COMMUNITY Annual Holocaust Academy By Shaarit Haplaytah April 14 Miller, and in memory of all deceased members of Shaarit Haplaytah by Sam Seltzer. Cantor Chaim Najman, of Congregation Shaarey Zedek, will chant memorial prayers, accompanied by Cantor Sholom Kalib. Greetings will be extended by Leon Halpern, president, Holocaust Memorial Center; Henry S. Dorfman, chairman executive committee, HMC; Mark Schlussel, president, Jewish Welfare Federation; Linda Lee, president, Jewish Community Center; Robert A. Arcand, director, Greater Detroit Interfaith Round Table of the National Con- ference of Christians and Jews; Colonel Jimmi W. Hanes, Jr., Commander, 379th Combat Support Group, Wurtsmith Air Force Base; Michael Eizelman, chairman, Holocaust Com- mittee, Jewish Community Council; and Charles Silow, president, Children of Holocaust Survivors Associa- tion of Michigan. Memorial musical selec- tions will be presented by Jocelyn Ruth Krieger, pianist. Shoshana Kraus will give a recitation. Proclamations will be acknowledged by Irvin Gastman, Junior Division of Shaarit Haplaytah. Rabbi Charles H. Rosenz- veig, director of the Holocaust Memorial Center, will deliver the memorial address. Ely Katz, commander of the Jewish War Veterans of the United States of America, Department of Michigan, will present the colors. The academy will be concluded at the Eternal Light, Holocaust Memorial Center. Student Holocaust Symposium Helps Make A Difference (Editor's note: Each year, the lives of thousands of Jews in Detroit are touch- ed by the Jewish Welfare Federation and its Allied Jewish Campaign.) Madhavi Dandu never thought much about the Holocaust. The 15-year-old Mercy High School sophomore was more con- cerned with school work and world politics as studied in the Model United Nations Club. Then she attended a Holocaust symposium. "I am amazed that anything like that could happen," she said. "Prior to attending the sym- posium, I knew only what I'd learned in school: the number of deaths, the ways of murder and historical dates." Ms.Dandu, who is Hin- du, and four classmates at- tended the most recent of the semi-annual Holocaust symposia co-sponsored by the Jewish Community Council. Following the pro- gram, the students taught the Holocaust section in their world religions class. "They bring back their impressions from the liv- ing testimonies of the ac- tual survivors, not just a history lesson," said Madhavi Dandu teacher John Shultz. "They teach about the stark reality of the memorial." Born in southern India and a resident of Canton Township, Ms.Dandu was moved after talking with the survivors. "I think (they) were the most effec- tive part of the program. The symposium allowed me to listen to some peo- ple's feelings, how it was in the camps," she said. At Mercy, an all-female Catholic high school, the class studied the pre-World War II era and European anti-Semitism. "I realize it is impossible to fully understand or even grasp the reality of the Holocaust, but I have gain- ed a better understanding of it," she said. Before she taught her classmates about the Holocaust, "it was not a common topic of conversa- tion. Now, it seems like a good topic to bring up," Ms.Dandu said. The big lesson for her en- tire class, she believes, is "if everyone learned about it, it couldn't happen again . . . not without some sort of intervention." The Holocaust sym- posium is an interfaith event designed to teach and reinforce the lessons of the Holocaust in a way that would be meaningful to young people. In addi- tion to the Jewish Com- munity Council, the sym- posium is co-sponsored by the Greater Detroit Inter- faith Round Table — Na- tional Conference of Chris- tians and Jews and the Holocaust Memorial Center. The Jewish Community Council and member or- ganizations link Jewish and non-Jewish communi- ties, taking an active role in interfaith and inter- ethnic relations, Holocaust education and fighting hunger and homelessness. The Council also promotes U.S.-Israel connections and human rights through the Soviet Jewry Committee. General Yehuda Halevy, Bar-Van's national executive vice president, briefed the university's Detroit leadership recently. Pictured with General Halevy are David Hermelin, Barbara Stollman and Neal Zalenko. JVS To Celebrate Its 50th Anniversary . Jewish Vocational Service will celebrate a half-century of service to the community with a celebration com- memorating the changing tides of immigration to the Detroit area 6:30 p.m. April 24 at Congregation Shaarey Zedek. The event will showcase the native foods of the Jewish im- migrants the agency has serv- ed through the years. Cuisine will include Eastern and Western Europe, the Middle East and America. Dietary laws will be observed. The Bill Meyer Orchestra and roving ethnic musicians will provide music for dancing. For ticket information, call Tom Clynes, 559-5000. Hillel Announces Patron Event Hillel Day School will host a patron event 6 p.m. April 10 at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Allan Nachman with speaker Ari Goldman, religion cor- respondent of the New York Times. Patron chairmen are Beverly Liss and Robert Schostak. Mrs. Liss is active in the Jewish Welfare Federation and a board member of Adat Shalom Synagogue. She is secretary of the Jewish Com- munity Center. Mr. Schostak is a Hillel Day School graduate and a former board member of the Jewish Com- munity Center. He is a member of Adat Shalom Synagogue. The patron event is a Liss Schostak prelude to the Hillel annual dinner to be held May 1 at Adat Shalom with speaker Bernard Kalb, former assis- tant secretary of state for public affairs and a former news correspondent. For information, call Hillel, 851-6950. ZOA Will Hear Samarian Mayor Ron Nachman, the mayor of Ariel, Samaria, will address ZOA's Einstein Luncheon Forum noon March 26 at the Zionist Cultural Center in Southfield. A fourth generation sabra, Mr. Nachman was brought up in Nes-Tsiyona, where his father served as deputy- mayor. He is a graduate of the University of Tel Aviv. In 1973 Mr. Nachman gathered together a group of young families, who were to become the founders of Ariel. For reservations, call ZOA, 569-1515. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 39 XCZJIMMEIn Haplaytah Shaarit Organization of Metropolitan Detroit — Survivors of the Nazi Genocide, will hold the annual Holocaust Memorial Academy 1 p.m. April 14 at the Maple-Drake Jewish Community Center. The annual academy is held in conjunction with the obser- vance of Yom Hashoah — Holocaust Remembrance Day. Arthur Weiss is chairman of the event. A candlelighting ceremony by the survivors of the con- centration camps and ghettos will include: Jane Salzberg, Hedy Simonovic, Esther Stybel, Irving Gutman, Mar- cus Last and Marcel Thir- man. They will be accom- panied by children and grand- children of survivors. A candle will be lit in memory of fallen Israeli soldiers and civilians by Jack