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October 29, 2020 - Image 44

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 2020-10-29

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

44 | OCTOBER 29 • 2020

SOUL

OF BLESSED MEMORY

continued from page 43

Mr. Zucker was the beloved
husband for 58 years of the
late Geraldine Zucker; the

loving brother of the late
Lou (the late Diane and
the late Marilyn) Zucker,
the late Harry and the late
Leah Zucker, the late Morrie
Zucker, and the late Sylvia and
the late David Cooperman;
the dear brother-in-law of the
late Donald Klein and the late
James Sniderman.
Interment was at Beth El
Memorial Park. Contributions
may be made to Jewish Family
Service, 6555 W. Maple Road,
West Bloomfield, MI 487322,
jfsdetroit.org; or Gleaners
Community Food Bank,
Oakland Distribution Center,
P.O. Box 33321, Detroit,
MI 48232-5321, gcfb.org.
Arrangements by Ira Kaufman
Chapel.

OBITUARY CHARGES

The processing fee for
obituaries is: $125 for up
to 100 words; $1 per word
thereafter. A photo counts as
15 words. There is no charge
for a Holocaust survivor icon.
The JN reserves the right
to edit wording to conform to
its style considerations. For
information, have your funeral
director call the JN or you
may call Sy Manello, editorial
assistant, at (248) 351-5147
or email him at smanello@
renmedia.us.

KRISTALLNACHT MEMORIAL

On Nov. 9, 1938, a two-day
pogrom began during which
the Nazis burned more than
1,400 synagogues and Jewish
institutions in Germany and
Austria on Kristallnacht (the
Night of Broken Glass), a crit-
ical moment in the chain of
events that led to the Holocaust.
On Nov. 9, 2020, March
of the Living will mark
Kristallnacht with a message of
unity and hope, through a unique international campaign. Titled
“Let There Be Light,
” March of the Living invites individuals,
institutions and houses of worship across the world to keep their
lights on during the night of Nov. 9, as a symbol of solidarity and
mutual commitment in the shared battle against antisemitism,
racism, hatred and intolerance.
People from all over the world will be able to add their voice
to the campaign. Individuals of all religions and backgrounds are
invited to write personal messages of hope in their own words at
the campaign website, motl.org/let-there-be-light.
The main synagogue in Frankfurt (one of the few not
destroyed on Kristallnacht) will be illuminated as well as other
places of religious and spiritual significance across the world.
Personal messages and prayers from the virtual campaign will
be projected on the walls of the Old City of Jerusalem.

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