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(South of 9 Mile) 353-5770 — Interior decorators and Builders Welcomed - - Custom Gloss Experts Since 1964 — 18 FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 1992 MEMBER SIPC SPAN-BM-8-EDA BOB ittiORIAN 336-9200 1-800-365.9200 CASH FOR LIKE-NEW WOMEN'S & CHILDREN'S ) i DESIGNER fashions & accessories ?---- : ,- ; - CONSIGNMENT i CLOTHIERS Call today for a FREE housecall appt. or in-store appt. 347-4570 43041 W. 7 Mile • Northville I e knew him as Louie Lebeau, an affable French resistance fighter stranded with several other Allied POWs in Nazi Germany. To those who saw TV's "Hogan's Heroes," he was • just one of the madcap prisoners who drove their German jailers to fits. Robert Clary, who played Lebeau, is, in real life, a sur- vivor of the Shoah who lost most of his family in Nazi death camps. In Auschwitz, no one laughed at the Ger- mans. Mr. Clary spoke in Ann Arbor last week about his experiences prior to and dur- ing the war. "What is up to us (sur- vivors) — what we are doing — is seeing that the Holo- caust is not forgotten," he said in an interview. But he admits that other forces drove him to tell his story publicly after virtual silence for three decades. In 1980, he saw a docu- mentary, Kitty Returns To Auschwitz, which showed one survivor's visit to the camp. Plus, Mr. Clary said, he was moved by rising hate group activity, growing ac- ceptance of Holocaust revi- sionism and a sense that humanity had not learned anything from the Shoah. "You hope to reach them; you hope to make them understand," he said. But he lamented the relative pop- ularity of presidential can- didate Pat Buchanan, whose "America First" campaign, Mr. Clary said, similar to the Nazi slogan "Germany for the Germans," leaves him very upset. "You can not just re- member your own past," he said. "You have to relate it to events today. We still have a great portion of the world who hate." In his speech to University of Michigan students, Mr. Clary emphasized the im- portance of learning not only about the Holocaust but about its ramifications. In pre-war France, where he grew up, he thought Jews were accepted. Now, he said, he realizes that all minority groups are at risk in any free society. "Why do we have to feel superior to another human being, just because they have different color skin or Robert Clary: "People still hate." different shape of eyes?" he said. "Make this a better world than the one we've left you. Do something constructive with your lives. If you don't, the world is doomed." Mr. Clary spoke as part of the Simon Wiesenthal Center's volunteer outreach program, which sends Shoah survivors to speak to school and church audiences. The Arm Arbor speech was part "You have to relate it to events today. We still have a great portion of the world who hate." Robert Clary of U-M Hillel Foundation's 13th annual Conference on the Holocaust. Other events included films, a poetry reading and a recitation of Shoah victims' names on the campus Diag. Mr. Clary said retelling his story can be exhausting, both physically and emo- tionally. "It's like a rolling of film in front of your eyes, and you have to tell people what you see. It takes great concentration and energy. "I have a duty. I have to leave a legacy. It's not going to bring back my parents. It's for history's sake." ❑ May the children of the stock of Abraham who dwell in this land continue to merit and enjoy the good will of the other inhabitants, while everyone shall sit in safety under his own vine and fig tree, and there shall be none to make him afraid. - George Washington