... THE JEWISH NEWS 'Page Twenty tettit're tovies tvain the sibte Ag-rEawlaR0 THE GUESTS fadderofikaloyel OEPC47n • CaL Friday, March 2I, 1947 e,o 'MO GOOOK.6L.T. FOR 111111 SET X.10 0,6ELP IZE-ricze TOGET 402 TO rt-IE -4r ROO= TOP Oc wouse ► 1111=111 THE FIRST KING OF ISRAEL We rl; FROM THE BIBLICAL !STORY OF FOUND IN THE FIRST BOOK OF Ek LATER Sa.muEL wENT st3461.•O TO tAIZPEt4 a,+0 vi a4 TI4EiZE wHEP4 Sew,. iu40 4 e SERVANT sAtztvF-0-•• •• LOOK aT TL-,E PEOPLE aulZtrYINIG- T.EvIZE GOING TO SEE SAMull t THINK. • ■ ► Tells of Camp Horrors Sarah Wien Rejoices in Freedom After Years of Slavery in Poland United Hebrew Schools Plan Pesach Programs Junior Campaign Workers to Hear Young German Journalist at Rally Passover programs are being Ernest W. Michel, 23-year-old planned by the members of the staff in all branches of the United German newspaperman a n d Hebrew Schools, April 7-10. Pro- author who staged a spectacular grams will feature playlets, the escape from Buchenwald, will be After five and a half years of misery and suffering in story of the departure from - the Czenstochowa concentration camp in Poland and a year Egypt, 'the life of Moses, Pesach and a half of hopeful waiting for liberation in the U. S. zone of songs, and recitations dealing with occupation in Germany, Sarah Wien is a free human being, the story of Pesach. Parents of the pupils and their enjoying the liberties afforded her in this country. One of only two survivors in her immediate family and friends are invited to attend. . one of only three survivors of 4, now are being rehabilitated by a. family circle of 36, Miss! fellow prisoners manufactured the JDC and many already have Wien was in Detroit last week; munitions for the Nazis. During been reunited with families or acted as interpreter for the American Military Government. He helped found the new Jew- ish Congregation of Mannheim and became its secretary. He also made recordings for the United Jewish Appeal, visited most of the DP camps in Ger- many where he worked very closely with representatives of the Joint Distribution Commit- tee, one of the three constituent - on a visit with her cousin, Harry! the final weeks of imprisonment, Schumer of Pennington Drive. , because she knew German and During her stay in Detroit, she ! five other languages, Miss Wien took occasion to describe her was placed at work in the Czen- experiences under the Nazis, the stocho• camp office. horrors of anti-Semitism in pre-1 "We were not permitted to war and postwar Poland, and ad- ' read anything," she revealed. dressed a large rally of the De- "But we had a secret radio and troit Palestine Histadrut (Ge- we were kept informed on what werkshaften) March 13. At this was happening in the outside rally she recited a poem she had world. We knew that the Nazi written, "The City Burns," and downfall was approaching. It was a horrible experience. Of the sang a DP song. original 55,000 Czenstochowa Brother to Join Here From Detroit, Miss Wien left Jews, only 2,000 survived. When for Chicago, where she will make we recited the mass' Yizkor for her home with an aunt. She soon the dead, in the displaced persons will be joined there by her broth- camp in Germany, it was a mass er, Samuel, who from the age Yizkor for 50,000." Miss Wien spoke with particu- of 18 was in some of the worst Nazi concentration camps, suffer- lar horror of the tragedies that ing untold hardships until he, were imposed upon Jews in Po- like his sister, fled after the war land. "Not only before the war, but to the U. S. zone. The third' survivor of the fam- afterwards, upon our liberation ily is a cousin whom Miss Wien by the Russians, the Poles perse_ did not know but who, upon cuted us," she said. "As soon as hearing her name in the Czen- we could, we fled by the thou- stocho•a camp, introduced her- sands, and those of us who were fortunate to reach the American self. zone were the lucky and happy Miss Wien's story is one of hor- people. Many were slain on the ror, but it reveals that heroic road to Germany. It was ironic determination which helped the that we should have suffered survivors from the crematoria to carry on and to live to tell the from Nazism and that we should have had to escape into Germany tale of Jews whose spirit proved to seek the aid of Americans." stronger than the Nazi knout. Praises U. S. Army A native of Czenstochowa. Po- Miss Wien speaks with deep land, Miss Wien was a university gratitude of the work of the U. S. student who had planned to spe_ army in the DP camps and of cialize in bacteriology. A poet the aid that was given her by and a singer as well as a student the Joint Distribution Commit- of science, she nevertheless was tee. compelled by the anti-Semitism "My relatives brought me in Poland to abandon her plans here," she said, "but the Joint and entered an ORT training made it possible. JDC's work is school in Lodz. Then came the historic