Jewish News - February 22, 2021

Page 28

OBITUARIES ELSIE MARTIN NORFOLK—Elsie Martin, longtime resident of Norfolk, passed away February 2, 2021. Born September 5, 1926 in Czechoslovakia, she and her family immigrated to the United States in the mid-1930s to escape the persecution of the Jewish people of Europe. She was the daughter of the late Benjamin and Helen Martin. She was a resident of Norfolk for over 70 years and was a legal secretary for a local law firm close to 40 years. She was a longtime, active member of Congregation Beth El Temple. Survivors include her nieces Faith Dauer (Jeffrey), Jody Gallo (Paul), Rachel Martin (Tom), nephews Alan Salsbury, Marshall Salsbury (Elaine), Jeffrey Martin (Margaret), Joseph Martin (Norma) and Jonathan Martin; as well as numerous great nieces and nephews and extended family. She was predeceased by her sister

Harriet Martin Salsbury and brothers Stanley Martin and Bernard Martin. She was much beloved by her family and friends. Graveside services were held at Forest Lawn Cemetery with Rabbi Michael Panitz officiating. Services were live streamed on H.D. Oliver Funeral Apts. Facebook page. Memorial donations to Congregation Beth El Temple or Temple Israel or to a charity of one’s choice. Online condolences may be offered to the family at hdoliver.com.

ROSE ROSENBACH NORFOLK—Rose Rosenbach, 90, passed away on Sunday, February 14, 2021. Born in Baltimore, Maryland, she was the daughter of the late Mary Miller Rottenberg and Joseph Rottenberg. She was preceded in death by her beloved husband of 67 years, Kurt M. Rosenbach; her brother, Maurice and her daughter-in-law, Kathy. Mrs. Rosenbach was a member of Ohef Sholom Temple.

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Left to cherish her memory are her children, Carolyn R. Perlman (Michael), Murray S. Rosenbach (Lisa), and Marcy R. Terkeltaub (Paul); Nine grandchildren, Jennifer (Jeremy), Erin (Greg), Melissa (Brian), Brandon (Callah), Jamie (Dustin), Staci (Jason), Stephanie (Joel), Melissa and Andrea; and two great grandchildren, Jacob and Jackson, as well as numerous nieces, nephews, and cousins. A private family graveside funeral service took place in Forest Lawn Cemetery with Rabbi Rosalin Mandelberg officiating. The service was live-streamed through www.hdoliver.com. Memorial contributions to Ohef Sholom Temple, 530 Raleigh Avenue, Norfolk, Va. 23507; Beth Sholom Village, 6401 Auburn Drive, Virginia Beach, Va. 23464; or Freda H. Gordon Hospice and Palliative Care, 5000 Corporate Woods Drive, Suite 500, Virginia Beach, Va. 23462). Online condolences may be sent to the family through www.hdoliver.com.

BERNARD “BERNIE” SCHLOSS NORFOLK—Bernard “Bernie” Schloss, passed away February 9, 2021. He was 88 years old and was born in Edelfingen, Germany. Bernie was the son of the late Henry and Regina Schloss, and was preceded in death by his brother, Max. Bernie is survived by his three daughters, Laura S. Jones, Caroline M. Schloss, and Helen R. Schloss-Griffin and her husband, Yehudah Leib Griffin; and a brother, Benjamin Schloss and his wife, Sharon. He was loved by his seven grandchildren, Neal Hobbs, Emily Gibson and husband Eddie, Blakely Griffin and wife Nivia, and Krista Stocks and husband Troy, as well as his six great grandchildren Dillon, Samuel, Prudence, Hurly, Jordan, and Scarlett. Bernie and his family fled Nazi Germany in 1939 by ship and came to America with his parents, grandparents, and brother Max. The ship he and his family boarded, landed in New York. Sponsored by a close relative, Bernie and his family soon moved to Norfolk, Va. He and his family built a successful meat packing company in Suffolk, Va., called the Virginia Packing Company,

Inc. Bernie also served in the U.S. Coast Guard. Bernie merited to complete 2½ cycles of the Babylonian Talmud with the B’nai Israel Daf Yomi group. He was a Torah observant Jew, a father, grandfather, great grandfather, and a well-loved pilar of the B’nai Israel community in Norfolk, Va. Donations to the B’nai Israel Congregation of Norfolk, Va. A graveside funeral service was conducted in B’nai Israel Cemetery. The service was live streamed through www. hdoliver.com. H.D. Oliver Funeral Apts.

ARI GOLD, YESHIVA STUDENTTURNED-POP STAR AND LGBTQ ICON Ari Gold, a pop star who left his Orthodox Jewish roots to become a music icon of and activist for the LGBTQ community, died this month. He was 47, and the cause was leukemia. Gold was born and raised in an Orthodox family in the Bronx, New York. NPR once reported that his musical talent was discovered while singing at his brother Steven’s bar mitzvah at age five. He attended Ramaz, a prominent Modern Orthodox Jewish day school in New York, before going to New York University. Gold wrote about what he called his “sheltered” upbringing in an essay in the LGBTQ magazine The Advocate in 2013 and has noted in interviews that his coming out to his parents in college severely strained his relationship with them. “The shame was deep and the shame was real, and that’s why I have been so passionate, because I know how I felt growing up with that fear. I thought everyone would excommunicate me,” Gold told NY1 in 2019. In his 20s, Gold became a star of the gay club scene in New York City before releasing his debut album in 2001, which openly referenced gay relationships and earned him a following as an artist unafraid to sing about his identity. He would go on to release seven albums and become close friends with other LGBTQ icons, such as the TV stars RuPaul and Laverne Cox. He also worked with homeless gay youth and worked to raise awareness about AIDS. While no


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