28 Friday, May 4, 1984 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS NEWS Holocaust academy Continued from previous page • DR. AARON B -RIVES Announces the GRAND OPENING of his new office in the Kristen Towers Building at Greenfield at 10 1/2 Mile Rd., Oak Park Dr. Rives is a Foot Doctor specializing in Adult & Diabe- tic Foot Care. He and his staff wish to invite you to visit the new office and have a FREE FOOT EXAM. Each office visit includes whirlpool and blood pressure reading. If you are experiencing the following foot problems please call for an appointment: 1. Painful corns and callouses 2. Painful thick ingrown toenails 3. Painful bunions and hammertoes 4. Painful tired, aching feet 5. Painful tingling cold toes and feet Dr. Rives offers laser surgery; and complete ambulatory surgery in his office. Convenient office hours available. 967-2929 Suite 139 Dr. Rives participates with Blue Cross, Medicare and other major medical programs. Ingeborg Kligaard, right, accepts on behalf of the Danish people The Righteous Among the Nations of the World Citation, from Dr. John Maines. Pictured with them are, from left: Mrs. Leon Popowski, Leon Halpern and Rabbi Charles Rosenzveig. Candles," a survivor and a child of a survivor joined to light together one of seven candles on the menorah on the bimah. Participants_were Heinia Ciesla, Helen Jutkiewicz, Mania Lesh, Jack Flam, Sol Gringlas, Sam Moskowitz, Shari Balberman, Faye Elbaum, Eva Kraus, Bernard Kent and Isaac Szlamkowicz. rector of the Holocaust Memorial Center, called for "a new beginning." A special candle was lit by Phil- lip Wimmer in memory of the 1.5 mil- lion children who perished at the hands of the Nazis. An additional candle was lit by Simon Schwarzberg in memory of slain Israeli soldiers and civilians. Cantor Hyman Adler of B'nai David chanted the El Moleh Rachamim and other memorial ren- ditions. Cantor Max Shimansky of Cong. Beth Achim also contributed to the musical protion of the program, accompanied by Lillian Zellman. Non-vocal musical selections were performed by Eric Rosenow on piano and Charles Weiner on clarinet. Rabbi Morton Yolkut, spiritual leader of B'nai David, gave an ad- dress in which he brought closer to home what he called "the enormity of the outrage." He said that the fig- ures, six million dead, 1.5 million children dead, were hard to fathom, but when the tragedy focuses on one little boy, "the agony of death — we understand." He asked rhetorically: how do the Jews respond to a Titus, the In- quisition, to Hitler, to Arafat and to Qaddafi? He replied, "Am Yisroel Chai — the Jewish People Lives." He recalled a comment by Presidential candidate Rev. Jesse Jackson who asked how long the Jews would mourn the victims of the Holocaust. "We will carry our sacred burden till our duty is discharged," Rabbi Yolkut said, describing incidents in which Jews throughout the world are persecuted, harassed and even killed. He said the Jews will continue to re- call the Holocaust victims "until every enemy of our people is crushed." Rabbi Charles Rosenzveig, di- "If the initiation of a calendar is indicative of the end of a dark period or of a new beginning, then the Holocaust is the right time. We need a new counting, a new period and a new day and the end of the Holocaust is that beginning." Greetings were brought from the Jewish Community Council's Holocaust subcommittee by Mrs. Eli Robinson, chairman; by Gustav Be- renholz, treasurer of the memorial center; by Arthur Weiss of the Shaarit Haplaytah Junior Division; by Robert A. Arkand, director of the Greater Detroit Round Table, Na- tional conference of Christians and Jews; and by Charles Silow, Children of Holocaust Survivors Association in Michigan. Dr. Irving Gastman of the Holocaust Memorial Center knowledged messages fr President Reagan, Sen., Carl LeVin, Rep. William Broomfield, Rep. San- der Levin, Detroit Mayor Coleman Young, Southfield Mayor Donald Fracassi, Archbishop Edmund Szoka, Oak Park Mayor Charlotte Rothstein and Sen. Donald Riegle. The program also included reci- tations by youngsters Ruth and Mike Flam. Abraham Pasternak recited the Kaddish, and Ani Maamin and the Partisanen Song were led by Cantors Aldler and Shimansky.