Interviewed by Sharon Alterman
October 2, 2013
Home of Manny and Natalie Charach
Manny Charach discusses briefly his business relationship with S.S. Kresge Company and Kmart. The bulk of the interview focuses on his philanthropic work.
Topics discussed include founding the Manat Foundation, funding homes for JARC and Kadima, funding the Charach Cancer Center at Huron Valley Hospital, endowing a fund at the Children’s Hospital, and funding a room at the Ronald McDonald House. His charitable work in Israel is also covered, including building a dining hall for Ethiopian immigrants, a retreat for IDF soldiers and funding Mobile Intensive Care Units through Magen David Adom.
Manny Charach was born in 1925 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania to Irvin and Clara Charach. After graduating high school, Charach served in the Army during World War II. After the war, he visited Detroit to attend a friend’s birthday party. There he was introduced to Natalie Miller. He proposed the next day and they were married in 1946.
Throughout the first ten years of their marriage, Charach held a number of jobs, most in the sales field. In 1957, he started a company that represented manufacturers (mainly electronic) called Manny Charach Associates. He began representing a little-known company at the time – Sony. Later, he obtained an account with a Japanese company called Matsushita who wanted to break into the American market. Charach thought the name would be difficult for Americans to pronounce and suggested a new one: Panasonic. Charach first sold Panasonic radios to S.S. Kresge company. When Kresge became Kmart, Charach provided most of the electronic products that were stocked in their stores. He retired in 1993.
Always generous philanthropists, Manny and Natalie dedicated themselves to charitable causes. In 1991, they opened the Janice Charach Gallery in memory of their daughter. They’ve funded multiple buildings in Michigan and Israel, a children’s playground in Denver, ambulances for Israel, equipment for children’s hospital, and the Clara and Irvin Charach Tamarack Museum.
Manny Charach died on July 14, 2017 at the age of 92.
Credit as: Leonard N. Simons Jewish Community Archives. Manny Charach Oral History Interview, October 2, 2013.