THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS YOUR WEDDING — BAR MITZVA ALBU FINER WI NER WILL BE WFIEN PHOTOGRAPHED BY . AND ASSOCIATES 357-1010 .Mu sic by Rabinowitz's 'New Lives' Recalls Holocaust Events By ALLEN A. WARSEN The latest contribution to the rapidly growing library on the Holocaust is Dorothy Rabinowitz's "New Lives," subtitled "Survivors of the Holocaust Living in America" (Alfred A. Knopf, New York, 1976). "New Lives" is a documentary book. It re- cords the experiences of former concentration Sam Barnett Big or small, we custom the music to your needs. 968-2563 Qaqathtt , g‘los. WAttiOUSt SORE *... -oe so tot dkvesloo olovel aviiveir fashions tov w 0001 • KNIT GLOVES & MITTENS $ 390 were $6 2PC. POLY PANTSUITS $ 1 9° were $30 HANDBAGS KNIT BUTTON- MANY STYLES DOWN VESTS $ 1 9° were $16 BELTED A-LINE SKIRTS $139° were $20 DOUBLE KNIT PULL-ON PANTS $790 were $12 PREWASHED DENIM JEANS $ 990 were $14 WOOL PANTCOATS 109° $499 °.' $ $16 BankAmencaro MasterChargo were $70 OUR Vie°":4 PWC*S fy.10 WI° WA Mt STORE SHELBY PLAZA BERKLEY 3160 W. 12 MI. 23 MI.-VAN DYKE HOLIDAY HOURS Mon. thru Fri. 10 til 9 Sat. til 6 Sunday 12 til 5 1 4 Friday, December 3, 1976 41 camp inmates, and de- lineates their suffering, struggle for survival, and readjustment after liber- ation. A survivor portrayed in the book, Jacob Korman, now in his 70s, was mar- ried and a businessman in Warsaw before the Nazi invasion of Poland in 1939. In the ghetto he was a kitchen inspector whose "job had been to observe closely the way in which the soup ration was doled out." At Maidanek he was a "horse." There the "horses" (prisoners) hauled all kinds of cargo, even corpses of women and children,- murdered by SS men and horse- whipped to death by Hermine Braunsteiner Ryan, the vicekomman- dant of the women's camp at Maidanek. Once for watching her kill two women, he was given 25 lashes. At that murderess' de- portation hearings in the courtroom of the United States Immigration and Naturalization Service in New York, Korman was the chief U.S. witness against Mrs. Ryan. Among others, he testified that he saw her hit an old woman and a child so many times until both woman and child were on the ground. "Af- terwards he and the other horses had to carry away the corpses." Incidentally, the mur- deress voluntarily gave up her U.S. citizenship in 1971; and in 1973 at the request of the West Ger- man government she was extradited to Germany where she is being tried for the atrocities she had committed. Froin Maidanek Kor- man was transferred to Treblinka, then to Au- schwitz, Mauthausen and Bergen-Belsen. After liberation, Kor- man, whose first wife perished in a concentra- tion camp, remarried. In 1951, the couple and their child that was born to them in Germany, immig- rated to the United States. Each story related in "New Lives" is full of drama. A good example is the story of Paula who kept hidden her five-year-old daughter in the slave labor camp, Skrzyske. There the child several times es- caped death thanks to Pau- la's ingenuity and courage. Also owing to Paula's alertness and daring, her 12-year-old niece, Serale, a slave laborer in the same camp, escaped death time and again. Now, Paula's 37-year- old daughter is happily married, is, devoted to her mother, and resides in Nazi Kappler's Illness Worsens ROME — Reports indi- cate that the condition of cancer-stricken Nazi war criminal Herbert Kappler has worsened and his death is a matter of days. Kappler, 69, who or- dered and lead a slaying of 335 Romans in 1944 was granted freedom by a mil- itary court last month. Queens. Her niece, Serale, became a scholar absorbed in art studies. A good example of Jewish resistance to Nazi tyranny and inhumanity is the story of Rember- tow, a town near Warsaw. There the Jews worked in a munitions factory until the Nazis decided to round them up and transport them to con- centration camps. Korman went to Re- mbertow before his cap- ture by the Nazis and got there just after the round-up. He saw there hair scattered everywhere — "a velt mit her" (a world of hair). He soon found out where the hair came from. He was told that the Jews resisted and refused to be transported. Many were shot for "trying to pull the guns" from the guards. The women, too, resisted. They "had bit- ten the noses off the guards," and had torn the hair out of their heads. After the battle, the dead, including several dead guards "filled the streets, and their hands — the hands of the women — were full of hair." "New Lives" is a book of heroism and tragedy, tenderness and compas- sion. Its author, Dorothy Rabinowitz has contri- buted articles to "Com- mentary" and other magazines. She is the co- author, with Yedida Nelson, of "Home Life." .T11.•TWELVE hlAti 12-Md. tL Telqpeeph • tiORTHWO01)- SHOPPING CENTER _ 13 and- Woodward, Royal Oak • FAIRIANE TOWN CENTER Dearborn • MEADOW BROOK MALL Rochester Michigan's Leading Department Store for Children GIRLS' NYLON SKI JACKET NOW SALE! 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