Interview: 'Mitch Albom's Have a Little Faith' is Food for the Soul
Best-selling Author Talks About His Latest Non-fiction Story Premiering on the Hallmark Hall of Fame
Challenging. Engaging. Entertaining. Thought provoking. These are just a few words the described my impression of Mitch Albom's new Hallmark Hall of Fame movie, "Have a Little Faith," which premiers Sunday, November 27 on ABC.
The story is an eight-year journey that weaves together two distinct events that overlapped in the life of author and journalist Mitch Albom ("The Five People You Meet in Heaven," "For One More Day"), portrayed in the movie by Bradley Whitford ("The West Wing," "Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip").
While back visiting his native New Jersey, Albom encounters the rabbi of the synagogue he had attended as a child, Rabbi Albert Lewis (Academy Award winner Martin Landau, "Ed Wood," "Entourage"). "The Reb," as Albom calls him, asks Albom to write his eulogy. Over the course of several years, the author regularly visits his former spiritual leader to learn more about this interesting man.
He also meets Henry Covington (Emmy and Tony Award winner and Oscar nominee Laurence Fishburne, "What's Love Got to Do with It," "Two Trains Running"), a Detroit preacher who overcame - along with his wife, Annette (Tony Award winner Anika Noni Rose, "Dreamgirls," "Caroline, Or Change") - a life mired in drugs and crime.
This reverend-in-recovery was the pastor of a small congregation in a broken-down building called I Am My Brother's Keeper Church. They not only provided food for the homeless but also offered the facility as a place -- on the church floor -- where they could sleep.
As a sports columnist for the Detroit News and city-celebrity, Albom has started several charities, most of which are focused on helping the homeless in the Motor City. It was through his non-profit, S.A.Y. Detroit (Super All Year Detroit), a group of non-profit charities dedicated to helping improve the lives of Detroit's most needy, that he became friends with Henry.
"Part of my job," he explained, "was to go to places and see what they needed. I found I Am My Brother's Keeper Church and went in. When I saw Henry I thought he was the janitor!"
S.A.Y. Detroit began through a story Albom read, in February of 2006, about the homeless in Detroit would be given a special Super Bowl "party" to keep them off the streets for the big weekend, but would be put back on the streets come Monday morning. The story really disturbed him so much that he wrote a piece calling upon the city to do as much for the homeless the rest of the winter as they were willing to do for a weekend. He even spent a night in a shelter to call attention to the issue.
In "Have a Little Faith," these two events in Albom's life - talking with "The Reb" and working with Henry - are woven into a heart-warming story of faith.
Rabbi Albert Lewis passed away on February 10, 2008 and Albom did, in fact, deliver his eulogy.
Lewis, described by Albom as "the singing rabbi," was a leading American Conservative rabbi, scholar, and author in his own right. He also served as President of the Rabbinical Assembly (RA), the international organization of Conservative rabbis; and Vice-President of The World Council of Synagogues.
"The Reb" even served as an international correspondent for The Catholic Star Herald during his sabbatical year in Israel just after the "Six Day War" of 1967.
According to a Wikipedia account, Lewis promised his readers of "honest and objective reporting, and not propaganda," stating that he would "try to present the feel or mood of Israel as accurately as possible."
While in Egypt he used press credentials from the Catholic paper, and traveled as Dr. Albert Lewis. He was then able to journey into areas where it would quite dangerous for an American Jew or rabbi, so soon after the end of the Six-Day War.
The rabbi's chats drew Albom back into the faith he'd left years before. As a part of the eulogy, the author wrote, "I didn't want to eulogize you. I was afraid. I felt a congregant could never eulogize his leader.
"But I realize now that thousands of congregants will eulogize you today, in their car rides home, over the dinner table. A eulogy is no more than a summation of memories, and we will never forget you, because we cannot forget you, because we will miss you every day.
To imagine a world without you in it is to imagine a world with a little less God in it, and yet, because God is not a diminishing resource, I cannnot believe that."
I asked Mitch Albom at what point he thought, "I've got to write about this."
"Not until I got involved with Henry," he replied. "I was already visiting Rabbi Lewis when I when I was writing other books after 'Tuesdays with Morrie." In fact, I gave a copy of the galleys for 'The Five People You Meet in Haven' to the Rabbi."
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