Passover 'New Shoes For Pesach' Shelli Liebman Dorfman Contributing Writer F or Ruchie Weisberg of Southfield, the weeks leading up to Passover involve not only the typical pre- holiday cleaning, cooking and shopping, but — for a unique and touching reason — they also bring serious thoughts of some- thing most take for granted. Ruchie Weisberg thinks of shoes. As she prepares for the holiday, which begins the evening of Monday, April 14, she reflects on her late mother, who, as a young girl, could not afford hoped-for and much- needed footwear before Passover. Inspired by this memory, Weisberg founded the Y'shoe-ah Foundation to help Jewish com- munity members in need receive shoes for the holiday. "Last year, a few weeks before Pesach, I decided to do something that would be a zichus (merit) for my mother's neshamah (soul); Weisberg said of her mom, Chana Rosenberg, who died in 2011. Her mother's story of how extreme disap- pointment at not receiving her long-awaited new shoes was overridden by a positive, religious outlook stayed with Weisberg for nearly 60 years. In addition to collecting funds for the purchase of shoes for the needy, Weisberg has written a book, Kaddish For My Mother (soon to be published), to further honor her mother's memory, with all proceeds donated to the foundation. In a key chapter, "New Shoes For Pesach:' Weisberg retells the story she had heard many times since she was a child. It describes Passover preparations in her mother's small village in Czechoslovakia, and the excitement of being told that with the holiday would come new shoes. With nine siblings, Weisberg said new shoes were a rarity. Weisberg's grandmother traveled to Prague to buy clothes and shoes for the fam- ily for Passover. "This year was my mother's turn; her year to get new shoes:' Weisberg wrote in her book "She fantasized about how they would look, what color, what style:' Her current pair, she wrote, were "worn through until the soles of the shoes were almost transparent:' Her grandmother returned with necessary items for some of her mother's siblings. "My mother waited patiently until her mother's gaze fell upon her beloved Chana, her dutiful daughter; the story reads. "Chanala,"' she said. `"I ran out of money, and the shoes were so expensive. I just could not buy them:' She assured her that her old shoes would be polished and, next year, she promised, 'You will be the first on the list: As my mother told this story, it was clear that her pride far exceeded her disappoint- ment:' Weisberg wrote. -Mama', she said, `next year Mashiach (Messiah) will be here and we shall all have as many shoes as we could possibly dream of."' Continuing Honor "I was devastated by the death of my mother and writing about her and starting this foun- dation was very cathartic for me:' Weisberg said. "The funds are collected to buy shoes, but, in actuality, the money is probably used for whatever a family most desperately needs for Pesach. "My entire book is devoted to what a remarkable woman she was. She was highly intelligent, taught herself to read; and she read classics, Tolstoy, Dostoyevsky, Herman Wouk. She was my best friend, my men- tor. My love of reading comes entirely from her example," said Weisberg, who studied English literature, American literature and creative writing at Wayne State University in Detroit and taught Hebrew school for more than 20 years. Weisberg's husband, Itzy, said, "I've known my mother-in-law since I was 17. She was a mother to me, and I loved her as if she were my own mother. She was a witty, wise and selfless person. She was also the most beloved Tubby' to my children. We all miss her terribly' The Weisbergs' eldest child, David Weisberg of Oak Park, said, "The relationship between by mom and my grandmother was one of devotion. As a result of this relation- ship, my mom still acutely feels the death of my grandmother and misses her severely," he said. "There can be no better way of honoring the relationship than to establish and nur- ture this charity in my grandmother's name. Giving tzedakah was of tantamount impor- tance to my grandmother, and this charity builds on her legacy and keeps it alive:' Weisberg's parents met in Salzburg, Austria, in a displaced persons camp. "My father, David Rosenberg, had been married before, and his wife and two little children were killed in Auschwitz:' Weisberg said. "He and my mother met, fell in love, and