Israel Cantor
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Herbert Cantor home Newspaper Articles Obituary Herbert Cantor, 87, of Levittown, New York, died on September 21, 2000, following a brief illness. A good, kind man, smart and funny, he was much loved by Millie, his wife of 54 years, children Phil, Mady, and Danny, children-in-law Carrie, Arthur, and Laura, and grandchildren Max, Nate, Tess, Eli, Ethan, and Alice. A World War II veteran and lifelong Democrat, he owned Valley Stream Auto Parts for 30 years, and was a member of the Israel Cantor Family Society which was founded at his birth. A passionate follower of the events of the day and a partisan of fairness and decency throughout his life, he leaves a legacy of devotion to family and friends, of generosity without strings, and a marvelous sense of humor. He will be missed Newsday Obituary September 24, 2000
Eulogy The occasion today may be my fathers death, but thats just an excuse. This is about honoring and remembering his life. I know I speak for my mother and sister and brother when I say that we are tremendously grateful for the love and goodwill expressed over the last month by so many people. Some of you knew Herb for decades, others crossed paths with him more recently, but its pretty clear to us that whenever people met my father, they were always struck by what a kind, decent man he was. My grandmother Tessie--Herbs mother-in-law--used to call him "a regular prince." And he was. Herb Cantor was born in 1913, on Amsterdam Avenue, at home. His parents were immigrants from Eastern Europe, and, like so many others, they were poor, though--he often liked to remind me-so was everybody else and they never felt impoverished in any meaningful way. He was the youngest child of Solomon and Anna--Shlomo and Nachama--and he had five adored and adoring older sisters: Rose, Spo, Edith, Lily, and Minna. The surviving children of his sisters are all here today, and I dont think Im exaggerating to say that Herb loved each and every one of them and worried about them as if they were his own children. The story is told in our family that Herbs paternal grandfather Israel Aaron was so elated at the birth of this grandson that he climbed onto the kitchen table and danced a jig. This, despite having only one leg. Herbs birth, or more accurately his bris, was the occasion of the founding of the Israel Cantor Family Society. It was a cousins club, in Yiddish a landsmenschaften, and it was a focal point of family life for what was a very large family. Herbs father was one of 22 children, 13 of whom survived to adulthood, and he had scores of cousins. The fact that the Society continues to exist and now has third, fourth, and even fifth cousins as members, was a source of great pride and pleasure to my father. He grew up in Manhattan and Brooklyn and the Bronx, and graduated from Morris High School in 1931--not an auspicious time for a young man to be entering the labor market, and the years of the Depression imprinted themselves deeply on Herb. He took any job he could find and went to night school, first at Brooklyn College and later at Fordham Law. One job he found, in 1932, played an important role in his life and deserves some mention. He became a runner on Wall Street a messenger, really, for Lehman Brothers. It was there that he met two other young men teenagers really -- Milton Gold and Marvin Penner, and these three fellows began a friendship that lasted another 68 years. The friendship endured the Depression, the War, and even the centrifugal forces of suburbanization. In recent years, the three men would get together now and again to have coffee in New York, maybe take in a museum, and basically spend several hours shmoozing. Id ask him what they talked about, and he would say everything and nothing. I think they all just reveled in each others company. Marvin died on September 1st, and Milton died on September 4th, and Millie says that once Milton died she knew Herb wasnt going to make it. Miltons son-in-law said they had a secret pact. Maybe so. After Herb died I came in on a conversation Mady and Phil were having about how the three friends were probably in a coffee shop now. I wasnt sure what she was talking about, and I said, "You mean, like theyre in heaven." And she said, "Yeah. But its really just a coffee shop." I think shes right. Herbs idea of heaven was to visit with the people he loved. Anyway, the Depression ended. The War started. And Herb enlisted in the Army a few weeks after Pearl Harbor. He joined the Signal Corps, as it was considered a good place for Jewish soldiers, and he went to basic training in Fort Monmouth, New Jersey. Thanks to one of his sisters, Herb knew stenography now theres a lost skill and this got him a job as a secretary to a colonel. It was while stationed in Fort Monmouth that he had the great good fortune of attending a Jewish folk dancing social, and there he met a young woman named Mildred Block. Millie had recently been recruited away from the British Purchasing Agency by the Signal Corps Labs, who wanted girls who had some college math. She moved to Fort Monmouth from Brooklyn to take a job testing communications components. It was her chance, as she put it the other day, to