Pauline and Harold Tischler with their new ketubah. Tale Of Love After 70 years of marriage, couple enjoys new ketubah to replace lost one. Laurie Tischler Beals Special to the Jewish News I n the spring of 1943, a darling young woman accepted an engage- ment ring from her handsome suitor. Unfortunately, there was no one to make a wedding for them, so they decided to elope. On July 18, 1943, this self-reliant 24-year-old woman by the name of Pauline Sanders, boarded a train in London, Ontario, expecting that her fiance, Harold Tischler, would meet her in Toronto where they had planned to be married. As she once told her three granddaughters: "If your Grandpa had disappointed me, I would have gone on to Buffalo to visit my aunt!" Well, Grandpa was indeed waiting at the station, dressed in his Royal Canadian Air Force uniform. They took a taxi to the home of a rabbi who performed the marriage ceremony and presented them with a plain, but meaningful ketubah. The witnesses were members of the rabbi's fam- ily. From there, the couple went to Niagara Falls for their honeymoon. In 1955, the young family moved from Canada to Detroit, where Harold worked as a manufacturer's rep and Pauline enjoyed retail sales, especially the book business, until they retired in 18 January 16 • 2014 1986. They are the wonderful parents of Gaye Tischler (Frank Castronova) who reside in Ferndale, and this writer, Laurie Tischler Beals (Robert Beals) of Fort Collins, Colo. They are also Nana and Grandpa to three granddaughters and two great-granddaughters. On one of my many trips to visit my parents, my father happened to come across the ketubah in his legal files and showed it to me. I had never seen one before. Forty-seven years ago, my hus- band and I respectfully blended our different religious backgrounds when a justice of the peace tied a very strong knot, so we don't have a ketubah. I was very taken with the word- ing that expressed the vows between a husband and wife and told Dad I would like to take a copy of the document the next time I was in town. When I asked to do that during another visit, my father said that the ketubah was somehow missing. He said it would not be possible to get a copy of it as it wasn't registered in the same way that a civil marriage license would be. I was saddened for their loss and decided to follow a course of action. I called our synagogue, Congre- gation Har Shalom in Fort Collins. The gift shop did not sell them, but Rabbi Shoshana Leis (who is the co-rabbi along with her husband, Ben Newman) was captivated by my idea to some- how replace the ketubah and said she would be happy to sign off on it as the officiant. I remembered a larger temple in Denver (where I would buy all of our Chanukah supplies during the early years of our marriage spent in the Denver area) and called their gift shop. Again, ketubahs were not an item that they sold; however, one lady offered to ask the cantor to see if he happened to have one in his possession. As luck would have it, the very kind cantor, Joel Lichterman, of the BMH-BJ Congregation, made a ketubah available to me. Incredibly, my parents' anni- versary date is the 18th, which means chai (life) and donations are accepted in increments of $18. I was thrilled to make a donation and sent a postage-paid envelope for it to be mailed to me. Our 9-year-old granddaughter, Kaela Beals Newman, and I were the witnesses. I then met with Rabbi Shoshana, who not only signed off as the officiant, but also filled in all of the Hebrew words to match the English side of the docu- ment. Additionally, she wrote a special message in the corner: "Thank you, God, that we have arrived at this special moment:' As I pulled away from the synagogue, my eyes were filled with tears of joy. I could hardly wait to present this special gift to my parents for their 70th anniversary. They proudly signed it, and I framed it, along with words from the Song of Songs. In a perfect feng shui setting, those two framed documents hang on a wall directly across from my parents' bed. A picture of them as they were 70 years ago com- pletes the grouping and it is the first thing they see each morning when they open their eyes. They reside in Southfield at The Park at Trowbridge. In October, my parents turned 92 and 95 years young, and our entire family is so proud of their longtime marriage and commitment to one another. We're all glad that Dad was at the train depot in Toronto all those years ago. However, this sweet story does have a punchline. My father has a wonderful, dry sense of humor and when Mom told our daughters how she would have gone on to Buffalo, Dad inter- rupted to say: "Your grandmother did not realize that Toronto was the last stop; the train didn't go to Buffalo!" Father knows best. ❑ Archaeologist Digs In To His Experiences ii jp P. Dessel is an archaeologist and a professor — and yes, he even wears a hat — but he insists he is nothing like Indiana Jones. Nevertheless, while the hero of Raiders of the Lost Ark led a life of adventure; Dessel, who has participated in excavations in Israel, Turkey, Egypt and North America, often deals with controversy. "Whenever I have encountered ancient burials on an archaeological site [in Israel], we have to rush to get them out," he said. "Or we just avoid excavat- ing them for fear the religious parties will shut us down" Religious Jewish groups in Israel that have claimed such excavations desecrate Jewish graves are not J.P. Dessel the only ones at odds with archaeology. Palestinian groups oppose discoveries that point to the exis- tence of a historical Jewish presence. At the same time, those with commercial interests are eager to exploit archaeologi- cal finds to promote tourism. Dessel will be speaking about his experiences excavating in Jerusalem on Sunday, Jan. 21, at 4 p.m. at the University of Michigan's Frankel Center for Judaic Studies, 202 S. Thayer St., Room 2022, in Ann Arbor. His lecture is called "The Archaeology of Jerusalem: Filling the Space Between Nationalism, Religion and Capitalism." He will explore how scholarly, nationalist, religious, political and com- mercial agendas intersect and compete when archaeologists in Jerusalem unearth sacred relics. "I want people to get a better sense of the uses and misuses of archaeology in the political realm," Dessel explained. "But I also want them to appreciate that when it comes to archaeology, it is not just about politics, but also commercial interests, especially tourism. In Jerusalem, all of these agendas are at play on a very big stage." Dessel is currently the Louis & Helen Padnos Distinguished Visiting Professor in Judaic Studies at U-M. He also is the Steinfeld Professor of Near Eastern History and Archaeology at the University of Tennessee in Knoxville. He specializes in the history and archaeology of the east- ern Mediterranean and the ancient Near East. The event is free and open to the public. i ❑