Survivors Support Prosecution Of Nazis ALAN HffSKY ASSOC A E ED OR S Bold and Beautiful Hand Made Diamond 14K Gold Bracelets. A.A. Fine Jamie's Est. 1919 S Hee 1 J1 9 ri 30400 Telegraph Rd. Suite 134, Bingham Farms • 642-5575 DONALD E. GALE, D.D.S. 353-2200 DENTURE CENTER HARVARD ROW MALL 21774 WEST 11 MILE RD. SOUTHFIELD, MI 48076 EXTRACTIONS DENTURES & PARTIALS RELINES & REPAIRS QUALITY DENTURES AT AFFORDABLE PRICES 30 YEARS' EXPERIENCE o feC , /1741 6S EQ111Pt° 18 FARMINGTON HILLS 488-0220 BIRMINGHAM 646-8477 ROCHESTER HILLS 375-9707 DWYER ANDsONS VOLVO/SUBARU Maple Rd. West of Haggerty 624-0400 OPEN SATURDAY onia Nothman is sure: There are many former Nazis living in the United States. A survivor of the Skarzysko concentration camp in Poland, Ms. Nothman said the idea that former Nazis are here "hurts a lot." The U.S. government "let them through" in the 1940s and '50s, "but it took us (survivors) years to get here." Ms. Nothman and other local survivors were reacting to the news that the U.S. Justice Depart- ment is seeking to remove the citi- zenship of Ferdi- nand Hammer of Sterling Heights, alleging he was a concentration camp guard dur- ing World War II. David Bur- dowski, a survivor of 12 concentra- tion camps, in- cluding Ausch- witz, is convinced of Mr. Hammer's guilt. For him, "if David Burdowski the OSI (Office of Special Investigations) says he's guilty, then he's guilty." "The guy in Cleveland (John Demjanjuk) — they say he wasn't Ivan the Terrible, but he was in the camps. It's too bad this guy is in the United States. It's too bad it took so long to bring him to jus- tice." Paula Marks Bolton was 13 when the Nazis invaded her na- tive Poland in 1939. "I was robbed of my childhood and my family," she says. And although it is painful to always remember, she tells her story weekly to school and church groups touring the Holocaust Memorial Center in West Bloom- "P# field. "I teach love and kindness," she says. "We have to let people know. We have to prevent the Holo- caust from hap- Dr. Charles Silow pening again by teaching the young." Ms. Marks Bolton believes Nazis should continue to be pros- ecuted, despite the passage of time. "It would send the wrong message," she says, if the prose- cutions stopped. "Wherever they are, they should be brought out. They should not go completely unpunished." Martin Schlanger was 19 when he was sent to Auschwitz in 1944. He lost his parents in the Holocaust. He also feels strongly about continuing prosecution. He said age does not matter. "These people committed the most horrible crimes in the his- Sonia Nothman and a professional perspective. Dr. Silow is president of CHAIM (Chil- dren of Holocaust Survivors Associ- ation In Michigan) and, as a psychol- ogist, director of Sinai Hospital's Holocaust sur- vivors program. "We don't know all the facts yet (about Mr. Ham- Paula Marks Bolton mer). We need to look at the evidence. But the question always becomes, `Should we just forget?' "I think that's wrong. This is a nation that believes injustice and the sacredness of human life. I think the Justice Department should be commended for con- tinuing their investigations." Dr. Silow says Holocaust sur- vivors continue to feel anger "that the murderers of their loved ones are still at large, and that many people don't want to hear their stories or feel their pain." There also is anger, he says, Martin Schlanger and a fear that people will forget about the Holocaust. Cl tory of civiliza- tion. They should Publicity be extradited to their native coun- Deadlines tries and prose- The normal deadline for local cuted." Mr. news and publicity items is Schlanger says noon Thursday, eight days pri- the United or to issue date. The deadline States used for- for birth announcements is 10 mer Nazis in the a.m. Monday, four days prior Cold War against to issue date; out-of-town obit- the Russians af- uaries, 10 a.m. Tuesday, three ter World War II days prior to issue date. and allowed All material must be type- many Nazis to written, double-spaced, on 8'/2 enter the United x 11 paper and include the States during the 1950s. name and daytime telephone Dr. Charles Silow looks at the number of sender. prosecutions from both a personal