Barry Eisenberg: Akiva's new exec. that for well over 20 years his life has been "my family, my job and Akiva." Now it's his fami- ly and Akiva. For Mr. Eisenberg, Akiva is a family affair. His wife, Andrea, has served as chairman of the school's education com- mittee and PTA. His daughter, Abby, an Akiva graduate, is a Stern College student. His younger daughter, Marcy, is an Akiva 10th-grader. Mr. Eisenberg's broth- er, Sandy, an Akiva vice president, has had two children graduate from the school: Rabbi Michael Eisenberg and a daugh- ter, Lynn. Sandy Eisen- berg's granddaughter, Rebecca, is in the school's kindergarten. Mr. Eisen- berg's other brother, Dennis, is a former Akiva executive director who now heads the Yeshiva of Flatbush, N.Y. "My heart has been here this year during the search," Mr. Eisenberg said. "My immediate job was to try to reduce the school's budget deficit, and in working toward that goal and others, I was overwhelmed by the number of things that needed to get done." Mr. Eisenberg's role as executive director will dif- fer from his predecessor's. While Rabbi Volk worked almost exclusively as a fund-raiser, Mr. Eisen- berg will raise funds and also direct the school's day-to-day operations, be it physical plant repairs or negotiating teacher salaries. He also said a priority will be to bolster the school's endowment funds. Akiva, he added, has not missed a teacher payroll now for several years. But finances are a never-ending concern. The school did face bank- ruptcy in 1981 and more recent financial obstacles. Mr. Eisenberg hopes Jewish federations na- tionwide will re-define their allocation priorities, putting education even higher on the list for funds. Akiva's tuition is 58 percent of its $1.5 mil- lion budget. This year the school awarded $325,000 in scholarships and received a $197,000 allo- cation from the Jewish Federation of Metropoli- tan Detroit. "Then there's the issue of teachers,". Mr. Eisen- berg said. "We have to get the best teachers we can, and to do so we need to pay good salaries. We have to be able to com- pete with other private schools. We. shouldn't have to settle for second- best." Akiva, he added, wants to provide many of the same course offerings and services as other schools. Short-term goals include a school guidance coun- selor and a school psy- chologist. "We need to be able to offer such services, espe- cially if we're going to be saying, 'Send your chil- dren here.' We have to offer what other schools have. We're open to chil- dren from Orthodox, Conservative and Reform families. Our high school is the community high school." Mr. Eisenberg is a life- time Detroit area resi- dent. His father, Meyer, was a founder of Young Israel in Detroit and built the Young Israel of Greenfield building. "I guess it hasn't hit me that I'm really at work yet," Mr. Eisenberg said. "I'm doing something I love doing, and more importantly, that I really believe in. Centrist Orthodoxy and love of Israel are part of my life. "But what I really like is to keep my office door here open because I like to see and hear the kids. And for me it's a thrill because I feel this is my contribution to my com- munity and to my people. Plus, this is better than having to break in a new person, teach them about the community and Detroit. "I know this area; I know the community. I feel I'm lucky to have this job. The growth and sur- vival of the school has always been important to me." ❑ Survivor's Story Haunts The YAD RUTH LITTMANN STAFF WRITER N early 200 young adults sat silently as Alex Ehrmann re- counted his life in Europe during the Holo- caust. In a dark auditorium at the Maple-Drake Jewish Community Center, audi- ence members heard the 67-year-old survivor de- scribe Hungary during the late 1930s, where child- hood friends began calling him "dirty Jew." A few years later he saw a Gestapo agent send his father to the gas chamber at Auschwitz. For some young adults, Mr. Ehrmann's story •seerhed ominously parallel to current events in Europe. "I ask myself a question today," Mr. Ehrmann "Are we going to see a repe- tition of what went on? I'm afraid I have no answer. I leave it up to you." The Cultural Awareness Committee of Federation's Young Adult Division host- ed the activity March 9. Mr. Ehrmann's speech fol- lowed an address by Michigan State University Professor Kenneth Walt- zer, who spoke on the upsurge of tribalism and nationalism throughout Europe and the Commen- wealth of Independent States. "Anti-Semitism is not limited to Europe, but SURVIVOR'S STORY page 16 50 YEARS AGO... Algerian Jews' Status Changed SY MANELLO SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS en. Henri Giraud, French High Com- missioner of North Africa, supposedly issued an ordinance dis- pensing with laws of racial discrimination. However, instead of Jews, Frenchmen and Arabs being on an equal G plane, Jews have been lowered to the position of "subjects." Jews and Arabs could apply for French citizenship but there was no guarantee that it would be granted. Observers felt that Algerian Jews had been tricked. One item that now seems to foreshadow today's events came from the London Times. It indicated that the Arab population of Palestine would probably take another 20 years to reach a point of maturity where it could take care of its own destiny; the article stressed the fact "Jews have brought pros- perity to Palestine, enabling Arabs to enjoy lavish government ser- vices." The plight of refugees was, as ever, in the fore- front of the news. The Bolivian. government instructed its consulates in Europe to grant immi- gration visas to 100 chil- dren. Of the more than 200;000 Rumanian Jews who had been deported to barren areas of the Ukraine, only about 75,000 still were alive; most were mortally ill due to starvation and lack of medical care. The British government indi- cated that it did not intend to admit into Palestine more than the 30,000 Jews entitled to enter under terms of the White Paper. The mills of change do sometimes grind slowly. Twenty months after President Roosevelt ordered the industry of the nation to employ all groups who could be of service in the war effort, the government was con- sidering a ban on ques- tions dealing with race and religion in applica- tions for war plant employment. One focus of the com- munity at this time was on Purim. A page was devoted to an article on the meaning of Purim, Purim facts and fancies and an editorial titled "Our Last Purim" by Judge Levinthal. He said in part, " When Hitler is gone we shall celebrate another Purim in commemoration of his defeat, but let it be our last such festival, for we shall no longer be defenseless, homeless people..." In the spirit of the holiday, a picture captured the varied cos- tumes of children at the party at Temple Israel. Thinking ahead to the holiday yet to come, the National Jewish Welfare Board was making attempts to supply kosher food for Passover for members of the armed forces. Servicemen were asked to contact the nearest Jewish chaplain or JWB representative to make arrangements. Locally, the Detroit Moeis Chitim Committee, under the chairmanship of Charles A. Smith, began ar- rangements to collect funds. As we near the end of our 50th anniversary year reports, this issue, 50 years ago, celebrated the first anniversary of The Jewish News. , Renewing our pledge to serve the Jewish commu- nity, the editor expres- sed his gratitude for community support and invited continued coop- eration of the entire community. As the community expanded, so did local organizations. William Hordes, president of the Jewish National Fund of Detroit, announced that JNF had acquired its own offices on Dexter and Burlingame and was going to increase efforts to redeem land in Palestine. The semi- annual collection of the blue and white boxes was planned. ❑ co cs) CC 2 15