LOOKING BACK Escape Plus 50 Continued from preceding page Uptown • Lathrup Village, Southfield . at 111/2 Mile • Phone 559-3900 Big & Tall • Lathrup Village, Southfield at 11 Mile • Phone 56,4030 Wishes Its Customers and Friends A Healthy and Happy PASSOVER 11 Mile and Lahser Harvard Row Mall 354-4560 Supervised Apartment Living for the Elderly The group apartments are for people who need more sup- portive care and can live comfortably sharing an apartment with two other individuals, each person having a separate bedroom. If you or someone you know desires a family-like, non- institutional setting, please call Zeno Baum or Carol Plotkin at 559-1500. Limited space is currently available, Group Apartments for the Elderly A Jewish Family Service Program 108 FRIDAY, APRIL 14, 1989 around the world will reunite clearances," Weinmann said. in London this June to visit "They wanted the Jews to the country that saved them. leave, but didn't make it all Former Kindertransport that easy for them to leave, child Bertha Leverton of Lon- either." don and her sister, Inge Of the British action, Wein- Sadan of Jerusalem, both sav- mann says, "It shows at least ed by the program, are they did something. At least organizing the reunion. They they permitted the children to expect about 1,200 par- come in — France didn't do it; ticipants from the United the United States didn't do States, Canada, New it." Zealand, Australia, Austria, He said he would not be go- Germany, Holland, ing to the reunion in England Switzerland, Israel and because he stayed with only Nepal. one English family and most The Baums, who eventual- members have either died or ly wound up in Southfield, moved away. will be there. A few other sur- Henry Baum, a cantor's son vivors are considering the who retired last year as prin- venture. Marion Alflen, also of The Nazis 'wanted Southfield, is going to Lon- don. Now 67 and a retired the Jews to leave, hairdresser and manicurist, but didn't make it she joined Kindertransport all that easy for from Vienna just before she turned 18, the cutoff age for them to leave. the program. She had mixed feelings about leaving behind cipal of Detroit's Cody High her family. School, recalls his Kinder- Born Marianne Lang, she transport departure. had lived a comfortable life as "I remembered it for days. a daughter of Charles Lang, There was a finality — even a decorated World War I of- as a kid of 12 years of age, I ficer and managing director knew there was no turning of the largest insurance com- back, no way the things could pany in Vienna. But on the come back to the way they day Hitler entered Austria, were. I knew then that the her father lost his job and, chances of reunion with my with his wife, had to train as parents were nil." domestics to be able to leave In England, he was lonely. the country. "I didn't know anyone. I Edith Maniker, a Kinder- didn't know the language — transport child who today is just yes, no and thank you," a para-professional with Baum said. special education children in Rose Baum, then 10, the Southfield Public Schools, remembers . watching the remembers as a child seeing other children in the Liver, her synagogue in Leipzig, pool Station's huge waiting Germany, burn on room as their future adoptive Kristallnacht. English families arrived. "I never fully understood As. children often do, they what was happening," she giggled and poked fun at said. "The only thing that af- some of the older people. They fected me was the furniture in stared endlessly. They our house was disappearing" wondered which people would — sold to raise money for her care for them. and her family to escape. Her "The Jewish communities parents were killed in concen- met you with cookies and tration camps. cake and welcomed you very Hans Weinmann, who is to- warmly," Henry said. "They day a docent at Detroit's were very generous and well- Holocaust Memorial Center, organized." left Vienna for Holland and Children had clothing, food the Kindertransport with his and other essentials. older brother Ernest. Young Henry stayed in a "The policy of the Nazis hostel at Brighton and ap- then was to get rid of the prenticed as a furrier, runn- Jews. The problem was, no ing errands. He earned a lit- country was willing to take tle over a dollar a week. them," Weinmann said. He left the hostel at age 17, Luckily, his mother's cousin moving to London, working worked as a domestic for a and learning to play ping- another Jewish family that pong. He liked to sing and agreed to take the brothers. studied for a while under a "The Germans didn't mind Royal College of Music giving exit visas — as long as professor. you could show you didn't owe Wartime England wasn't taxes, had no debts, had no easy. The Baums recall criminal record — you had to hiding in the tubes — the go to about six different of- London subways — when the fices with your parents for German buzzbombs came.