"0" DOWN DOWN PAYMENT NO NO FINE PRINT 1994 PRIZM Stk. 11016 $189 • • • • 36 MONTH 00* SMART LEASE AM/FM Stereo Power Steering Intermittent Wipers Front/Rear Mats • Air Conditioning • 5 Speed • Electric Defogger • 1.6L MFI L4 Engine *36-Month GMAC Smart Lease. Payment of $189 x 36 plus use tax. Security deposit of $200 required and first payment of $196.56. 45,000 miles allowed over term with .100 per mile over 45,000. Lessee responsible for excess wear and tear and may purchase vehicle at end of lease but not required to purchase. NFV Jack .Ariiimsiwzivsin=" tC:iciievrioLET T I-IF n pTp ni T ORCHARD LAKE RD. 10 Cauley Between 14 Mile & 15 Mile Gee 855.9700 OPEN SATURDAYS 8 p.m. - 4 p.m. HOURS: Mon. & Thurs. 8:30 a.m.-9 p.m., Tues., Wed., Fri. 8:30 a.m.-6 p.m. QUESTIONS page 1 caust is a relatively new phe- nomenon." When preparing to write "Life Unworthy of Life," Professor Bolkosky and others studied U.S. high-school texts. They discov- ered that one or two paragraphs, equaling about 70 words, in world-history books are devoted to the systematic killing of the Jews of Europe. Most often Auschwitz is mentioned along with a photograph of stacked dead bodies or a prisoner looking through barbed wire. "I think teachers have been willing to teach but have been scared. They feared objections from parents and school boards about teaching too singular a fo- cus. And there is ignorance on the teachers' parts too," Professor Bolkosky said. 'This is a very dif- ficult subject to teach. Steven Spielberg has made the most headway so far" in his movie Schindler's List. Rabbi Charles Rosenzveig, founder and executive vice-pres- ident of the Holocaust Memorial Center in West Bloomfield, agrees education — especially in the form of museums and his- torical centers — is key in fend- ing off anti-Semitism and "revisionism." Like Professor Bolkosky, Rabbi Rosenzveig recognizes the di•er- ence between deniers and the un- informed masses. His greatest fear is not deniers; it is the "uni- versalizing' of the Holocaust — counting war and political victims MERGING page 1 name, their heritage and build for the future. "But at the same time I'm cau- tious because we're dealing with people who have a 102-year his- tory. We have to be very caring and very careful. B'nai Moshe has been through this. We know their pain." While its West Bloomfield fa- cility was under construction, B'nai Moshe met for more than a year at the Maple-Drake Jewish Community Center. Its mem- bership dwindled to the size of B'nai David's. B'nai David considers itself traditional. B'nai Moshe is a member of the Conservative movement and allows women aliyot during religious services. B'nai Moshe's Ms. Bodzin said there would be no compromise on that issue. "A Conservative synagogue is the only place we can go," said Mr. Traison. "It will be a big change for us, but we will fit in well with B'nai Moshe's mem- bers." During Sunday's meeting at B'nai David, several longtime members spoke tearfully about the closing of the synagogue and their inability to follow the con- gregation to West Bloomfield. Said Ms. Bodzin, "In one sense, in the context of the Holocaust. "There is a great danger in submerging the two (Holocaust victims and war and political vic- tims)," Rabbi Rosenzveig said. "There has never been a war Sid Bolkosky: Education versus ignorance. without war abuses. Combining the two only predicts repetition of both. It makes the Holocaust as acceptable as war." Rabbi Rosenzveig commends Mr. Roper for being forthright in announcing the polling error but added, "I'm not convinced of how important these surveys are. But I suppose if it (the poll) awakened people, it served a purpose." Mr. Roper has conducted a new poll for the American Jewish Committee. Data will be released following a full analysis. ❑ it's ending for them. They are go- ing out of their building and leav- ing some of their friends. But we are hoping to find common ground and make this as smooth as possible for all of us." Rabbi Yolkut, who has been spiritual leader at B'nai David for 17 years, called the closing of the synagogue "unfortunate, even tragic." He cited the loss of Detroit's third-oldest congrega- tion and the niche it served, "be- shtieblization tween the (self-contained community) of the The congregations begin praying together next week. Orthodox and the leftward movement of the Conservatives." "In recent years we had bar and bat mitzvahs of children whose great-grandparents had been married at B'nai David on Hastings in the old Jewish neigh- borhood in Detroit. "It's sad," he said, "for those who, because of distance, can't join the merged congregations. "It's sad for the Jewish com- munity." ❑