Yom Kippur Holiday Duty How those in the military balance the High Holidays with their responsibilities. T Alan Muskovitz ABOVE: Colten Baitch, an Orthodox Jew, observed the High Holidays as best he could while on a mission in Afghanistan in 2010. He still serves as a drill sergeant in South Carolina. 32 he challenges of getting ready for the High Holidays. Maybe, in your case, it’s the added stress of preparing Rosh Hashanah dinner for a house full of guests or the ordering of the right-sized deli tray for the break-fast. Then there’s the pressure of arriving at synagogue services at the exact right time to secure the highly coveted, easy-to-exit parking space. Now, imagine the challenges of getting ready for the High Holidays while in the uniform of one of our U.S. Armed Forces stationed thousands of miles away from home during WWII, the Vietnam War or in the middle of intense fighting in Afghanistan. It’s a different perspective I recently had the privilege of learning more about. This year, Art Fishman, 91, senior vice com- mander of the Jewish War Veterans State of Michigan, drove to Rosh Hashanah services at Temple Shir Shalom in his 2017 Chevy Equinox. On Rosh Hashanah Sept. 8, 1945, Art arrived at services at the City of Shanghai Synagogue in a rickshaw. “On the day before Rosh Hashanah, my execu- September 13 • 2018 jn tive officer on the destroyer the U.S.S. Robinson informed me that after my morning duty, I was to stop by the supply officer and get a winter dress uniform,” Art said. “I was being granted time off to leave the ship to attend High Holiday services.” It would be a nice respite from his assignment aboard the Robinson — mine-sweeping operations along the Yangtze River. Art recalls paying somewhere between 5 and 10 cents (not including tip) for his rickshaw ride. A pretty inexpensive chauffeur ride to hear a shofar. Following services, Art, along with about 40 other Jewish service men, were treated to lunch that included “Russian vodka mixed with orange juice in Coke bottles.” MAKING AN IMPACT The late Rabbi Allan Blustein, former director of pastoral care at Sinai Hospital in Detroit from 1981-1991, always dreamed of being in the Army. That desire to give back to his country was, to a great extent, born out of his witnessing as a young man the extraordinary care his father, a WWI veteran, received in the V.A. hospital in his hometown of Chicago. That opportunity to serve would come in 1958, when Allan heard the Army needed Jewish chaplains. Having only been ordained as an Orthodox rabbi since 1957 from the Hebrew Theological College in Skokie, Allan, newly married, gave up being a pulpit rabbi in Chicago and enlisted in the Army in 1958. A series of health issues — serious enough to keep him from the frontline in Vietnam but not out of uniform — would not deter him from mak- ing a profound impact over the course of his 22½- year military career; especially during the High Holidays. The rabbi’s widow, Judy, 80, of West Bloomfield, shared the following moving experiences with me about her husband that took place over the course of his tour of duty in Europe in the 1960s. While stationed in Orleans, France, the rabbi would be in receipt of extra kosher food supplied by the Jewish Welfare Board in New York that arrived in time for the High Holidays, specifically earmarked for Holocaust survivors. “He had the Jewish GIs make the deliveries because they were too young to know very much about the war,” Judy said. “He wanted his soldiers to see the survivors face to face.” While based in Nuremberg, Germany, Judy told me, just prior to Rosh Hashanah, her hus- band “would take Jewish troops to several hidden gravestones in the forests where he would read the names of the Holocaust victims and lead the GIs in saying Kaddish for them.” Also, in each of their three years there, Judy recounted how, before the High Holidays, her hus- band would “take our three young daughters to the Nuremberg Palace of Justice. He sat each of them