OPINION Auschwitz SAVE on a Continued from Page 7 $8 061 1991 Cadillac NOW ONLY $26 9 440 LOADED W/EXTRAS! Digital Dash, leather seats, alum. wheels & rear defogger ISC Pkg., custom stripes. . .. Stk. #1532 Black Sapphire, White sim. cony. top, White leather interior (eado., Roadside R SMARTLEASE- OGER RINKE GDILLAC parked at the very entrance to the camp (rather than a distance down the road). The entranceway is a big parking lot. This summer was my fourth visit to the camp over a period of years, and as the years go by, I find the place taking on more and more the atmosphere of a fairground. The front building to the camp has been turned into a cafeteria. It's marked by a sign, "Bar," a term generally used in Poland for an infor- mal eating place, but to a foreigner it sounds like a place for liquor. On each side of the entranceway there are small stands selling souvenirs, camera supplies, ice cream and other goodies. Here and there, en route on the roadway, one sees graffiti, "Jews out of Poland," al- though there are only a hand- ful of Jews remaining in Poland — in Krakow, 185. The Nazis killed 3,200,000 Polish Jews, nearly the entire population of Jews in Poland. On my visit this year to Auschwitz, I could not help but notice a group of some 70 college students from South Korea (they were studying Polish during the summer in Krakow). At Auschwitz they were light-hearted at the en- trance, they were light- hearted in the museum, and they were light-hearted as they left. The de-Judaization of the site, judging from the com- plaints, appears to be a The place looks more like a lush residential area than a concentration camp. greater affront to Jewish sen- sitivity than this frivolity. I wondered about the apprecia- tion of the memory of the vic- tims and what, if anything, these visitors learned from the visit. What have others learned from it? A placard at the entrance to the museum carries San- tayana's famous saying, "Those who do not know history are destined to repeat it." 0 A General Motors Family Since 1917 758-1800 ■ 11•1 ■ 1•II Continued from Page 6 One-of-a-Kinds, Floor Samples and Discontinued Quality Home Furnishings. Fashion And Function Meet In This Sleeper Loveseat And Matching Chair. A. The Nova Sleeper Loveseat Is Available In Teal And Copen (Blue/ Grey). 58" x 30" x 29"H. Compare At $485, Our Price $279 B. Matching Chair Is Also Available In Teal And Copen (Blue/Grey). 30" x 30" x 29"H. Compare At $289, Price OUT $165• The Quality You Have Come To Expect From The House Of Denmark At Closeout Prices, And A Variety That Will Keep You Coming Back. Quantities Limited. Featured Products Subject To Prior Sale. 10 FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1991 Only at Keego Harbor 3325 Orchard Lake Rd. (1 Mile North of Long Lake Rd.) 682-7600 "critique" the more educated, observant, or baal teshuva. The other minority is grow- ing in professional stature, education and economic vitality. How often, how far will we continue to run? How many more millions will pour into buildings with an ex- pected "Jewish" usefulness of 25-30 years? How many more "accomodations" to ritual desires to attempt a boost in member numbers in syna- gogues? And what is it that we strive to have survive? We don't know. Because we've lost our definitions. We have forgone the use of creativity in the Purim costume for the Halloween costume. We drive to shul and forget to leave the chewing gum in the ashtray. What's the point of all this? It's Huntington Woods, Southfield, Oak Park, Birm- ingham. It's Machon, Beth Shalom, the Young Israels, Yeshiva Beth Yehudah, Emanu-El, Shomrey Emunah. It's bookstores, bakeries, a deli, butchers, good homes on nice streets, schools that would benefit from our input, libraries, seniors, and families. It's Beth Achim. It's building bridges, and keeping them, on 12 Mile Road, and elsewhere in these so-called aged and childless suburbs. It's time to stop running. Because it is disgusting. Time to pour those millions into "re-invest" opportunities: a Jewish high school, Neighborhood Project sup- port, better elementary Hebrew studies, synagogue membership development — a real effort. On Tuesday, Nov. 12, voters decide the fate of yet another Jewish establishment — Beth Achim and the multi-faceted issue of move-move/merge- stay in Southfield. No, it is not possible to go back to Dexter, Twelfth, Wyoming and Curtis. Not half-jokingly it is said, "What is after Farmington?" Just when does it stop? Beth Achim members of all ages have a unique oppor- tunity to make a heretofore never-made statement about running and abandonment. One-hundred thousand Jews don't have to cram into one suburban city. Southfield is a test of Jewish values. Barry Silver Oak Park Yitzhak Navon, who became Israel's fifth president in 1978, was the first Sephardi Jew to attain that post.