"With Israeli flags blowing in the breeze and our heads held high, we marched for life, we marched as Jews, we marched as one ... Despite our different backgrounds and beliefs, we all joined together for the same purpose and that is to always remember and never forget what happened to the Jews in this century. It is also to celebrate --- Hitler may have succeeded in mur- dering six million Jews, but he failed in his ultimate attempt to ex- terminate the entire Jewish people and we all proved that today." — Miriam Segelbaum "Birkenau is the scariest place on earth. It is just like I pictured — dank, foggy — this place looks, smells and feels like death. It's hard to liik at the ground — to touch the ground, knowing that someone died right on that very lo- cation, their lives cut far too short. As I was walking, Mr. Cala (Elias Cala, a survivor who joined the mission) told me to look down, as I was looking up at the barbed wire. 'See those patches of grey?' he asked. 'Those are human ashes.' All I could do was cry. Then we de- cided to pick some up in film can- nisters to bury next week in Jerusalem." — Michael Simon May 7, 1997 "Why do you have to wait so long after eating meat before you eat dairy?" While explanations were not always forthcoming, the teens began to open up to each other about their beliefs in and ob- servance of Judaism. It was not unusual to later see them peppering their own rab- bis about questions they could not answer. Nor was it unusual for participants to question other rabbis about beliefs with- in the various branches of Judaism. On Shabbat in Warsaw, Ari Sherizen and Avi Newman of Akiva Hebrew Day School drilled Rabbi Yedwab about Reform Ju- daism. "They really wanted to know about the differences, the similarities in what makes them Jews," Rabbi Yedwab said. fter a long tour through the grassy yards here the War- saw Ghetto once stood, par- ticipants returned to the hotel for a quick, light meal before Havdallah. Rabbi Yedwab, leading the group, began a rousing kumsitz featuring songs in Hebrew and English. The teens quickly picked up on the spirit of the mo- ment and began singing song after song, linking arms with one an- other, dancing in circles. Those from the Ax "My excitement for the promised land grows by the second and I know that the second we land I will feel like I have come home." — Risa Heller, from the airplane over Eu- rope Above: Flames burned at the end of the tracks in Birkenau, where a ceremony for the Jews who died in the Holocaust was held. 'What a feeling it was!! The plane landed and our voices rang loudly with the sound of Hatikvah. The feeling was absolutely unimaginable. We departed the plane and went down the stairs to the ground. At that point nothing felt more appropriate than dropping to the ground and kissing it. Many of us kissed the ground and oth- ers cried tears of joy for we felt that we were home ... I just cannot put feelings into words when you leave a country that hates your people, that has killed your people and go to a place that is your peo- ple." Right: In Krakow, children, like this little girl, begged in the streets. Below: The students saw many tombstones in several cemeteries in Poland, showing the diverse and vibrant community that once lived there. North American Federation of Temple Youth (NFTY) began one song, which led into another which Akiva students sang. "I was worried that this would just end up being another NFTY song session, but then the ruach (spirit) took over," Rab- bi Yedwab said. "They started taking turns leading the singing. The dancing began in earnest." "I don't want to say that it was a once-in- a-lifetime experience. That would be too pes- simistic," Rabbi Yed- wab said. "Rather, this was a lifetime experi- ence." It was then — after a day that began with the egging of a stu- dent on her way to pray, after walking past — Risa Heller, after landing in Israel May 8, 1997 anti-Semitic slogans freshly painted on the walls of local shops, after standing on the train platform that once served as the final stop before the gas chambers of Tre- blinka — it was in that moment that the students from such varied backgrounds in Detroit Jewry began to bond. And it was a bond that helped them through the next day's events — the March of the Living from Auschwitz to Birkenau. As the walk began, the Detroit contin- gent happily chatted with one another. 'We ate lunch outside a school. The greatest sadnesslirony that I found was the slide. The slide — a colorful metal structure -- was built over a bomb shel- ter. This is life in Israel ... We climbed Mt. Armel. The ascent was a steep walk. The descent was a cleff climbing, bar holding, rope grabbin or- deal. I was very proud of myself; it was definitely an accomplishment." — Amanda Warner May 9, 1997 'We walked to the kotel and sang as we walked in. I felt a certain sense of home in me as I approached the wall and recit- ed the shechcianu. I prayed for all those who lost their lives and their relatives'lives in the Holocaust. I felt it was my responsibility after seeing the horrors of the Holocaust in Poland." — Julie Jonas