soul of blessed memory Th rough Family And Philanthropy, She Proved ‘Hitler Didn’t Win’ ESTHER ALLWEISS INGBER CONTRIBUTING WRITER T tration camp. They were he joyous Jewish life forced to go on a Death Henrietta G. Weisberg March, until Russian forces led in America was a saved everyone a few days rebuke to every horror she later. experienced in Poland dur- “Mom had accomplished ing World War II. her task of keeping Rachel A survivor of the alive; she kept her word Holocaust, Mrs. Weisberg, to her mother, my grand- 89, was a Bloomfield Hills mother,” Julie said. Their resident, philanthropist and father Israel and brother the matriarch of her family Ruben perished at Treblinka. when she died on April 12, Henrietta Weisberg Brother Herschel was never 2018. found. “She was proud of the Brought to Detroit, the girls beautiful family she so boldly lived at different times with their loved and nurtured,” said mother’s married sisters, Aunt Congregation Shaarey Zedek Esther and Aunt Bessie. Rabbi Aaron Starr at his dear After graduating high school, friend’s funeral service. He co- Henrietta became a bookkeeper officiated with Rabbi Joseph in Hamtramck. Rachel married Krakoff, Hazzan David Propis quickly, while Henrietta had a and Assistant Cantor Leonard broken engagement before meeting her Gutman. great love, Alvin Weisberg. She and her Mrs. Weisberg, Starr said, was known “Mr. Wonderful” were attendants in the for her “strength, profound convictions, passion and compassion, generosity, wis- same wedding party and married after a dom and humor.” five-month engagement. “It was an incredible love affair,” Julie She was proof positive that “Hitler said of her parents’ 63-year marriage. didn’t win,” as she liked to proclaim, Mr. Weisberg, who died last year, helped though he had certainly tried. start the former Chatham Supermarkets In a eulogy, Julie (Weisberg) Schlafer and was controlling shareholder of Pet shared many details about her mother. Supplies Plus stores in four states. Born in Warsaw on Dec. 25, 1928, “Nothing in the world was as beauti- Henrietta was the third of Israel and ful as seeing my father look lovingly at Sarah Gastfrjnd’s four children. She my mother,” she said. “They would walk was something of a “spitfire” during her around the block holding hands.” happy middle-class childhood. The Weisbergs also had a marriage Just 11 when Germany invaded Poland founded on uplifting lives. They contrib- on Sept. 1, 1939, “Mom became a smug- uted generously to the Jewish Federation gler begging for food outside the ghetto of Metropolitan Detroit and the Jewish walls to feed the family,” Julie said. Hospice and Chaplaincy Network. On the first morning of Passover 1943, families were taken away on cattle cars. Ambulances they purchased for Magen David Adom help countless Israelis. Women went to Majdanek, where moth- Their $1.5 million donation built the er Sarah died in a gas chamber. Henrietta Henrietta and Alvin Weisberg Center successfully pleaded for her little sister Rachel to stay with her. Nazis used stones for the Acute Care of the Elderly at Beaumont Hospital in Royal Oak. females gathered in the field to make Additionally, the gift established an roads. endowed fund for geriatric education In August, the sisters were sent to a and research. labor camp that specialized in making The Henrietta and Alvin Weisberg ammunition. Working with chemicals Gallery at the Holocaust Memorial caused Henrietta’s hair and nails to turn Center in Farmington Hills is dedicated orange, and her skin became bright yel- to the memory of Henrietta’s family killed low. She also got typhoid fever. Guards in the Shoah. In it displayed prominently narrowly missed her hiding under the is a World War II-era German box car, barracks. similar to the one Henrietta experienced. Henrietta was invited to escape with In 1953, Mrs. Weisberg became a mem- other women, but she chose to remain ber with her husband at Congregation with Rachel. The escapees were caught Shaarey Zedek, his parents’ synagogue. on the fourth day and shot to death at Their children, Steven and Julie, received roll call. After the camp was liquidated, strong Jewish educations. Last year, the the sisters went to Buchenwald concen- 76 April 19 • 2018 jn new Henrietta and Alvin Weisberg Lobby