- Friday, February 7, 1947_ THE JEWISH NEWS Page Six ■ Women to Raise Ten Per Cent of Record Quota Mrs. Ehrlich Stresses Role Qf Young Mother in Drive Left to right: Mrs. Herman Weisman, Mrs, CarrSchiller, Mrs. Louis Gla- sier, Mrs. Ralph Davidson, Miss Dorothy David- son, Mrs. Joseph G. Gilbert, Mrs. Benjamin Imber and Mrs. H. G. Goodman. (Continued from Page 1) The more than 570 women who braved the snow and ice to attend the luncheon were spurred to intensified par- ticipation in the campaign by the addresses of the two guest speakers, Mme. Alfred Spanjaard, Dutch survivor of the Nazi concentration camps, and John W. Vandercook, noted author and news commentator. The audience was visibly affected by Mme. Spanjaard's talk. She described her experience with the Nazis, from the first Gestapo raid on her home ) in Amsterdam, through two years in the notorious Bergen-Belsen concentration camp, and, finally, her return to this country as an exchanged prisoner-of-war. Son Born in U. S. Mme. Spanjaard is convinced she owes her life to the 12 years she lived in the United States. Her son was born in this country and his American citizenship classified her family as "privi- leged prisoners," that is, those who were starved and tortured, but not automatically extermi- nated. After 13 midnight raids on the Spanjaard residence, the Ges- tapo finally decreed that 11-year- old Barry's American passport carried with it no privileges, and the boy, with his parents, were arrested and forced to sign a paper asserting they were "giv- ing their services voluntarily to Germany." For 10 months the Spanjaards were interned at the Westhofer Camp in Holland, where they were forced to witness each Tues- day the transportation of 2,500 Jews to certain death in the Polish extermination camps. Mme. Span- Left to right: Mrs. Rose Woirauch, Mrs. Gerald Woloveck, Mrs. Harry Jurow, Mrs. Jose Winsen,• Mrs. Joseph H. Kukes, Mrs. Harold B. Kukes, and Mrs. Nathan Silverman. Left to right: Mrs. Jacob Fishman, Mrs Morris Tack, -Mrs. Sidney Kelt, Mrs. Asher Smith, Mrs. Meyer Goldstein and Mrs. A. Alpert. finally reached Switzerland, the Swiss were so human and kind that her son asked in bewilder- ment "Mother, are there really good people left in this world?" Happiness Shattered Their happiness was shattered by the death of M. Spanjaard, at the very moment that they crossed the Swiss border. Yet, Mme. Spanjaard reports, "he died happy, knowing that his wife and son were free at last." Mme. Spanjaard warned the Federation women that it was "a Left to right: Mrs. G. L. Willens, Mrs. Sidney Rosen, Mrs. I. B. Dworman, Mrs. Samuel B. Danto, Mrs. Theodore Levin, Mrs. Isidore Sobeloff, Mrs. Harry Jacobson, Mrs. H. B. Keidan, Mrs. S. Koblin. Left to right: Mrs. L. Yaffa, Mrs. J. Feldman, Miss B. Beudes, Bobs Srere, Mrs. M. Schayowitz, Mrs. Abraham Srere, Mrs. Rose M. Lipson and Mrs. Abraham Hershman. jaard's parents were among the mere geographical coincidence" that the American Jews escaped. victims of the gas chambers. She urged unlimited support of Suffered Hunger and Torture Transferred to the Bergen-Bel- ; the United Jewish Appeal, to ease sen camp, the Spanjaards under- the plight of the thousands of went a two-year period of star- survivors. "Out of pure grati- vation, cold, and mental and phy- tude," she concluded, "you must sical torture. Mme. Spanjaard re- consider your contributions not counted numerous incidents of charity, but absolute human duty." Vandercook's address carried Nazi bestiality, climaxed by her own son's plea that he and his the impact of facts and authorita- parents commit suicide to elude tive observations on the future of the unbearable starvation. Her world peace and the status of reply was a fierce "We must live," world Jewry. "Suspended in Space" although there seemed little pros- He described the remaining pect of remaining alive, until Jan. 21, 1945, when she received the European Jews as "suspended in almost unbelievable news that space" with no home ties and no the family was to be returned to I economic security. "The world is unconcerned about them, yet their t' country. hope of life must be em- Mme. Spanjaard and her son small bellished, and given substance. managed to get her dying hus- This is the task of the United band to the Red Cross train where, for the first time in two Jewish Appeal," he emphasized. Vandercook sees little prospect years, they found heat and hot food. At first, she reported, they of a third world war. "I'm per- were totally immune to their sur- fectly sure," he stated, "that the roundings; they found it impos- world isn't going to tumble into sible to believe they had been another abyss." This prophecy he ''released out of Hell." When they bases on the rapid demoblization of the United States and the USRR, and on the success of the United Nations. All photographs on this The NBC commentator dis- page are by Paul Kirsch, cussed the Jewish survivors in Europe from the aspect of their Jewish News Staff Pho- importance to the world. He nar- rated his impressions of the tographer. Buchenwald concentration camp, Left to right: Mrs. Louis Oppenheim, Mrs. Joseph Silverman, Mrs. E. E. Einstein, Mrs. Earl Gilman, Mrs. Louis Tatkin, Judy Preger- son and Mrs. E. Greenbaum. LEFT: L. to R. — Mrs. Arthur Levy, Jean Feerer, Mrs. Alan Warnick, Mrs. Bud Harris, Mrs. Lawrence See- gar, Mrs. David M. Feerer, Mrs. Samuel Ruskin and Mrs. Victor Shiffman. • • • BELOW: L. to R. — Mrs. Charles Rubiner, Mrs. Robert Marwil, Mrs. Robert Morri- son, Mrs. Thomas Marwil, Mrs. D. J. Bittker, Mrs. I. Irv- ing Bittker, Mrs. B. B. Glazer and Mrs. Harold Shapiro. "a vast city of the dead," which he visited within a few days of its liberation. "Still a Socialist" His self - appointed guide through the camp, Vandercook reports, was one of the inmates, a tiny Jew who dismissed queries as to his physical condition with the statement "When I came here I was a Socialist, a Jew, and a free man. I am still a Socialist, still a Jew, and again free. Is it of any consequence what is the shape of my figure?" It is the people with this strength of character and convic- iton who have survived, Vander- cook declares, "people who have an enormous lot to give to hu- manity." Climax to Seminars "If this campaign succeeds," he concluded, "you will have saved some of the finest talents among people alive today. You will be aiding not only homeless Jews, but, by saving this rare metal, you will haye served supremely well in the larger task of saving all humankind." The luncheon climaxed a pro- gram of seminars on the "Accent on Youth" theme, led by leaders professional Detroit's among social workers. Dr. Editha Sterba, noted psychoanalyst, discussed emotional problems at-- )ng child- ren; Samuel Neuschatz, director of intermediate activities at the Jewish Community Center, led the seminar on leisure time ac- tivities; Mrs. Charles Lakoff spoke on Jewish education, and Albert Cohen, director of the Jewish vocational Service, discussed vo- cational guidance. •