Martin Kaplan, May 12, 2016

Title

Martin Kaplan, May 12, 2016

Description

Dr. Martin Kaplan was born in Brooklyn, New York in 1928 and raised in the Bronx, New York City. Both of his parents, Samuel (born in 1899) and Clara Kaplan worked as school teachers. His father was a Russian immigrant from a village named Olshan near Vilna, Lithuania. Both of Dr. Kaplan's parents were raised in Orthodox Jewish homes but became more liberal with their Judaism in their own homes. Dr. Kaplan recalls lighting Shabbat candles, having a bar mitzvah, and keeping kosher at home, but seldom attended synagogue. He also discusses systemic anti-Semitism.

After graduating from DeWitt Clinton High School, Dr. Kaplan attended the City College of New York for one year. He then transferred to Syracuse University, his father's alma mater. Dr. Kaplan went to medical school at State University of New York Downstate Medical Center in Brooklyn, New York. He joined the United States Air Force between the Korean and Vietnam wars because of the likelihood he would be drafted as a doctor. He was stationed at Greenville, South Carolina where he would later meet his first wife Nicki Nixon. His wife converted to Judaism through the rabbi at the conservative synagogue in Greenville.

Dr. Kaplan moved to Lexington, Kentucky in 1959 where he joined an allergy practice with Dr. Maurice Kaufmann and Dr. Lloyd Mayer. He discusses the medical community that existed in Lexington at this time and the Jewish doctors that he could recall. Upon moving to Lexington, Dr. Kaplan joined Temple Adath Israel, the only reform temple in the city. He also joined B'nai Brith. He became president of the congregation at one point when there was an attempted "uprising" against the Rabbi of the time--Rabbi Leffler. He goes on to name the different rabbis of the congregation over his years of membership. He discusses his current wife's membership in the Hadassah organization. Dr. Kaplan explains his relationship with Judaism in comparison to his parents' and his children's. He describes his support of Zionism and his family's connection to the Holocaust growing up.

Subject

Lexington (Ky.)
Jews--Kentucky--Lexington.
Jewish leadership--Kentucky--Lexington
Jewish women--Kentucky--Lexington
Jews--Identity.
Worship (Judaism)
Religion
University of Kentucky. Medical Center
Physicians--Kentucky
Military service, Voluntary--United States.
United States. Army Air Forces
Medical education
Universities and colleges.

Format

video

Identifier

2016oh059_jk021

Interviewer

Janice Crane

Interviewee

Martin Kaplan

Interview Keyword

Discrimination.
Anti-Semitism
Antisemitism
Family histories.
Jewish families.

Interview Rights

All rights to the interviews, including but not restricted to legal title, copyrights and literary property rights, have been transferred to the University of Kentucky Libraries.

Interview Usage

Interviews may be reproduced with permission from Louie B. Nunn Center for Oral History, Special Collections, University of Kentucky Libraries.

Files

kaplan.jpeg

Collection



Citation

“Martin Kaplan, May 12, 2016,” Jewish Kentucky, accessed November 18, 2024, https://nunncenter.net/jewishkentucky/items/show/279.