Photos and Article from the Reunion of the Jewish Community
of Sheboygan - August 20-22, 1999
From the Sheboygan Press Friday,
August 27, 1999, Page C1 and C2 Presented here by the courtesy of the
Sheboygan Press
Press photo by Gary C.
Klein
It was a unique gathering. Belle Holman of Skokie, Ill., probably summed
it up best when she said, "People have family reunions, but how many
people have a reunion for all the families from one city?"
That's what happened at Beth El Synagogue in
Sheboygan this past weekend. Members, former members and descendants of
anyone who had at some time been a part of Congregation Beth El were
invited to a reunion. Harold Holman, president of Congregation
Beth El, welcomes those attending the reunion. Congregation president, Harold Holman said,
"What are we really doing here? We're here celebrating 100 years of
the Jewish community of Sheboygan." About 225 people from all over the United
States [and Israel] attended. Some grew up here. Others had never lived in
Sheboygan, though their parents or grandparents had. Among those responding to the invitation posted
on the Internet were Yvonne Kristal Stephan of Louisiana and her
sister, Etta Kristal Levine of New York. Their mother was born in Sheboygan. Said Yvonne,"We came looking for our
roots." "And we found some links to family we didn't
know we had," said Etta. Among them, a cousin from California whom the
sisters had never met before. These are the descendants of immigrants, many
from Lithuania, (Litvaks) who found a home in Sheboygan as part of a
wave of immigration that took place from the 1880s to about
1920. Reunion speaker, L. Elliot Lipschultz of
Northfield, Ill., who has studied patterns of immigration, said one
impetus for the "gold rush" to the Midwest was the vast forest that
covered Michigan and Wisconsin - enough lumber, he said, to "...pave
the roads with wood an inch thick from New York to San Francisco.
That's what drew our ancestors here." Sheboygan's Jewish immigrants included the
Alperts and Aronins and Holmans and Lockes and Miringoffs and
Wassermans and Petashnicks - looking, all of them, for a better
life. Boruck [Baruch] "Benjamin" Blachman was among
them. Leaving behind a pregnant wife and eight
children in the Disna area of Russia, he arrived in Sheboygan in
1913. Taken in by relatives, he worked at the Holman
Overall Factory until he saved enough money to send for his
family. A 1913 photograph shows the young mother and
her now nine children in Russia. A written caption said all the
children were dressed in borrowed clothes for the picture.
As members of what was a smal1 religious
minority in a Christian society, life, for the earliest immigrants,
could be hard. East Coast resident, Stella Wasserman Schwartz,
who grew up in Sheboygan, recalled that her grandmother was the only
Jewish child enrolled at the then Horace Mann School. "She was harassed, but finally one little girl
made friends with her and then she got other friends, but she always
felt she had to be careful, growing up," said Schwartz. Later on, of course, the growing Jewish
community also provided a social network for its members. The immigrants worked hard and prospered. And
they understood that education was the key to a better life.
Press photo
by Gary C. Klein Joel Alpert, Boston, was among the masters
of ceremony at the Beth El reunion. Joel Alpert of Boston, whose father was born in
Sheboygan, was one of the reunion masters of ceremony. Alpert's great-grandfather [Max Gollman], a
sandler in the Russian Army, was 35 years old when he came to
Sheboygan in 1904. "He was a railroad worker and then he worked in
a chair factory and eventually collected scrap metal and sold it. My
grandfather [John Alpert] was a grocer. My father [William Alpert]
was the first in the family to go to college. He participated in the
building of the Apollo spacecraft. Quite an achievement for our
stock, which was partially extinguished in Europe[ because it was
considered by some] as worthless." (during the World War II
Holocaust.) As the Jewish community grew, still retaining
its religious heritage, its members intermarried [among eachother
]. In fact, said Alpert, "The whole Sheboygan Beth
El congregation is really family in a way, because so many of us are
intermarried." But the success of the children and
grandchildren of these once impoverished immigrants has had an
unintended and unwelcome effect on Beth El Synagogue. At its height about 40 years ago, Beth El was
the vital heart of spiritual life for about 250 families - nearly
1,000 people. "But," said Alpert, "as the second and third
generations became educated beyond the local job market, they
immigrated to larger cities." Now, Congregation Beth El is a shadow of its
former self. The young, for the most part, are gone. Its faithful but
aging congregation is dying off. For current member, Al Stessman, the
successful reunion was bittersweet. At services this past Saturday
the synagogue was full. Said Stessman, in remarks to a Saturday
afternoon gathering, When I came to Sheboygan in 1967, I remember
coming to synagogue on High Holidays and finding the synagogue full.
Now, where we'll be in five years, we don't know."
"People have family reunions,
but how many people have a reunion for all the families from one
city?" Belle Holman of Skokie, Ill.
Press photo by Gary C. Klein
Looking at a display of photographs and
memorabilia of past and present members of Beth El Synagogue in
Sheboygan are Dr. Jack Weinstein of Scottsdale, Ariz., and his
daughter, Jamie Golsen, Atlanta, Ga. They were among the more than
200 people from all over the United States [and Israel] who attended
a reunion held at Beth El Synagogue this past weekend.
We all had a great time.
Here are some photos:
John Alpert and John
Alpert
Bob and Dalia Stein, Lois, John
and Richard Alpert
Charlie Alpert, Stella
Wasserman Schwartz and Richard Alpert
Mara Alpert, Sonya Alpert, Joel
Alpert, Susan Alpert Drazen and Gila Drazen
Karen Alpert Entous, Joel
Alpert and Stuart Parker
Rabbi Rettig, Joel Alpert and
Harold Holman
Standing: Dalia Stein, Stuart
Parker, Dick and Debbie Alpert, Nancy Lefkowitz, Bob Stein, Susan
Alpert Drazen, Erv Koppel, Shim Ellis Sitting in front: Sonya Alpert,
Helen Koppel, Phyllis Ellis Photos by Nancy
Lefkowitz
Photo from Steve
Bensman Standing in back and identifiable:
Sidra Rothman (girl friend of), Jon Zion, Josh Rosen, Charlotte Zion
Rosen, Robert Cope, Bernard Zion, Miriam Bensman (Steve Bensman's
wife), Daniel Harris (son of Tobie Zion), Liesl Gruenwald, Margaret
Gruenwald Cope. Sitting in front: Julie Rosen, Abe
Rosen.
Articles and Photos from the
'FAMILY' OF BETH EL SYNAGOGUE
CELEBRATES 100 YEARS OF THE JEWISH COMMUNITY IN SHEBOYGAN
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Last updated on November 4, 1999
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