do something for the war effort and maybe meet a nice fella. Personally, Im glad she won on both fronts. Herb shipped out in mid-1943, and spent the next two years in India, Burma, Ceylon and China. He didnt make a big tsimmes out of his years in the Army for him it was the right thing to do, and he did it. His two old friends were both Conscientious Objectors, but this did not cause a break among them, which I think showed great character and loyalty on Herbs part. Herb rose to tech sergeant and was discharged, honorably, late in December 1945. He married my mother two weeks later. This marked the beginning of the next stage of his life, really the next stage of Herb and Millies life together, because from here on out they were partners. They started a family, figured out how to earn a living, left their one-room apartment in Long Beach for what seemed to be an absolutely palatial 4-room house in Levittown in 1948. Dad was working for his brother-in-law Ed, Steves father, at Eds auto parts shop in Lynbrook. He had to provide for a growing family, and earlier ambitions of lawyering or politics were put aside. Phil was born in 1950, Mady in 1951, and I arrived in 1955. In that same year, Herb who at this point was not all that young and certainly had many responsibilities took a chance and went into business for himself. He found a partner a hardworking machinist named George Schutz and in December 1955 they opened Valley Stream Auto Parts, otherwise known as "the store." It was the center of Herbs working life for the next 30 years, and he made it into a successful business. Im still in awe when I think about it. He left the house before we were even awake, and came back after 7 every night, and worked every Saturday as well. And not once did he ever complain. I dont think that my Dad loved his job, but I do know that he loved his family. And he was willing to work as hard as necessary to support us. My brother believes, and I think hes right, that Herb enjoyed being a good and honest businessman, and was tremendously proud of being a provider for his family. He was also one of a dying breed a liberal small-business owner. When all of the auto parts workers on Long Island went on an industry-wide strike, at the Valley Stream shop Herb was the one who gave out the leaflets. The business grew slowly but steadily over the years. Herb was well aware of the long boom that he was riding as part of the automobile industry and often commented on how lucky he was. He did not mistake his good fortune for virtue and was always utterly sympathetic to people who hadnt had such luck. He instinctually favored the underdog. He was a dyed-in-the-wool, FDR New Deal Jewish liberal Democrat, and one has to mourn the passing of yet another such person. My sister insists that Herb would want me to encourage everyone to vote in November, and to vote on Row H. Mady also insists that Herb intends to vote by absentee ballot in November. Im not quite sure how thisll work, but Im sure she has a plan. For me, one enduring daily memory from childhood is Dad walking through the front door and the family sitting down to dinner, which always included a discussion of current events. I think my father read a newspaper, often two newspapers, every day of his life from the late 1920s to the year 2000. The New York Times has never had a more loyal reader. And the Levittown Tribune never a more acute critic. That was our local weekly paper. In Herbs immortal words, it was the only paper he could read in its entirety on the way to the bathroom. In 1985, Herb sold the store to two of his employees and retired, and thus began the final chapter of his life. He was lucky in retirement, and he knew it. He was healthy, and he had enough money for his extremely extravagant lifestyle. Phil and I used to meet him in the City for lunch, and could never get him to take a taxi to meet us. He would only ride the bus, even as he got weaker and walking became harder. Depression-era habits die hard. The happiest part of his retirement began with Madys marriage to Arthur. Herb was exceedingly fond of, and impressed by, Arthur, Carrie, and Laura, and he enjoyed teasing us about how well we had each married. And then in 1986, to his utter delight, his first grandchild, Max, was born in Philadelphia. Herb danced his own jig, and it continued with Nate in 1987, Tess in 1990, Eli and Ethan in 1991, and Alice in 1995. He used to say that he waited a long time for the first grandchild he was 73 when Max was born but it was worth it. And for the next 13 and a half years he was a loving, vibrant, and remarkably cheerful presence in all of the grandkids lives. In retirement Dad also began what to us was a most unexpected hobby. He became a court buff. He made friends with several other men, some of them here today, and their group became a fixture at the county courthouse. He enjoyed judging the judges, watching the lawyers perform, and was often very moved by the human stories and drama that unfolded. Newsday did a nice story on the court buffs last spring, which gave Dad a lot of pleasure. And he and Millie have made a little cottage industry of being interviewed by various graduate students, documentary filmmakers, sociologists, and anyone else