THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, October 3, 1980 21 Playing for Time' Omissions Give False Impression (Continued from Page 1) • Poles, Catholics, politi- cal and other "untermen- shen" were also victims of the Nazis, but the Jews were singled - out for "spe- cial" treatment. • The Pope and other Christian leaders knew of the situation in Nazi con- centration camps but re- mained silent. • The Auschwitz cre- matorium burned some 12,000 corpses a day. • Some German Jews were more German than Jewish, but not according to the Nazis. But "a little knowledge can be a dangerous thing," the old saying goes. Through errors of omission and commission, "Playing for Time" can give viewers a false impression of life in a Nazi death camp. For example, Dr. Josef Mengele, the infamous Au- schwitz doctor now repor- tedly hiding in Paraguay, is depicted as a cultured Ger- man gentleman who loves music. No mention is made of his heinous human medi- cal experiments; his role in selections of inmates for gassing is grossly minimized. Likewise, SS camp commander Maria Man- del, chief of the Birkenau women's camp, is por- trayed as a sometimes humane music lover who cries over the disappear- ance of a little Polish boy she had "adopted." In Fenelon's book, on which the film is based, Mandel is specifically described as personally taking "her" little boy to the gas chamber. There is noth- ing mysterious or implied about his disappearance. Perhaps most misleading is a scene that exaggerates a description in Fenelon's book. The body of orchestra conductor Rose is laid in state in a coffin, surrounded by flowers. Rose, a German Jew, and niece of Gustav Mahler, was not treated in death nor in life as were hundreds of thousands of victims of Auschwitz. While Fenelon's book de- scribes this extraordinary but actual 'occurrence, the film fabricates details that are unbelievable to the point of absurdity. In the film the coffin of Rose is draped with a Nazi flag by members of the SS and Mengele, himself, comes to pay his last respects. At one point, he even kisses Rose's violin. Some four million Jews and non-Jews perished in Birkenau-Auschwitz, by gassing, burning, beating, torture, dog bites, shooting, hanging. This was the "normal" way of death there. The film shows the viewer the exception, but — not the rule. At this point no film footage of actual gas chambers or crematoriums is interspersed. Even the one hanging that is portrayed is romanticized. The victim, underground leader * * * CBS Picketed Demonstrators picketed CBS-TV headquarters in New York on Sunday and again on Tuesday to protest the casting of PLO- supporter Vanessa Red- grave as Fania Fenelon in "Playing for Time." WJBK-TV in Southfield was also picketed Tuesday evening before the movie , was broadcast., , Mala, is shown being hanged next to her lover, with whom she had at- tempted to escape. They gaze into each other's eyes as they die. Mala was in fact hanged. Alone. But not before she was tortured, beaten and trampled until she was "just one mangled mass of blood, a disjointed puppet," according to Fenelon's book. tion camp by train in No- vember 1944 and liberated by the British on April 15, 1945. T PRI E Cassette Dictating Transcribing Machines 342-780 The end of the film be- comes garbled, as though the producers were "playing for time." After 10 months at Birkenau, Fenelon and other orchestra members were in fact • moved to the Bergen-Belsen concentra- - THE ALLAN/ /TOURS COLLEGE announces an adult education program... U STUDIES CJF Preparations Continue a select group of classes following high scholarly standards taught by specialists in these areas: A Shown preparing for the Council of Jewish Fed- erations General Assembly, which will be held at the Detroit Plaza Hotel Nov. 12-16, are from left, top photograph, CJF representatives Nora Donegan and Norman Ober, Tillie Brandwine, Detroit Committee chairman Dulcie Rosenfeld (standing), Barbara Mar- cuse and Shelby Tauber. In the bottom photograph is the Adjacent Communities Committee, including from left, Elaine Fishier, Flint; Esther Greenfield, To- ledo; Lottie Berenholtz, Windsor; Carol Amster, Ann Arbor; committee chairman Ruth Broder of Detroit; Ruth Vinacow, Flint; Harriet Whiteman, Windsor; and Emily Bank, Flint. Aviva Mutchnick to Speak for Hadassah, Midrasha Aviva Mutchnick, special consultant to the American Jewish Committee, will de- liver the first lecture in the Midrasha-Hadassah Mini-Mester series 11 a.m. Thursday at the Midrasha, 21550 W. 12 Mile, South- field. She will speak on "Jews in Arab Lands." Ms. Mutchnick was born in Bahgdad, Iraq. In 1951, her family moved to Israel where she lived in Ma'abarat for 10 years. After serving in the Israeli army, she studied at the University of Michigan. Her majors included politi- cal science and sociology and research on Palesti- nians and the West Bank. Ms. Mutchnick has served as executive di- rector of the Labor Zionist Alliance and executive director and co-chairman of the World Organization for Jews from Arab Countries. The Mini-Mester series will be held from Thursday through Nov. 6 at the Mid- rasha. There is a registra- tion fee. For information, please call the Midrasha, 354-1050 or 352-7117; or Hadassah;, 357-2920. • • • • HISTORY LANGUAGE RELIGION PHILOSOPHY • LITERATURE • BIBLE • SOCIOLOGY Day and Evening classes available. For information and registration call: THE ALLAN/ /TOURO COLLEGE MONDAY TO THURSDAY 1 pm to 5 pm 357-2968 21550 West Twelve Mile Road • Southfield, Michigan 48076