ANNE
KLEMPNER, 93,
of West Palm
Beach, Fla., for-
merly of
Michigan, died
March 17, 2016.
She is survived
Klempner
by her son and
daughter-in-law,
Mark and Ellen Steiner Klempner of
Boca Raton, Fla., Dvora and Stewart
Schulman of Ann Arbor; grandchil-
dren, Britt Klempner, Rachel and Dr.
Zack DeFilipp, Chava Schulman and
fiance, Eli Saul, Lauren and Adam
Schwartz; great-grandchildren, Mina
Leah, Bayla Eliva, Yochanon Dov Ber
DeFilipp, Sydney and Zoe Schwartz;
loving nieces, nephews, other rela-
tives and friends.
Mrs. Klempner was the beloved
wife of the late Benjamin Klempner.
Contributions may be made to
Ann Arbor Chabad House, 715 Hill
St., Ann Arbor, MI 48104. Interment
was held at Beth Abraham Cemetery
in Ferndale. Arrangements by
Hebrew Memorial Chapel.
EMANUEL “MUNI” MARK, 95,
died peacefully at home on Nov, 24,
2015, in Chicago.
Born in Libova, Latvia, in 1920,
the first son of the Yiddish lexicog-
rapher Yudl Mark, Muni was raised
and steeped in the secular Yiddish
world of Latvia and Lithuania
His mother, Bluma, died after a
long illness when Muni was 14. Yudl
and Muni moved to the U.S. in 1936,
taking advantage of Hitler’s tempo-
rary opening of the borders for the
Berlin Olympics.
Muni served in the U.S. Army
from 1942-1945. A radio operator
in Patton’s third army, he received
the Purple Heart after being seri-
ously wounded in battle on Sept. 17,
1944. Seventy years to the day after
his injury, a piece of shrapnel was
removed from his chest during a
pacemaker procedure.
Muni’s work as a Yiddish teacher
took him to Akron, Chicago, the
Bronx and Detroit. In Detroit from
1954-1980, he was director of Camp
Farband, an organizer for the Labor
Zionist movement and a director of
fundraising for the Jewish Welfare
Federation, completing his career
at UJA-Federation in New York in
1985.
Anchored in his love of the Jewish
world, he embodied the social
justice ideals of Labor Zionism,
expanding that love to all people.
“Alle mentschen zaynen brider” — a
Dorfman’s “Tree of Life”
Trust, Compassion and Understanding.
Tending to funeral arrangements is an emotional process.
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can help alleviate the stress.
That is why people turn to Alan and Jonathan Dorfman
Arrangements can be made from anywhere in the country.
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30440 Twelve Mile Road s Farmington Hills s MI 48334 s 248.406.6000
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1995070
continued on page 64
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