SPRING GYM SHOE SALE How A Handful Of Men Found Courage Against Evil gi ELIZABETH APPLEBAUM ASSOCIATE EDITOR ronislaw Jachym often is haunted by childhood memories of milk and chil- dren and Nazi dogs. He was raised in a small Pol- ish village, Tarnow, near a forest that attracted many Jews look- ing to hide during World War H. Though Bronislaw's own family was poor, Mrs. Jachym often gave bits of bread to her son and told him to toss them to the hun- gry passersby. Bronislaw was particularly im- B FILA • L.A. GEAR • CHAMPION • CONVERSE AL MANN Eastland Mall Dearborn Waterford Southfield Entrance 7A SUPER STORE SUPER STORE SUPER STORE On Ten Mile Road On the Corner of 15219 Mich. Ave. Next to Hudson's Mall Hours West of Greenfield Telegraph & Huron East of Greenfield 371-2233 584-3820 334-3917 559-7818 Royal Oak CLEARANCE OUTLET 520 W. 11 Mile 547-7684 STORE HOURS: Morr Wed & Sal 10-7 • Thurs & Fri 10-9 • Sun 12-5 (previous sales and layaways excluded) T H E D E T RO I T J E W IS H N E W S Eva Fogelman 18 In the last 40 years, the death rate from heart attack has dropped 34% the death rate from con- genital heart defects is down 41% and the death rate from stroke is down 60%. The American Heart Association of Michigan is 40 years old. quip American Heart Association of Michigan A United Way Agency pressed by one woman and the two small children with her they looked like biblical cherubs, he thought. His mother offered the three an extra portion of bread. Less than half an hour later, the Nazis, accompanied by their fierce dogs, came through the woods. They caught the woman and her children and immedi- ately shot them. Today, Bronislaw Jachym is a physician whose recollections of helping Jews during the war is always shadowed — at times to the point of obsession — by his memory of the woman and her children, and of others who did not survive. `The slightest stimulus triggers the past," writes author Eva Fo- gelman. "The child he was still mourns these people he never the Yad Vashem archives and coming across the names of res- knew." Ms. Fogelman, who was vis- cuers "in very serendipitous kinds iting Detroit last week, is the au- of ways. Someone would find out thor of the new Conscience & the work I was doing, then one Courage: Rescuers of Jews Dur- call would lead to another." The men and women she even- ing the Holocaust. A psychologist in New York, she first considered tually profiled in Conscience & the topic when she was a grad- Courage are "from all walks of life," she said. 'There were jour- uate student in 1981. "I wanted to find out how hu- nalists and diplomats, farmers man beings behave under ex- who could barely speak their na- treme conditions of horror," she tive language, doctors, nurses, so- cial workers and engineers. One says. did the special effects for James Bond films." Her key question was: "What was the initial moment when someone began to risk his life?" Despite the variety of their pro- fessions and backgrounds, reli- gious leanings and levels of education, the rescuers all shared several consistencies. First, each was "able to toler- ate people different from them and see Jews as human beings just like themselves," she said. Second, they had a role model for altruism who had been influ- ential since childhood. Third, many experienced what Ms. Fogelman called "an inter- vening factor." Often, their be- coming rescuers was not the result of their own decision to go out and save another, but a mat- ter of a friend coming to the door and asking for help. To come to the aid of a Jew during World War II was the act of a remarkable person, Ms. Fo- gelman said. It meant risking not only one's own life, but the lives of his family, his children. And it meant not falling prey to seduc- tive propaganda. Nazi films like The Eternal Jew were highly effective, Ms. Fo- gelman said, creating a sense of "us," the decent Germans, Ms. Fogelman is the daughter against "them," the evil Jews. (Some nations fought back as of survivors, and her father was saved several times by gentiles. soon as the films hit their shores; He was working in a bakery in in Denmark, members of the Re- Byelorussia when German troops sistance often set fire to theaters, invaded; the shop supervisor, a or to the projectors in those the- aters, before anti-Semitic films were shown.) Each rescuer had a Today, rescuers continue to face hatred in their home coun- role model. tries, where anti-Semitism is still rampant, Ms. Fogelman said. Eva Fogelman "They are not moral heroes in Russian, told questioning Nazis, their societies." She also recounted the story of `There are no Jews here." Later, Ms. Fogelman's father joined the one rescuer who had received a partisans, where he received food number of gifts from the man he had saved. The rescuer's neigh- from local farmers. As Ms. Fogelman's research ex- bor's children were jealous, de- tended from a graduate paper to manding of their father, "Why a book, she began attending gath- didn't you help the Jews so we erings of survivors, looking into could get some things, too?" ❑ 4