Left: Rachel Kloc and her son, Howard. Below: Rachel and Hershel Kloc. 0 was getting food. Riding an old bicycle he had found, he 'would buy whatever food he could, then pile it on his pack to take home. Later, he helped children cross the border to safe haven in the American zone. Virtually all the Klocs' family perished in the Holo- =caust. Hershel and Rachel Kloc came in 1949 to the United States, settling in Detroit where Rachel had family. o At times, Mrs. Kloc would discuss the war with her ° children, but always speak- , ing about it from a distance, in purely historical terms. She rarely spoke of her own experiences because "I don't want to fill my kids with so cmuch pain. "Every child, when he hears such stories it sticks r in his mind. I still remem- ber stories my father used to tell me from World War I. Some things are just so painful, you don't want to give a piece of it to somebody you love." But Howard Kloc was de- termined to record his par- ents' memories. So finally he brought a tape recorder, sat down with his mother, and asked her to begin. At first, talking was diffi- cult. "I broke down," Mrs. Kloc says. "I couldn't continue. He kept asking and I kept saying, 'Please, Howard, not today.' "I was very anxious (to speak), but I couldn't come to it," she added. "But God bless Howard; he got ahold of me." Mr. Kloc and his mother were exhausted when the taping was done — her memories recorded in Yid- dish, English, Hebrew and later edited and transcribed for the temple's book. But Howard was pleased. "It helped me understand my parents a lot better," he says. "As a child, I knew they were different, and that was hard. English wasn't their first language and my dad didn't know anything about baseball, and I was always sort of embarrassed by that. "But now I'm really proud THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 25