22 Friday, May 16, 1986 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Meet Our Capable Crew PURELY COMMENTARY Waldheim Jewish Community Center Day Camp Robin Herman Director Program Pre-School - 1st Grade Stan Trumpeter Day Camp Director Candy Bousquet Program Director 2nd - 6th Grades Ready to provide a wonderful experience! Free Bus Transportation Session I, June 23 - July 18, Session II, July 22 - August 15 Exciting programs for pre-school through 10th grade For information call 661-1000, extension 254. Continued from Page 2 camp whence escape was virtu- ally impossible. Kulka tells about an exception to this rule. A non- Jewish SS guard, Victor Pestek, assisted Siegfried Lederer in an historic escape. A love story is part of the true, historic event. The SS guard, Pestek, was in love with the Jewish woman Rene who was among those scheduled for ex- termination. The story of this love affair forms a moving chapter in the Kulka record of a most remarka- ble event. Rene survived the horrors and with her mother found refuge in Czechoslovakia. She married an American officer and moved to this country. Recaptured, returned to Au- schwitz, the story related here provides the details of Lederer's survival and Pestek's punish- ment with death. Details of the events, the re- cord of the fellow survivors who live as testimony of the events, and the factual record of what is to a degree a fictionalized drama of the notable event, is included. Escapades involving Victor Pestek, who did not halt his ac- tivities contra the SS in which he had been enrolled, and the dramatic developments involving him and Lederer make Escape From Auschwitz a most revealing chapter in the history of anti- Nazi episodes. While on transfer to There- sienstadt, Lederer and Pestek discuss the ways to resort to re- sistance and to help the hordes threatened with death. Lederer aimed at finding ways to inform the International Red Cross. Pes-' tek was ready to acquire weapons for action against the Germans. Pestek was on leave from the SS during the period when he aided Lederer. They had reached Prague from Theresienstadt and Lederer was trying to make con- tacts with the Swiss authorities in the effort to share the facts about, the status of the Jewish victims under Nazi oppression. There was recapture and re- turn to Birkenau, severe punishment for Lederer, and the death penalty for Pestek. Lederer's tasks via There- sienstadt apparently attained some results, the record showing that the Red Cross received some of the information regarding the Attention Subscribers To change address, stop delivery or cancel subscriptions, we must have • Your account number as it appears on your mailing label. • The name of the sub- scriber as it appears on the mailing label. • At least four weeks' notice. Your cooperation is greatly appreciated. Subscription Dept. Nazi mass death threats to the Jewish inmates. Few Holocaust accounts match this ultra-dramatic tale. Lederer eventually enlisted in the partisans and survived severe gunshot wounds. He died in Prague at the age of 68 in 1972. There are survivors from Au- schwitz who are witnesses to the correctness of the Lederer-Pestek escape from Auschwitz and the subsequent occurrences. Erich Kulka has added an im- portant . chapter to the Holocaust history with Escape From Au- schwitz. Death Calls Personalities The week's death list marks sad losses for Jewish com- munities in this country and in England. Hershel Bernardi's theatrical record is too well known to need special elaboration. Ida Landau was among the for- gotten because she had been out of active life for many years. Yet she must receive recognition for noteworthy services she rendered with her husband, the late Jacob Landau, in the advancement of the Jewish Telegraphic Agency. She had a special role in. American Jewish journalism in the management of the Overseas News Agency. In that capacity, she was associated with her brother, Victor Bienstock, one of the current distinguished Detroit Jewish News columnists, in drawing into services the leading American foreign correspon- dents. With brother Victor she also organized Transworld Fea- ture Syndicate. From Manchester, England, comes the news of the death of Marcus Shloimovitz, and emi- nent correspondent who played many roles in championing social and political causes. He became famous for his success in conduct- ing a campaign to have expunged from dictionaries derogatory definitions of the word "Jew." In this campaign he had the collab- oration, on the American scene, of prominent Detroiter Leonard N. Simons, who, like Shloimovitz, never abandoned a good fight. From London, England, came the news of the death at the age of 101 of one of the controversial men in British politics and foreign affairs. Emanuel Shin- well battled on many fronts. He was as disputable as the complex- ity of his many involvements, even as a pugulist. He applied it in his political career when he punched a fellow member of the House of Commons who advised him to go back to Poland. Actu- ally, his birthplace was the East End of London. On Dec. 7, 1984, Purely Com- mentary had a lengthy tribute to Shinwell, on his career in the House of Lords and as a member of several government cabinets. It indicated his courage and his valiant alignment in Zionist ranks. His courage will long be remembered when recounting British Jewish history. T s 4