my mom gave birth to my brother on their first anniversary in Salzburg. "Her entire family was killed in Auschwitz. She came to Ellis Island in 1948, stayed in New York for a few months and then came to Chicago where my father had family. My father passed away in 1962, and my mother raised my brother and me on her own. She Local foundation collects funds for Passover footwear, honors mother's memory. was a very talented seamstress and worked in a high-end men's clothing factory. She moved to Southfield in 1980 to be with her children; well, really her grandchildren. "She was very religious, yet had a strong foothold in both the religious and secular world; she loved every Jew, regardless of ori- entation. She was financially savvy and very knowledgeable about politics:' Help From God The Y'shoe-ah Foundation was named through a combination of sentiments, the most obvious being the inclusion of the word "shoe:' "My mother had a Yiddish expression she used when anyone was depressed or anx- ious:' Weisberg said. "She would say, 'The yeshuah (help from God, or salvation) will come when you least expect it: This was a constant refrain to all my friends and hers who needed a bit of bolstering:' The foundation name also holds a similar sound to the word "Shoah (Holocaust):' "Certainly, the sentiment of 'help from God' is what saw her through the darkest time of the Shoah," Weisberg said. "She truly believed that in the end, we, as a people, if not her personally, would survive; that the yeshuah would come. My mother was a remarkable woman, a survivor who never lost her belief in God:' The foundation is under the auspices of Matan B'Seter Detroit, a Southfield-based agency headed by Rabbis Shaul Broner, M.Z. Greenfield and Meir Leiberson. "We contacted Rabbi Broner because he and Itzy are long-time friends, and he knew that in Rabbi Broner's hands the money would be given anonymously and with the utmost dignity to the beneficiaries:' Weisberg said. "I asked him if he, as a representative of Matan B'Seter, would distribute funds I collected to large families so their children would have new shoes for Pesach:' Last year, additional funds were collected and disbursed before Rosh Hashanah. "I am extremely proud we were able to join forces with Matan B'Seter and help those in need during these difficult times:' Weisberg said. "My mother would have loved this mitzvah:' Itzy Weisberg said, "My wife has a prayer on the wall that translates, 'My God and the God of our fathers: May it be Your will to accept with mercy and grace any good deed that I do whether in thought, word or action and let it all go in merit of the neshamah of my dear mother Chana bas Yosef. May her soul be bound up in the bonds of eternal life and her memory be a blessing. Amen: Ruchie Weisberg holds a framed photo of her late parents, taken in 1945. "I would give a king's ransom to have a picture of my mom as a young girl; unfortunately none survived the war," she said. The late Chana Rosenberg dances with her daughter, Ruchie Weisberg, at Weisberg's daughter's wedding in 2000. "I'm so proud of Ruchie coming up with the Y'shoe-ah Foundation and writing a book to honor her memory:' he said. As Passover approaches, Ruchie Weisberg tracks the progress of the foundation, get- ting word of the most recent gift. "Last week, Rabbi Broner gave a family $100 from the fund:' she said. "He said to Itzy — without revealing names — `Ruchie would have cried had she seen how happy this family was to get a mere $100: "I know my mother would have been ecstatic to help anyone in need, particularly with something new for Yom Tov:" The action also brings emotion to Weisberg. "When I heard I started bowline she said. "I feel over the moon to know in my mother's memory someone has been able to receive new shoes for Pesach:' ❑ Helping Others The Southfield-based Matan B'Seter Detroit is a 25-year-old charitable agency run by volunteers that pro- vides financial aid to those in need in the Metro Detroit Jewish commu- nity, following the Talmudic principal, "The needy of your city take pre- cedence." Donations may be made at the checkout in One Stop Kosher Food Market in Southfield and at Paper Goods Plus in Oak Park, or mailed to Friends of MBS, 25275 Southwood, Southfield, MI 48075. Donations may be earmarked for the Y'shoe-ah Foundation. For details, email friendsofmbd®gmail.com or call (248) 968-5646. April 10 • 2014 43