UP FRONT Schools Are Evaluating Local Holocaust Package ALAN HITSKY Associate Editor T he high school Holocaust Cur- riculum Project initiated last fall by the Center for the Study of the Child in Farmington Hills is now being evaluated by 54 high schools, ten school districts, five colleges and universities and ten religious schools throughout the country. While many of the 18-lesson master texts, videotapes and student texts are being used by local school districts, curriculum sets have also been requested by schools in New York, Connecticut, Virginia, Ten- nessee, Nebraska and Ontario. "We have great interest in Canada;' said project coordinator Peter Nagourney, "and the curriculum is also being con- sidered in Ohio for what may be a state-wide program." A sampling of area districts which are currently using or evaluating the curriculum include: Bloomfield Hills, Berkley, Royal Oak, Farmington, Ferndale, Oak Park, Rochester, Southfield, Troy, Walled Lake and West Bloomfield. Sets are also being studied at Cranbrook, Detroit Coun- try Day, Cass Tech, Hazel Park, Clarenceville and temples Beth El and Emanu-El. Nagourney and curriculum authors Dr. Sidney Bolkosky, Betty Rotberg Ellias, and Oakland Schools' Dr. David Harris have been working to spread word of the new educational tool, attending meetings and seeking endorsements. More than 4,200 an- nouncements advertising the cur- riculum have been mailed. Nagourney is also considering placing the curriculum with a California distributor in order to more easily reach a wider high school audience. Representatives of the Center for the Study of the Child will meet with leaders of the American Jewish Con- gress in New York this month, seek- ing an endorsement for the cur- riculum, and are continuing fundrais- ing activities to offset $250,000 pro- duction costs. With more than 20 Holocaust cur- ricula available in the United States, endorsements can be very political. But the curriculum has received the stamp of approval from the education director of the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Council, the director of the International Center for Holocaust Studies of the Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith, and several Holocaust scholars. Nobel Prize winner Elie Wiesel was asked to review the curriculum when he visited Detroit in December. He told the curriculum sponsors that he would give them an answer this winter, adding that "education is the key" lesson of the Holocaust. At the same time, the executive board of the Children of Holocaust Survivors Association in Michigan gave the new educational tool their blessing. However, a requested endorse- ment from Detroit's Holocaust Memorial Center did not materialize. HMC director Rabbi Charles H. Rosenzveig told The Jewish News that the HMC "simply is not in the business of making endorsements. We are simply not geared to making evaluations with 26 different cur- Continued on Page 16 The New Year is full for Riva Livshits, Wina Zusis, Miriam Lemberg and Soya Giefman. Center's New Year Dance Welcomes Soviet Seniors Some 85 recent Soviet im- migrants marked the New Year in their new land last Sunday, celebrating their freedom at a special party at the Jimmy Prentis Morris Jewish Community Center in Oak Park. The two-hour program of dancing and refreshments was sponsored by the Center, the Detroit Federation of Musicians and the Area Agency on Aging. The party was for older im- migrants — "in their 50s to their 80s" — to make them more comfortable in their new home, according to the Center's Diane Sands. "Many of the newcomers are feel- ing honiesick," said Sands. "After all, they have been uprooted from their old homes." She said the New Year's dance was one of a series of events designed for the Russians, many of whom take English classes at the Center. Sands is planning a monthly current events group, led by Americans fluent in RUssian, to give a U.S. interpretation of the news. But Sunday was time for a party, with the seniors dancing to the music of a four-piece orchestra led by Sam Barnett, playing Fiddler, traditional Russian and American dance music, and horas. 'ROUND UP Hitler's Art Sparks Protest Louisville, Ky. (JTA) — A watercolor Adolf Hitler painted in Vienna in 1910 was sold for $36,000 at a New Year's Day auction, the World Jewish Congress reported. The sale triggered an angry but peaceful demonstration by some 25 people against "the celebration of an evil man who's well known for his mass murder, not well known for his art." The 9-by-15-inch painting, signed by Hitler, depicts a church, a bridge and a horse- drawn carriage in old Vienna. It was auctioned by the Den of Steven 'Gallery, which ob- tained it from a retired Ford Motor Company executive who insisted on remaining anonymous. The purchaser was Dr. Donald Wright, a Louisville physician. The protest was organized by J. Mary Sorrell of the New Jewish Agenda. Ethiopia Vries 20 Jews: Tsur Tel Aviv (JTA) — Ethiopia put about 20 Jews on trial last month for their involve- ment in attempting to im- migrate to Israel, Israeli Im- migration and Absorption Minister Yaacov Tsur said Monday. His comments were reported in the newspaper Maariv, which added that nothing more is known of their fate. Thur said that most of the defendants had worried relatives in Israel. The estimated 10;000 to 20,000 Jews who remain in- Ethiopia are prohibited by the government from emigrating. About 16,000 Ethiopian Jews have come to Israel, according to Tsur, while 11,000 remain behind. He also noted that about 28,000 Jews remain in Iran, 4,500 in Syria and about 1,000 in Yemen. Soviet Exits Up In 1987 New York (JTA) — More than 8,000 Jews emigrated from the Soviet Union during 1987, a nine-fold increase over the 914 Jews who were permitted to leave in 1986, and the largest amount since 1981, when 9,500 Soviet Jews emigrated. But Soviet Jewry activist groups expressed disappoint- ment over the figure, noting that in the year in which "glasnost" was introduced the number of Jewish emigres comprised only a small frac- tion of the 400,000 Soviet Jews who wish to emigrate. Pamela Cohen, president of the Union of Councils of Soviet Jews said that 2,072 Soviet Jews went to Israel, 144 of whom reached the country on direct flights from Bucharest, Romania, which were introduced last year. Arabs Consider Forming Party Tel Aviv (JTA) — Israeli Arab leaders are debating whether to establish an in- dependent Arab political par- ty or continue to work for their agenda within the mainstream factions which, for most of them, is the Labor Party. According to a report Mon- day in Davar, the head of several Arab town councils and public figures from Galilee, the Negev and the "triangle," a group of Israeli Arab towns southeast of Haifa, held meetings in re- cent weeks to discuss forming a new Arab party. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 5