88 Friday, June 14, 1985 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS -, $47, ,_,:‘ „.., _ _ _. • a ma ,a4____ ,,m , ... ini me is ism lowerna moromfab an=1111 j.1111111 4.51114 1.. _1 1 ami os. imam aim ow Nibs& Ag •• _ • . as was -- umbrireirl lliallim illuilin illimmi llii iii 1111. 1111 1111 •181 1/M111,111111P ow ft_ isommis .61111 1.1111 111111141111 MIMI mmosi1P MN 11111.11)10116 4111.11111111/11111= IIINIMINIMMOIMPO.11111 =NM =II Nam maimmil simesims as um um aminami am ■ ■ .." Wrni lli i gia li a i ll gia gr ll INN al 111.111 l: 11111 III 11111.1111111MIN ma uni inie n 11.1 1111 411 11.2111 111:111 111111 11111 17 umiak m l p.m am ma ximMIIII NI .74,1 16 - MIN li i 6.111 . 11111,11111-111111111111- IS lbw • 11111111.111111101111111111111111111111110111.1111./ /11 11111111:1111111 11111 .111. 1111:1■ 1 71110 111 1111 111111 ■ 111. 1111:111 11.1 4111:11111611111 11111 .1:11 1.11 11.11 111116 11117111111 111111111 ■ 1711 111111 1.1.11 1111111•11 11111.111 111111111111. 11111 imr 11111111111 * 1 iuMraljels. MB wia.11 ..1•= 111111111MM 711:a 1111 ■ IIIIIIIIIIIII RN Eft swam IN. INN 111111111111 -11 WIN 01011M11 1111111111111111.111111111111 J 11111111111111=0.11011 11111- 1-1 a ll impoeiso.som iguNal lie ass *NM tom 111111- 'ME 11111111 .111,111. MI VS • IMONINIMPIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII11.111 M. I" ' ' 11110111.1*. ow iii "Ilia In= OM. . 4-rtan es allajni' EMI ink ION ri 111111 , - win la Siltrolautig .-- 1101Iaimi llajo in 111111 Ill Art by Chari McClean A Jew Alone Is A Jew In Danger Lessons learned from 40 turbulent years of history, from Auschwitz to today. BY ELIE WIESEL Contributing Editor Only three years separated Auschwitz from Jerusalem: How did our people manage to bridge those two events with- out losing its sense of reality? Had an individual gone so fast from such despair to such exultation — he or she would have been mentally unbalanced. The density of this generation's events — their pace — their power of evocation — cannot but baffle our imagination and challenge our memory: a normal person would be unable to take that much sorrow and that much joy in one lifetime. So many wars, perils, victories, losses, funerals, celebrations... The Sinai Campaign, the Six-Day War, the war Liberation of Jeru- salem, the war attrition, the Jewish ren- aissance in Russia, the ingathering of Falashas, the Yom Kippur War, the first direct meetings between Israel and Egypt, the peace treaty with Sadat... So much has happened in one generation — was it too much? Upheavals in Russia and, on a different scale, in Ethiopia? All those anti-Semitic incidents — verbal or violent — in Paris, Rome, Antwerpen — or Vienna — what is their significance? Often we have the feel- ing that history is trying to tell us some- thing — perhaps to give us some warnings — But we are unable to decode them. And so — the question remains: what is the sense of history today? Aren't we but Continued on Page 62