began welcoming synagogue visitors. According to Starr, Mrs. Weisberg was proud that Steven served as president of The Shaarey Zedek, as she called it, and Julie is on her way to the presidency of her Aspen Jewish Congregation. Julie said her mother “believed deeply in God” although their family lived a secular Jewish life. Mrs. Weisberg enjoyed the music at Shaarey Zedek — especially for Kol Nidrei — although she couldn’t carry a tune. Shaarey Zedek’s Propis restored a guitar Mrs. Weisberg had given him with only one string left. At the service, he played the guitar while singing “L’Dor Vador” (“Generation to Generation”). For more interests, Mrs. Weisberg was great at games. She bowled weekly and followed game shows on TV. A master bridge player, she had set days to play bridge, mah jong and canasta. Mrs. Weisberg survived the grave medical challenges of ovarian, kidney and colon cancers, as well as heart dis- ease and hypertension. She was known to never hold a grudge, “perhaps because she had lived through too much,” Julie said. Her mother’s sense of humor was a saving grace, also helping her cope with being “vertically challenged.” Two years ago, Shaarey Zedek honored Henrietta as its “Woman of Valor.” “Though Paula Abdul was the keynote speaker, Mrs. Weisberg was clearly the star,” Starr said. “She made us laugh and made us think because that’s what she always did.” Mrs. Weisberg was the beloved wife of the late Alvin A. Weisberg; cherished mother of Steven and Lori Weisberg, and Julie and Steven Schlafer; loving “Mimi Hank” or grandma to Jessica Weisberg, Madeline and Logan Ostrand, Matthew Weisberg, Bradley and Carly Schlafer, and Scott Schlafer; proud great-grandmother of Liam Parker Bohlin; and adored sister of Rachel Schwartz. She’s also survived by many loving nieces and nephews. Contributions are suggested to Holocaust Memorial Center, 28123 Orchard Lake Road, Farmington Hills, MI 48334, www.holocaustcenter.org; Congregation Shaarey Zedek, 27375 Bell Road, Southfield, MI 48034, www. shaareyzedek.org; or Aspen Jewish Congregation, 77 Meadowood Drive, Aspen, CO 81611, www.aspenjewish.org. Interment took place at Clover Hill Park Cemetery in Birmingham. Arrangements by Ira Kaufman Chapel. • SUSAN EISENSHTADT BORAKS, 66, of Farmington Hills, died April 13, 2018. She is survived by her brothers and sisters-in-law, Jerry and Carol Eisenshtadt, Boraks Dr. James Eisenshtadt, Elona Eisenshtadt; nephews, Steven (Mallery) Eisenshtadt, Howard (Sharon) Eisenshtadt, Jeffrey (Wendy) Eisenshtadt, Jerod Eisenshtadt; nieces, Aria Remer, Jill Eisenshtadt and Wendy Begres; many other loving family members and friends. Mrs. Boraks was the sister of the late Robert Eisenshtadt; daughter of the late Harry and the late Sybil Eisenshtadt. Interment took place at Clover Hill Park Cemetery in Birmingham. Contributions may be made to Doctors Without Borders or to a charity of one’s choice. Arrangements by Dorfman Chapel. ELSIE BRONSON, 106, of Bloomfield Hills, died March 25, 2018. She was born in Detroit, where she lived most of her life. Elsie and her hus- band, Irving, cared for Bronson her father and mother in their home until her parents died. She and Irving enjoyed travel- ing to many places. Elsie was active in the Young Women’s Bikur Cholim, an organization focused on visiting and aiding sick and poor Jews in hospitals. She and her sister-in-law Tillie would work on the charity’s annual fundraiser, the Angel Ball. She is survived by her daughter and son-in-law, Fern and Dr. Gerald Broock of Portland, Ore.; son and daughter- in-law, Dr. Barry and Donna Bronson of San Francisco, Calif.; grandchildren, Laura Bronson Krane (David), Erick Bronson (Liz), Dr. Heather Ann Baskin, (Lester), Scott Broock (Lisa); great- grandchildren, Ari, Ella and Jordan Krane, Lexie and Zachary Bronson, Olivia and Violet Broock, and Annabel and Lilly Baskin; nephew, Dr. Herbert Gardner (Margot); nieces, Lorraine Dangovian (Alfred) and Roberta Greenlick (Clifford); many great-nieces and great-nephews. Mrs. Bronson was the wife of the late Irving Bronson; sister and sister-in-law of the late Mervin Gardner and the late Tillie Frankel Gardner. Interment was at Cover Hill Park Cemetery. Contributions may be made to a charity of one’s choice. Arrangements by Ira Kaufman Chapel.