With PACE fund, giving comes full circle

Martye's family moved to this area from the Bronx when he was 12, he's been a member of Bnai Abraham Synagogue since the '50s, and he doesn't do things by halves. He and Beth, who is recently retired from a career that included first modeling and then real estate, describe themselves as very active people. Tennis, golf, walking and bicycling are just some of their pursuits. As an attorney with a litigation firm, Martye has, for the past 40 years, helped people deal with personal injury; he has "no interest in retiring."
This drive extends to all facets of life. Not content with his original bar mitzvah, Martye said that, about 10 years ago, he "re-did the whole bar mitzvah start to finish, and even read from the Torah, which I didn't do the first time." He noted that some in attendance were at both bar mitzvahs, but it was a special opportunity to have his family with him. Between them, he and Beth have five children and two grandchildren.
But that second bar mitzvah, Martye said, was really a tribute to his father, of blessed memory, who was "very aware of his Jewishness," as is Martye. Through it and the fund he has set up, Martye comes full circle to his roots. For him, this means supporting funds that ensure a strong Jewish future or that fight prejudice. It means "giving back."



