I DETROIT
Nazi Films
Continued from preceding page
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cational tools in the college
classroom. She said she had
no idea these films were be-
ing distributed, illegally or
otherwise.
Mrs. Rivo said the center
hasn't shown their film and
refuses to allow it to be
viewed in college film
courses.
"We just don't know the
impact of these films," she
said. "It could reinforce
negative stereotypes and
create new ones."
Rabbi Rosenzveig said the
Holocaust Center received
its copy in 1983 from a corn-
pany in Great Britain. He
said The Eternal Jew follow-
ed typical Nazi propaganda.
"The way it worked was to
take Jewish truths and twist
them around," Rabbi
Rosenzveig said. "With the
Nazis, wealth became a vice
as long as it was Jewish, and
wealth became a virtue as
long as it was non-Jewish.
"It was a game they played
to appeal to the baser
elements within German
society," he said.
Rabbi Rosenzveig, who has
been gathering and docu-
menting the events of the
Holocaust for more than 20
years, just returned from a
nine-day trip to Germany.
He visited the Federal Ar-
chives in Bonn, with whom
he is establishing formal ties
and is arranging to have
other Nazi propaganda ma-
terials sent to the Holocaust
Center in West Bloomfield.
One of the things he found
at the archives was a list of
659 names of Jewish men
and women that were killed
in Bonn.
"This was the first time in
history that a government
formerly embarked on a pro-
paganda intensive effort to
depict the Jewish people as
the embodiment of all evil,"
Rabbi Rosenzveig said.
"Even before Hitler set up a
department of justice," he
said, "he set up his ministry
of propaganda."
Rabbi Rosenzveig, who
was born in Poland, said no
one but the dead has the
right to forgive.
"Because films like this
still circulate, we must
never forget and concentrate
all our efforts into documen-
ting and recording Nazi
atrocities," he said.
UJC Horizons
Continued from Page 1
ity Council, Horizons will
provide resources to conduct
special projects through the
Endowment Fund For the
Future, said David Gad-
Harf, JCCouncil executive
vice president.
For Jewish Vocational
Service, Horizons could help
finance a number of pro-
grams, JVS Executive Di-
rector Al Ascher said. Mr.
Ascher hopes the program
will help JVS find donors to
support student stipends for
Project JOIN, which
employs students as interns
in Jewish communal agen-
cies.
JVS has already submitted
proposals for projects to be
placed on the Horizons' wish
list, including a program
providing specialized
transportation services for
adults with severe han-
dicaps to participate in adult
employment workshops. A
proposed scholarship pro-
gram would finance adult
day care for adults with de-
velopmental disabilities.
JVS has a six-year waiting
list for its day care program
for adults with developmen-
tal disabilities.
"We are looking for an en-
dowment that would pay a
year's tuition for such a pro-
gram," Mr. Ascher said.
"The county does not have
sufficient funds to pay for
it."
Other agencies slated to be
endowment partners with
Horizons are the Agency for
Jewish Education, Fresh Air
Society, Hebrew Free Loan
Association, Jewish Com-
munity Center, Jewish
Family Service, Jewish Fed-
eration Apartments, Jewish
Home For Aged, Jewish
House of Shelter, Reset-
tlement Service and Sinai
Hospital.
"Generations covers
everything, and Horizons is
strictly for the agencies,"
said Michael Maddin,
chairman of the Federated
Endowment Fund. "We were
trying to find a way to create
a direct linkage between
agencies and their endow-
ment effort and the Fed-
erated Endowment Fund.
"It's like crashing through
an open door," Mr. Maddin
said. "We need to be able to
provide other ways to take
care of our future."
A person setting up a
$5,000 endowment through
Horizons would get a tax
deduction for the interest on
its return for that first year.
As the fund grows through
interest income, the donor is
able to decide where the in-