firrig a ‘'1----t -5 Good- TinTe ll '*17- 1) ,,,), 1-- "4: te) C Jooc - 1 T , !irk_ n ( - i - ;?';' orD C. 1 5 * ) - • --J 4 C i 0 c X 4 -1- : i i i c, ments E r) gshared moments 2 re) 8 shared moments 2.)(-%t, 9 shared moments iu ( .‘friencishi rat oSPECIALfriendshi? et 0SPECIALfriencishirt Q. - SPECIAL,friencis iN DS friendsiip BON DS friendsli BON DScriendsnipBC3N DS BONDS tys ll ASP CIA BONDS ml ' P CIAL PrINDSZ 'SPECIAL BOND: , Ct - c---- stj tA ikef E T., - 3 C1 ----rz- - - 5 6 , )ts - Times ments e, ,t t..s. E r) Jewish physician stri es caring alliance with Cha de j ailsommulyty. Ats , r - - - friendshio rt OSP ECM!. inencis lip iv4 6Sr EMI. friendshiprt (3SPECIAL fri s hip. " * L.) — 4.a ' s. - N DSinendship 130N DS friendship BON DSfriendsho BON DS Don Cohen I Contributing Writer Dr. George Mogill doesn't remember the exact year, but it likely was 1947 when he first met Father Thomas Bidawid, who had just arrived in Detroit to establish the first Chaldean church here. Mogill, a medical doctor, was driving along Woodward Avenue after a house call. He would make 80-90 house calls a month in those days. "It was raining and dark. And I saw a priest waiting for a streetcar," he recalls. "I asked if he wanted a ride, and he got in." It turned out they only lived a few blocks from each other in Detroit's Boston-Edison neighbor- hood. "He sounded like a Frenchman when he spoke English, but he told me his original language was Aramaic, so I told him a Jewish prayer, Barich Smea in Aramaic," Mogill says. "I was listening to a symphony and he liked it, so we listened, and I drove him home." Home meant Mogill's house. "It was Friday night:' Mogill says. "I said, 'Mom, I brought a Father home for you.' We had both chicken and fish for dinner. My mother didn't know why he only ate the fish, but I said, 'Father, it's OK; I understand.'" 10 CHALDEAN NEWS I JEWISH NEWS December 2011 Catholic tradition at the time prohibited eating meat on Fridays. Mogill, 94, is a former chief of fam- ily practice at Grace Hospitals and clinical professor at the Wayne State University School of Medicine, both in Detroit. He still sees patients two days a week. The sharp storyteller and gentle- man relishes talking about his friendship with Bidawid. "He spoke 11 languages fluently, and I had thought I was smart because I spoke five says Mogill, a Detroit native. Many years ago, Mogill's father, Samuel, was a cantor and mohel (ritual circumciser) at B'nai David and later at Ahavas Achim as well as other Detroit synagogues. In 1948, Bidawid established Detroit's first Chaldean church, Mother of God, near Grand Boulevard and Second. He served his parish until he was transferred to Chicago in 1951. Mogill remembers attending Christmas Mass at Mother of God with Congregation Shaarey Zedek Rabbi Morris Adler, his wife, Goldie, and Mogill's mother, Anne. One time when Bidawid vis- ited from Chicago, he asked to visit Shaarey Zedek, by then in Southfield, to see the stained-glass Chagall win- dows."He and Rabbi Irwin Groner started talking about gematria [numerical equivalents for letters] ... Rabbi Groner and Father Bidawid were equally brilliant," Mogill explains. Mogill kept in touch with Bidawid, eventually exchanging letters through the Vatican's diplomatic pouch when Bidawid was elected Bishop of Ahwaz, Iran, and Northern Iraq, in 1966, before becoming the Vatican's representative in Cairo, where Cardinal Bidawid died in 1971 A Special Bond Mogill's connection with the Chaldean community continued long after Bidawid left Detroit. While he says he wasn't the doctor to the Chaldean community, he Cultural Perspective delivered many Chaldean babies, Mogill sees a lot of similarities and tended to many Chaldean between the Jewish and Chaldean families, including the clergy. communities. He regrets they didn't Sister Therese Shikwana, 66, has grow as close as they could have. been a patient and friend of Mogill "In Baghdad, Jews and Chaldeans for almost 40 years. She lives with were two minorities with a Muslim eight other sisters in Our Lady of majority, so they were very close Chaldean Convent on Middlebelt in Mogill says. "You'd assume they'd be Farmington Hills. close here, but maybe there weren't Mogill calls her brilliant; his face enough Chaldeans here at first shines when he tells that she taught [maybe 30-40 families]. Or maybe it for 25 years at Pershing High School was because there were no Jews from in Detroit. "She was so effective they Baghdad here." allowed her to wear her habit in the Mogill adds with a grin: classroom. Amazing," he says. "Chaldeans and Jews have a While a University of Detroit great history of being together student in 1973, Shikwana began — Abraham comes from Ur of to develop a condition that left Chaldees, so we go back a few gen- her tired all the time. She had met erations. Our communities started Mogill through Father Jacob Yasso here in the same way. They were the of the Chaldean community and closest I could identify with because went to see him. they took care of each other the "He was very much concerned same way we did when we brought about me Shikwana recalls. "He in the Russians, the Hungarians and was very patient, very dedicated the Polish Jews. I remember Hebrew and very good." Free Loan: God forbid you didn't He examined her, let her rest and give. They came after you to give drove her home afterward. help." Soon, he had her admitted to the As Mogill recalls, Chaldeans hospital. After 10 days of evaluation, "opened grocery stores just like we they still weren't sure about the did when we came. problem. "One day he came in and "I think they did it faster than said, 'Sister Therese, I know how to us, but who knows?" he adds. "The treat you!'" she says. Jewish community today is a whole She started a series of B-12 shots different ballgame than we were 50 every other day in his office. "I had years ago. But I think the Chaldean no insurance. He did it all for free community is further ahead than we she says. "He did it for all the clergy." were at the same time _