UP FRONT Holocaust Scholar Traces Memory And Rebellion DAVID HOLZEL Staff Writer R Anna and Israel Wiener explain how Jewish National Fund aids Israel in response to a Tzedakah Fair question from Stephanie Warren and Marla Herman last Sunday at Temple Beth El. Students from four schools solved hypothetical problems by talking to representatives of 31 Jewish organizations at the annual fair. Kitty Dukakis Is Vying . For Detroit Jewish Support STAFF REPORT K itty Dukakis, the Jewish wife of presidential hopeful Gov. Michael Dukakis of Massachusetts, will be campaigning within the Jewish community of metropolitan Detroit today. Mrs. Dukakis will be the guest of an open reception at 10:30 a.m. at the Holocaust Memorial Center following a tour of the memorial. She also will tour the Oak Park building of the Jewish Community Center and will speak on Jewish con- cerns during erev Shabbat services at the Federation Apartments. Her campaign pitch toward the Jewish community winds down with a private reception at 2 p.m. at the Bloomfield Hills home of Arthur and Effie Weinberg. She will then attend a reception in Flint at the home of Michael and Natalie Pelavin. She will join her hus- band at a labor rally in Flint Friday evening. Mrs. Dukakis will return to Detroit next weekend to campaign for her husband before the March 26 state Democratic caucuses. Mrs. Dukakis, who could be the first Jewish first lady, has served on former President Jimmy Carter's Commission on the Holocaust and the United States Holocaust Memorial Council. aul Hilberg's career as a hist- orian of the Holocaust began with a flippant remark by a university professor when he was an undergraduate. The professor, a specialist in the Prussian bureaucracy, was teaching a course called "The Rise of the Na- tional State!' Hilberg recalled the pro- fessor telling his students: "Atrocities of the Napoleonic period have never again been repeated!' The incident took place two years after the end of World War II, and Hilberg responded, "Professor Rosenberg, what do you call six million dead Jews?" "Ah," the professor responded, "that is a complicated question!' Hilberg told a Detroit audience Monday night that he took his pro- fessor's evasive answer as a serious challenge. Even after he began his Holocaust research, professors and publishers tried to discourage him from making the Holocaust his career. "Writing about the Holocaust, in my case, was an act of rebellion." Hilberg, now a professor of political science at the University of Vermont, wove together the themes of rebellion and response to the Holocaust in a presentation at the Jewish Community Center in West Bloomfield. His appearance was spon- sored by CHAIM — the Children of Holocaust-Survivors Association in Michigan and the Albert Einstein Lodge of B'nai B'rith. The author of such works as The Destruction of the European Jews told his listeners that "a doctrine of forget- ting" followed the Holocaust. Even with the Cold War in full swing, "there was an air of optimism which precluded the past?' The purpose of the war crimes trials in the late '40s was to "finish the business." Textbooks and en- cyclopedias made little mention of the Nazi atrocities and when they did, dealt with the perpetrators and not the victims. "Courses [on the Holocaust] were not offered in schools, not even in Jewish colleges." The first attempts to understand the Holocaust in the 1950s, such as the film Night and Fog, never men- tioned Jews as the victims of genocide. Then something happened: In 1961, Nazi leader Adolph Eichmann was captured by the Israelis and brought to trial in Jerusalem. "In some sense it was an educational mis- sion," said Hilberg of the Eichmann trial. "Israel and the world were now going to discover the Holocaust!' The Israelis' intention was as much to teach their younger genera- tion about the Final Solution as it was to serve justice. But something went wrong, Hilberg said. Young sabras, some who had fought in one or two wars, or who were about to enter the army, asked, "Why did they let themselves be slaughtered? We would never have done that." "For the first time, the victims emerged;' Hilberg said and they were regarded as cowards by the young generation. The Eichmann trial was an utter failure, he asserted, and the Holocaust again became nearly a Continued on Page 34 ROUND UP Israelis Urge Pollard Pardon Tel Aviv (JTA) — A petition signed by more than half of the Knesset asked President Reagan to pardon Jonathan Jay Pollard and his wife, Anne Henderson Pollard, now serving prison terms for spy- ing in the United States on behalf of Israel. The petition, which was signed last week by 70 Knesset members represent- ing ten parliamentary fac- tions of all political complex- ions, was presented to U.S. Ambassador Thomas Picker- ing for transmission to the president. Jonathan Pollard is serving a life sentence and his wife is serving two concurrent five- year sentences as an acces- sory to the espionage activities. She reportedly is seriously ill with a digestive system disorder. The petition states that the signatories are approaching President Reagan "on a humanitarian basis, assum- ing that after the Pollards are granted pardons they will emigrate to Israel!' Ambassador Sent To Fiji Tel Aviv (JTA) — Israel's first ambassador to the Fiji Republic, Zohar Raz, presented his credentials Tuesday to the president at Suva, the island nation's capital. Fiji, an archipelago in the Western Pacific, had been a British colony since 1874 and became an independent parliamentary democracy on Oct. 10. 1970. Greek Generals To Aid PLO Athens (JTA) — A group of 30 retired Greek generals and admirals from the army, navy and air force announced they are prepared to put their technical expertise at the disposal of the Palestine Liberation Organization in its struggle against Israel. The declaration was issued in Tunis, where the retired of- ficers met at length with PLO chief Yasir Arafat, affirmed their solidarity with the Palestinian cause and con- demned Israel for its "bar- baric acts against the Palesti- nians and refusal to abide by United Nations resolutions." Dem Absentee Ballots Available The Michigan Democratic Party will make available absentee ballots or "presiden- tial preference forms" for those who will be unable to participate in person in the March 26 Democratic caucuses. The preference forms must be returned to the Democratic Party no later than 5 p.m. March 25. For information, contact the Oakland County Democratic Party, 334-0971 or 399-1112. Rabbi Abramson To Leave Hillel Rabbi Robert Abramson will leave his position as headmaster , of Hillel Day School this summer. He made the announcement Tuesday night at a meeting of Hillel's school board. Rabbi Abramson has ac- cepted the New York-based post of director of the depart- ment of education of the United Synagogues of America. He will begin his new job on Aug. 1. He has headed Hillel Day School for 13 years. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 5