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NI DOL EB ELT RI:1 FARMINGTON 1 13 MILE • `', "%k.C, •;;.• AT 11 DANGER SIGNALS NERVE TENSION Holocaust Center This entitles you to: m • CONSULTATION • CHIROPRACTIC SPINAL EXAM • MINIMUM OF 10 SPINAL TESTS FOR SPINAL EVALUATION • Check this list. CHIROPRACTIC CENTER, P.C. CLOSE-UP portation difficulties can be resolved. The problems facing the HMC in trying to accomplish all it wants to do are corn- pounded, ironically, by those arising from its own success. Having established so profes- sional and well-equipped a facility, its members have raised community expecta- tions of professional efficiency and expertise. Until now, the HMC has been run by Rosenzveig and a volunteer staff, who are on all sides un- stintingly praised. But as the HMC's reputation grows, so does its need for additional staff. "The Holocaust Memorial Center will never reach its destiny unless we develop a greater pool of lay and pro- fessional staff," says Jackier. In time, Jackier believes, as it responds to the demands made on it, the institution will adjust to the "community dynamic" which has taken it over, and evolve into a highly efficient organization, a proc- ess which he says has already begun. Extra responsibility for leadership and outreach, HMC's board members ac- knowledge, will arise from their recent decision not to support the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Council campaign for the proposed national museum in Washington. That campaign goal is $100 mil- lion from private contribu- tions, in order to complete, the project by 1989. The U.S. Council has asked regional centers not specifically for funds, but for expressions of support. The HMC was unable to endorse a national museum whose board was appointed by the government, fearing that it would be too vulnera- ble to pressure from special- interest groups. "It is not in- conceivable," says Rosenzveig, "that in the fu- ture there will be pressure to include any group that sees itself as having been perse- cuted. What will happen, for example, if the Arabs want to include a memorial of Shatil- lah (the Palestinian camp in Beirut in which hundreds were slaughtered in 1982 by Christian Phalangists under Israel's jurisdiction)?" The board's decision was not taken lightly. Many members had great hopes for the national project when it was first proposed but have become disillusioned by the subsequent plans to include memorials to non-Jewish vic- tims of Nazi aggression, in- cluding those from com- munities such as the Ukraine and Poland, where native persecutors are remembered by the Shaarit Haplaytah as often worse than the Nazi SS, and where many of those im- prisoned by the Nazis for political reasons were them- selves anti-Semitic. "In Buchenwald, in Bar- rack 57 where I was impris- oned," says Abe Pasternak, "a Polish prisoner said to me `Why did God bring me here to see more Jews?' " Not all regional centers agree with Detroit's decision. "We should be leaders, not dissenters," says Dallas direc- tor Sue Kollinger. "There are other ways of making your position clear than lack of support." The importance and education potential of a na- tional center, she believes, is too great to be put aside. Dr. Marilyn Feingold, edu- cational consultant to the U.S. Council, agrees. "The question we must ask is who do we want to reach?" She points out that the prestige, resources and access to nationwide channels of com- munication available to an officially recognized national facility give it an unequalled opportunity to bring the truth about the Holocaust to a non-Jewish public. An equally important ques- tion, responds the HMC, is "What do we want to reach them with?" "We must resist all attempts to dilute the Holocaust," says Rosenzveig. "A national Holocaust center is an absolute necessity. But it is better not to have one than to have one structured the way it is now." Prof. Raul Hilberg, author of The Destruction of the European Jews, and gener- ally regarded as the preemi- r>