THE JEWI SH NEWS I) FRONT This Week's Top Stories A reparations conference for Holocaust survivors is set for May in Southfield. PHIL JACOBS EDITOR ran Victor thinks of the old couple in the little house in Oak Park. What a difference $100 a month extra would mean, added on to their modest fixed income. The couple Ms. Victor thinks about are Holocaust survivors. She met them while chronicling their story on video as part of the Shoah Visual History Foundation. Ms. Victor wants them and any other deserving survivors to get that money. Based on what she's learned from the re- cent news accounts of missing Jewish money held in Switzer- land, she has no reason not to believe that hundreds of sur- vivors living in Michigan are due more. With the help of several sponsors, Ms. Victor, president and executive producer of Vic- tor-Harder Productions, is hosting a Compensation For Holocaust Survivors Confer- ence 1-3:30 p.m. Sunday, May 18, at Congregation Shaarey Zedek. The conference will feature a presentation by attorney William R. Marks, whose Washington, D.C., practice is entirely dedicated to Holocaust reparations and restitution claims. Mr. Marks, according to Ms. Victor, works with an attorney in Germany seeking to increase the health pensions for those survivors already col- lecting compensation, to reac- tivate claims for those survivors who previously ap- plied and were denied, and to pursue claims for German so- cial security, property restitu- tion, slave labor and Swiss bank inquiries. What started as something that Ms. Victor thought would A reparations expert will speak. be a nice, relatively small meeting that would take "six phone calls," has turned into a major conference. The word is getting out to survivors all over the state, including the Upper Peninsula. Sponsors of the event also reflect the diversity of the Jewish community and the unity of several Holocaust organizations. They include the Jewish Federation of Met- ropolitan Detroit, CHAIM (Children of Holocaust-Sur- vivors Association in Michi- gan), Holocaust Education Coalition, Hidden Children of Michigan, the Holocaust COMPENSATION page 26 Gubernatorial Mission Gov. Engler has set a date for his trip to Israel. PHIL JACOBS EDITOR ov. John Engler is finally going to Israel. He'll be there from May 17-21 in a trip arranged by the Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit and the Jewish Community Council. The trip is seen partly as a trade mission and an opportu- nity for the governor to meet with high-level Israeli political and business officials. The gov- ernor may also be visiting the G Central Galilee area, Michigan's Partnership 2000 region. Plans and a specific itinerary are still in the making. "We are proceeding," said the governor's spokesman, John Tr- uscott. "We've been in consulta- tion for years with Max Fisher about making this happen." Mr. Truscott said it is Gov. Engler's hope to meet with Prime Minister Binyamin Ne- GUBERNATORIAL page 26 To Deport Or Not? A judge weighs the deportation question in the case of Ferdinand Hammer, former Waffen SS member. JILL DAVIDSON SKLAR STAFF WRITER I f Ferdinand Hammer is to be involvement in wartime atrocities. believed, his case is the ulti- At the hearing Monday, dozens mate right-name-wrong-man of Mr. Hammer's friends and rel- atives attended as a show of sup- tragedy. A farm worker recruited into port. They say he is being cruelly the Nazi Waffen SS, he was a du- persecuted by the U.S. govern- tiful soldier on the Russian front ment. Mark, Mr. Hammer's son-in- who suffered through daily rations of potatoes for so long that he can law who asked that his last name no longer stomach them. not be used for fear of retribution, He could hardly believe it when said the family is torn up by the the United States Department of accusations and blames Jews in Justice, through its Office of Spe- the government for this misguid- cial Investigations (OSI), began ed pursuit. its quest to remove his citizenship "[The family] feels the Jewish and deport him. Even more sur- people are doing this persecution," prising to him was the evi- dence the government produced, including docu- ments from concentration camps listing one of its work- ers as Ferdinand Hammer. "I swear that that was not me," he said. "I was not there." A deportation hearing for Mr. Hammer was held Mon- day before Judge Michael Creppy in Detroit. So far, the OSI has proven through thousands of pages of documentary evidence pre- sented in federal court that Mr. Hammer voluntarily served in the Waffen SS Death's Head Battalion as a concentration camp guard Ferdinand Hammer waits with family members and then lied on immigration during a break in his deportation hearing. papers to secure passage to America and to eventually gain he said, adding he believes there is a conspiracy against Mr. Ham- U.S. citizenship. Last May, U. S. District Court mer, 75, a former foundry super- Judge Horace Gilmore found the visor. "It is common knowledge government's evidence convincing that the prosecution is Jewish." and removed Mr. Hammer's At the deportation hearing, the American citizenship. government called no witnesses The question before Judge but presented a stack of historical Creppy is whether or not to deport documents on which Mr. Ham- Mr. Hammer. The immigration mer's name appears, including judge is expected to render his de- duty rosters from concentration cision within 30 days. camps such as Auschwitz, If Judge Creppy decides for Mr. Flossenberg and Sachsenhausen. Hammer, he can stay in the coun- The defense, represented by try. If the court finds for the gov- William Bufalino II, aimed at de- ernment, Mr. Hammer must bunking the prosecution's theo- leave the country or stay while ap- ry that all Waffen SS involvement pealing the verdict, said Justice was voluntary and that Mr. Ham- spokesperson John Russell. mer served in the Death's Head So far, Mr. Hammer is one of Battalion. 58 individuals the OSI has been The first of three witnesses to successful in denaturalizing for take the stand, Elizabeth Schnei- their activities during World War der of Sterling Heights, testified II; of that number, 48 have been that she saw Mr. Hammer in their deported. Another 300 individu- village of Lacarek, Yugoslavia, als are being investigated for their when he was on leave from SS duty in 1944. She said his uniform carried no marks of the Death's Head Battalion members, an in- signia with a skull and crossbones. The second witness, Joseph Hajnal of Eastpointe, said he was forced to become a member of the Waffen SS or be shot. "You don't go and your family gonna get a hard time," he said. "They watch them and maybe shoot them." Ferdinand Hammer testified last, maintaining that he fought on the Russian front lines and that he never worked as a guard at a concentration camp. He said he entered the service after receiving a letter asking him to join. In addition, Mr. Ham- mer testified that he was told grave consequences would be- fall him if he refused to join. "They would kill you," he said. He said he never partici- pated in the atrocities against Jews during the war and only learned about them after he came to America. However, on cross exami- nation, Mr. Hammer faltered on the dates and locations of his service and contradicted some earlier testimony. He said that although his name appeared on the duty rosters of and transports to concen- tration camps, it was not the same Ferdinand Hammer. Mr. Bufalino also entered the defense's only material evidence in support of its claim that mem- bership in the Waffen SS was not voluntary. A 1953 memo issued by the U.S. Displaced Persons Headquarters in Europe stated that some of the individuals re- cruited from the Balkan states were forced into German military service. "Mr. Hammer testified that he was not at Auschwitz, Mau- thausen or Sachsenhausen," Mr. Bufalino said. "No evidence showed Ferdinand Hammer was involved in atrocities against Jews or anyone else." Jeffrey Menkin, a government trial attorney, said the case was decided on the evidence present- ed. When asked if it was possible that the government could have the wrong man, he replied, "I find that entirely incredible." El PHOTO BY DANIEL L I PPITT Seeking Just Compensation