and humanitarian and I war, her interment in the con- want to record the superhuman centration camp and her eventual tasks JDC performs." liberation. Miss Wien said that there were no children in the concentration Manufactured Munitions She was 20 when she was camps, that the youngsters were forced behind electrified barbed murdered, and those who were wires of the Nazi-made camp in rescued were placed in non-Jew- the city of her birth. For five ish homes for the duration of the relatives. Poles Have Freedom - While Poles also worked for the Nazis in the Czenstochowa camp, she said that for them it meant jobs, that they came and left at will. Only the Jews were kept-prisoners and tortured. She added that the Polish intelligens- sia was murdered and the masses, in their ignorance, remained anti- Semitic. The handful of humani- tarians among them who fought against pogroms were the Social- ists and the labor leaders. The anti-Semitic Polish mass-es at- tacked Jew‘ everywhere and even destroyed children's homes. "Nearly 100 per cent of the survivors desire to go to Pales- tine," she declared. "But children and pregnant women are given preference and Aliyah Beth, out- side the quota, is dangerous and compels delays in hopes of sett- ling in Zion. Therefore, those who must leave go to the United States or wherever else they can find , haven, and the rest must wait and wait." Work for Selves Referring to the latest JDC program to create work for the DPs, Miss Wien said that the sur- vivors refuse to work for Ger- many's reconstruction but gladly create articles, under JDC guid- ance, for their own needs. She displayed a DP-made cigaret- case she was carrying, and showed how the DPs proudly in- scribe the Mogen David and the Zionist flag upon their wares. "They are talented people, the DPs," she added, "and will be a credit to Palestine and wherever they may settle." Miss Wien came to the U. S. on the Marine Perch with the aid of JDC and the United Serv- ice for New Americans. Her brother is on the way to the U. S., with JDC aid, and her fiance, also a survivor from Naz- ism, who is working with UNRRA, soon will come to Chip and a half years she and her war. These youngsters, she said, country. -- 18, 1945, killing several SS men to make good his escape. He re- corded his experiences in his bode "I Was 104,995" which is being published in Germany and which he plans to publish in the U. S. After the war he returned to his native city, Mannheim, and ERNEST W. MICHEL agencies of the United Jewish Appeal. Michel reached the United States last summer. He has been working as a reporter for the Port Huron Times Herald. His articles also have appeared in guest speaker at the Junior Ser- vice Group's workers' rally ia support of the Allied Jewish Campaign, at 8 p. m. Thursday, March 27, at the Jewish Com- The Jewish News. rriunity Center. Another feature of the meet- Dancing will follow the busi- ing, which will launch the Jun- ness portion of the meeting. ior Division's participation in. the campaign, will be a presentation of the play "To the American Parents Purchase Land People," which was written by To Memorialize Son, Morton Wishengrad and which will be staged by the Wayne Pfc. Robert P. Weisman University Broadcasting Guild. In memory of their son, Pfc. Acting as chairman and master of ceremonies for the rally Will Robert F. Weisman, who was killed in action be Norman Naimark, Junior Di- in Germany vision campaign chairman. Revived German Press One of the first young journal- ists to come out of post-war Ger- many, Michel helped revive the German press as an editor and correspondent for German news- papers published under the sup- ervision of the occupation au- thorities. In October, 1945, he joined DANA, sole and official German news agency set up by occupation forces to reestablish news gathering activities. He covered the War Crimes trials at Nuremberg for DANA, the first German reporter to receive such an assignment. Michel spent most of his youth as a Nazi prisoner. Sent to a la- bor camp when he was 16, one week after the outbreak of war, he was detained in almost every German concentration camp in- cluding notorious Auschwitz. March 20, 1945, Mr. and Mrs. Israel Weisman of 9650 N. Mar- tindale have purchased two dunams of land in Palestine through the Jewish National Pfc. Weisman Fund. Pfc. Weisman, who entered ser- vice in August, 1944, was killed shortly before his 19th birthday. He was a graduate of Central High School and a member of the Jewish Center and AZA. His parents, who are active in Arlazaroff branch of the Jewish National Worker's Alliance, in- scribed his name in the Golden Book of the Jewish National Fund at the time of his death, and last year commemorated his_ After six years • as a prisoner, yarzheit by -planting a garden in he !finally broke out of Buchen- a Jewish National Fund forest #,Wild With two friends on April in Palestine.-