Morton Wolin and his daughter, Jennifer. LI) but Rabbi Rosenthal's daughter found just the thing. We learned (at Buchen- wald) for the first time what is meant by being "legally shot to death": an SS officer rips the cap off of someone, hurls it over the railing and commands the prisoner to recover the cap. While the prisoner is obediently doing this, another SS officer aims at the prisoner and shoots him down — "in the act of trying to escape." — Rabbi Frank Rosenthal It was eerie to walk where the dead had walked, were walking and will always walk. — Rachel Erdstein, on a visit to Mauthausen The most devastating of our chores (in labor camp) was stamping on the Russ- ian mine fields in front of the regular German and Hun- garian army units. The highways and dirt roads were mined by Russian par- tisans. There were small mines, cigar box size, with a small plastic spring sticking out containing dynamite or TNT. The German mine de- tectors could not cope with these type of mines as they did not contain any metallic substance. So the Jewish slave laborers were forced to walk like a living chain, arm in arm, in front of the Hun- garian and German army units. The results were dev- astating. Every day there were mine explosions; the victims were always from our units. During the three weeks my unit was up front our number was reduced from 265 to 123. — Leslie Schey It is a mitzvah to remem- ber, and it is a mitzvah to defend the memory against those who want to take it away from us. Also impor- tant to Jewish survival is our surviving as Jews, liv- ing Jewishly. As Jews we have been bequeathed a "pre- cious legacy" that is both a joy and a weighty responsi- bility. I feel a connection with those who were killed, and the connection trans- lates itself into a sense of commitment to Jewish sur- vival ... Before saying Kaddish, if I do not have to remember a friend or a family member, I will try to think of someone who died in the Holocaust. I will imagine a name and sketch a very brief biography in my head: maybe a child, or an ordinary worker who rarely gave Jewish matters much thought. I try to imag- ine someone who has for some reason gone un- mourned. — Michael Scrivener Over half a century later, I still have a vivid mental picture of my father saying goodbye to me at the Warsaw railroad station, as I was on the way north to Gdynia, about 187 miles, and Dad was on his way home. We both cried uncontrollably, shaking with chills, not a word uttered, knowing full well that we would never see THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 27