Ceresnie & Offen Furs Presents The Largest Selection Of The Year At Special Holiday Savings. Memories Of Lost Loves, Family Fill 'Anton The Dove Fancier' ■ Elegant ELIZABETH APPLEBAUM Assistant Editor ■ Luxurious A ■ Warm young Newsweek pho- tographer named Bernard Gotfryd was taking a picture one day of W.H. Auden. The British-born poet was intrigued by Mr. Gotfryd's accent. "You sound as though you were born in Auuuustria," he said "Where are you from?" "I was in Mauthausen (concentration camp)," the photographer replied. "Mauthausen! Good God!" W.H. Auden sat back. "Did you ever think of writing about it?" "But I can't write," Mr. Gotfryd insisted. Auden shot back: "How can you know until you've trrried?" Years later, Mr. Gotfryd did try. His book Anton the Dove Fancier and Other Tales of the Holocaust was recently published by Wash- ington Square Press. In his book, Mr. Gotfryd, a speaker at the Jewish Corn- munity Center's book fair last week, tells of his beloved in the underground, Alex- andria; of the kind SS guard who provided the Gotfryds with food; of the erudite Mr. G. who bit into lumps of sugar when he drank tea and was deported in 1942 from Poland to a death camp. Mr. Gotfryd, born in Radom, Poland, said he wrote his book to fulfill a promise to his mother. She had told her son: You must survive to tell the world what the Nazis did to us. The morning before she was taken away, Mr. Got- fryd's mother sat weeping on a broken bench underneath a lilac tree. It was not long until her 44th birthday. She came in from the garden, laid a loving hand on the face of her son, Ber- nard, then prepared a meal. To this day, Mr. Gotfryd remembers intimate details of the day, the last time he saw his mother. He recalls the colors of sky that morn- ing, the smell and taste of the potato pancakes sprinkl- ed with onions that his mother prepared, the exact angle of his father's face as he stood beside the window. "A lot of people compare my writing to my photogra- phy," said Mr. Gotfryd, for many years a staff photog- ■ Sumptuous ■ Soft ■ Sensuous Catch the spirit of holiday giving! Gift wrap her in a fur by Ceresnie & Offen...or shop our new boutique, Leathers by Studio 181, for fabulous leather-and-fur fashions for men and women. Financing Available. teC7 Ceer , ruo" t a 181 S. Woodward Ave., 1 Blk. S. of Maple, next to the Birmingham Theatre • 642-1690 • Free Adjacent Parking•Mon.-Fri. 9:30-8:30, Sat. 9:30 5:30, Sun. 1-5 - All furs labeled to show country of origin. Bernard Gotfryd: "I simply wanted to tell my story." rapher with Newsweek. "Maybe there's some truth to that, I don't know. I con- fess there are times I couldn't tell you what I had for dinner last night, but the deportation, or my father as he stood looking for the last time at his wedding photos —things like this you don't forget." The youngest of three chil- dren, Bernard Gotfryd re- Mr. Gotfryd wrote his book to fulfill a promise to his mother. She had told her son: You must survive to tell the world what the Nazis did to US. members his parents as "willing to go to the ends of the world for each other." His childhood was "secure and comfortable," he said. In the summer, the family visited the country with friends and relatives. Young Bernard studied the violin, and memories of his playing are included in Anton the Dove Fancier. Mr. Gotfryd said he has written another story, not included in the book, about his music teacher, Mr. Aaron. A widower, Mr. Aaron lived with a Polish Christian woman who played the cello. "I was very secretly in love with her," Mr. Gotfryd said of his teacher's girlfriend. "I always hoped to drop the violin and take up the cello." Mr. Gotfryd's passion as a child was the camera. He received a Kodak Brownie and began taking pictures of everything he saw. During the war, he worked as an ap- prentice in a photography studio, using his skills to help members of the underground obtain false identity papers. After the war, Mr. Gotfryd settled in New York. He began writing Anton the Dove Fancier in 1983. His first story was "Mr. G.," a portrait of one of his father's friends. "This was a man I couldn't get out of my system," Mr. Gotfryd said of the story's subject, Mr. Gutman. "I was mesmerized by him. When he talked — about commu- nism, about fascism, warn- ing my father about the Nazis — I simply listened. We're Now Working In Your Neighborhood • Kitchen Refacing Call for a FREE • New Kitchen Design In..Home Estimate. Now and Save $300 • Evening Estimates Expires 12/31/90 • Baths _J • Maywood • Merillat • Homecrest • Aristokraft ALLEY VISIT OUR SHOWROOM CABINET, Inc. 525.6511 32581 Northwestern Highway, Farmington Hills, Ml 48018 (313) 737-7122 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 51