I UP FRONT MAKE MOTHER'S DAY LAST A LIFETIME Journal . Continued from Page 5 fTLIDILNI DAPERf VOLUME XII NUMBER 4 OCTOBER time - CONTENTS From the EdItom THE QUARTER IN REVIEW Andrzej Coined, John Hardt Jerzy Milewski, Jan Nowak Janusz Onyszkiewicz, Jerry Surdykowskl rabowska Jerzy Surdykowskl The city's most unique and luxurious Mother's Day gifts are waiting for you at Greis Jewelers. Give her an elegant gift from Greis Jewelers. Her love and devotion deserve a present that will Fast a lifetime. INC. JEWELERS 32940 Middlebelt Road • Farmington Hills, MI • 855-1730 Just in time for her special day, tennis tin-le features a special sale on warm-ups from her favorite makers: NANCY HELLER • FILA • ELLESSE • SERGIO TACCHINI • HEAD Now' 20°/0-30% Off Beautiful complementary gift wrap!! tennis time Maple at Lahser 646-4475 Tables • Desks _Wall Units Bedrooms Dining Rooms For 10 Years Experience & Expertise in the Design of Affordable Laminate, Lucite & Wood Furniture =t Muriel Wets m a n 14 FRIDAY, MAY 12, 1989 661-3838 4i In the Aftermath of the Shims A Studkim Papers Survey The First Demand Polls Apart Jan Chowaniec Wasted Days and Wasted Nights Mark Michalski Trouble in the Fields Tomasz Jerz The Telephone Booth Strew Profile: Soidadty's Brussels Office Wilms firottoreera 111.11* Witkowski Poems Hawk . Many Reeds le Independence M.InteMew with MA** Raider Marek Zfeated Kazirnierz Podeakt liarbam#indzich The kits of Tommy, " Just Anothor Roadside Encounter The MtWeenntel of Reform The cover of a recent issue of Stadium Papers. his latest issue: an anti- Semitic campaign launched in 1968 and the 1946 Kielce Pogrom against the Jews. One thing the upcoming issue of Stadium Papers does not contain is an essay ab- solving Poland for past ac- tions, Krzyzowski says. The journal "is not an apology for Polish anti- Semitism or the indifference of much of the Polish popula- tion to the Jewish suffering before and after the war," Krzyzowski says. "We weren't interested in that!' Krzyzowski searched the world for writers for this month's 80-page edition. Among the contributors are Solidarity member Abel Kainer, and Wladislaw Bar- toszewski, the son of a Righteous Gentile. The jour- nal contains interviews with Marek Edelman, the only surviving leader of the War- saw Ghetto Uprising, and Krzysztof Sliwinski, a Catholic who led the cam- paign to preserve Polish- Jewish cemeteries and co- founder of the new Associa- tion for Polish-Israeli Friend- ship in Poland. Leading Polish poets Adam Zagajewski and Henryk Grynberg also wrote pieces for the May issue of Stadium Papers. The variety of backgrounds of the writers reflects the myriad attitudes of the Polish community toward Jews and Jewish issues. Krzyzowski cited the different reactions to the film "Shoah," Claude Lanzmann's nine-hour film about the Holocaust. "The Polish American com- munity was decidedly negative," he says. "That was not the reaction in Poland?' Their first priority is na- tional independence, but young Poles are reaching out to Jews, Krzyzowski says. "Part of it is that they feel a responsibility to do so. Part of it is guilt. And part of it is a legitimate interest in our own history and culture?' In addition to soliciting writers- for the essays, the staff of Stadium Papers con- ducted a survey about pro- spects for Polish-Jewish dialogue. Among those ques- tioned were a Holocaust sur- vivor, a professor of Jewish studies in Canada and representatives from the Polish community. The results, Krzyzowski says, "were all over the map" and do not allow for any kind of conclusion. He did find that Jews believe dialogue is im- portant, but for different reasons. Some consider it vital only to analyze the past; others called it necessary for the future. Among Poles, Krzyzowski found two at- titudes: "Either everything is the fault of the Jews, or everything is our fault?' Krzyzowki knows "Traces of Polish Jews" may generate some controversy. So does Swiecicki. "We weren't trying to generate controversy," Swiecicki says. "But just because something is con- troversial doesn't mean it can be ignored. "I hope we will generate understanding. I hope the journal can be used as a forum for discussion here in Detroit, as an opportunity to learn different perspectives!" As with previous issues, copies of the May edition of Stadium Papers will be sent to Poland. Krzyzowski says the reaction there has been positive. Started in 1976, Stadium Papers has more than 1,600