interested in the history of Levittowns early days. The Jewish Heritage Archive interviewed him only a few months ago for two hours about his experiences during the war, and thats a tape I know we will cherish having. To the very end Herb kept his wits about him. As many of you know, the surgery didnt go well. But he did regain consciousness for a few days, and was fully aware of us and of what was going on. He couldnt speak because of vocal cord damage, but he could write and use hand sign language and occasionally puff out a few words. At one point, a nurse fixed his pillow and asked, "Mr. Cantor, are you comfortable?" And Herb, who knew that he was dying, mouthed one of his favorite lines. "I make a living." Herb asked me a couple of months ago if I thought he had really had much influence on my life. It was an interesting conversation, and I realize now that perhaps he was sensing the end of his life and wanted just a tiny bit of reassurance. It was freely given. He had many wonderful qualities, but perhaps the one that his children would agree was the most important to who we have become was that he was unconditionally supportive of us throughout our lives. He helped us financially when we needed it, encouraged us professionally in what I know he considered three relatively odd career choices, and never ever second-guessed us. Mady said the other day that Herb fundamentally trusted us and assumed that we would make good decisions for ourselves. And he was right to be confident because he had instilled in us some common sense, some sympathy, and some smarts. Just three days before his surgery we had an impromptu gathering for Herb in the backyard. It was a great day, with all the grandkids playing and Herb animated and telling stories and making sure we didnt spend too much on the takeout food. At dinner, this normally reserved man who didnt express his feelings easily stood up and made the most touching valedictory, telling us that if he didnt survive the surgery he was nevertheless a satisfied man, and that he loved us all, especially Mom, and that the last 15 years had been the best years of his life. Of course we said "Herb, whats the worst that could happen?" which he thought was hilarious. And of course the worst has happened, but I prefer to think about how much he loved a good joke, and what a sweet guy, what a funny guy, he was. I know that Phil and Mady and I always loved introducing both Millie and Herb to our friends, who always seemed to share our delight in them. I talked on the phone to my dad pretty routinely. He, of course, was from the old school, where the point of a long-distance call from Levittown to, say, Brooklyn is to get off the phone quickly, before the charges mount up. This was even more the case when it was my nickel, so to speak, as he didnt want me or the party to give unnecessary money to the phone company. But I could usually keep him talking for a few moments about political developments, and he always ended our conversations the same way: "Im proud of you, Danny-boy , Im proud of you" were always his closing words. Well, I just want to say that we are proud to be Herb Cantors children. He was a good man.
Mady Cantor I want to share with you one small memory I have of my father because I think it speaks to his devotion to his family. When I was in high school I participated in something called Sports Night, an evening of competitions that took place in a crowded, overheated gymnasium full of screaming teenagers. The whole thing was my father's idea of hell, and he just could not bear to go to it. My part was a solo gymnastics performance on the rings. I had just started my routine and was upside down, 7 feet off the ground, when at the far end of the gym, framed all by himself in the doorway, I saw my father, wearing his raincoat, with his hat in his hand, looking very uncomfortable, I'm sure, but he was there. I could always count on his love and support. I never had to earn it. It just came with the territory. Here is a short poem that I think is about living well and dying well. It reminds me of my father. It was written by Marge Piercy. Connections are made slowly, sometimes they
grow underground. Live as if you liked yourself, and it may
happen:
Steve Cotler, nephew
Jean Nordhaus, niece The last time we were together with all the Cantors was on a
happy occasion,
Carrie Cantor, daughter-in-law The truth is, I'm feeling both sad and happy today. I'm sad because Herb, my father-in-law, is gone from our day-to-day lives. I'm sad that Herb won't be sitting in his usual place at the head of the table. I'm sad for the empty spaces that seem to be everywhere all of a sudden. But I'm happy too. Happy that Herb was born on that summer day in 1913. Happy that he survived two world wars and the Depression. Happy that he found Millie and loved her his whole life. Happy that he raised three wonderful children - one of whom I had the privilege to marry. Happy that he was fascinated and engaged by the world around him and enjoyed all that life had to offer. Happy that he was loved and cherished by so many people. Happy that Herb led the sort of life that makes us all so sad to see ended. Goodbye, sweet Herb.
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