with his wife, Linda Dresner. "He's a mentsh," said Scott Kaufman, Federation CEO. "Ed has made a tremen- dous impact on the Jewish people, Israel advocacy and AIPAC [American Israel Public Affairs Committee]; and he's also influenced a generation of young people in our community to get involved." Early Background Hard work is in his blood. Ed Levy's grandfather Sam Levy escaped the Cossacks in Belarus and stayed with relatives in Traverse City before putting a stake on a farm near Rochester in the 1890s. Sam had been a peasant farmer in Russia. Now he grew sugar beets. Sam became the village blacksmith, then the village teamster hauling produce to Royal Oak and surrounding areas. Sam's youngest son, who hated school and wasn't very religious, was Ed's father. "He was in the fourth grade for four years before they threw him out:' Ed said, smiling. When he grew up, Ed Sr. moved to Detroit and started to collect alley rub- bish with a horse and wagon. Eventually, he bought a dump truck and started to haul rubbish, then foundry waste. He approached Henry Ford, whom he had met years earlier, and offered to remove slag from the foundries with his trucks and use the slag to fill in swampland that would eventually become the foundation for the Rouge River plant. Ed Sr. grew the business, became a success and passed his principles of hard work, the free enterprise system and a love for Israel on to his son. Ed Jr. stopped getting an allowance at age 13, but has never had a problem making money. He even paid his way through school at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. "By the time I was going to college, I was already running a little operation making money for the company:' he said. After graduating in 1952, he joined the Edw. C. Levy Co.; he became president and CEO in 1969. Israel And AIPAC Ed Jr. grew up in a family that wasn't reli- gious, but cared very much about what happened to Jews. In 1949, his father was called to a meeting of local Jewish lead- ers, including Bill Davidson. They wanted to do something for the new State of Israel besides write checks. With his background, Ed Sr. was the only one there who had any experience in construction projects larger than homes. With the community leaders' invest- ment , the group built a quarry and crushing plant near Ben-Gurion airport,