Together To Remember
A meeting of David-Horodoker descendants revives the memories
of relatives lost.
PHIL JACOBS EDITOR
They took 3,000 of our men and boys on the
17th of Av, Aug. 10, 1941 and shot them
down in trenches outside of town. The Nazi
SS and our neighbors, the Horochukas, may
their name be blotted out, ended the lives of
the men.
For a year, the women and children lived
on in a wretched ghetto, starving to death,
until those 1,100 who were left were taken
out and shot on the 28th of Tishri, 5712,
Sept. 10, 1942. We are buried outside of
town on the road to the village of Olshon.
Mourn us, for no one else is left.
Musician Sam Barnett welcomes the David-Horodok memorial crowd.
A
llen Zagier, a New Jersey accoun-
tant, knew that he had relatives who
perished during the Holocaust. He
also did research to learn that he
had a connection to this small town known
as David-Horodok in what is now Belarus.
He had to go through Detroit to make some
of those connections.
Last Wednesday evening, at the Janice
Charach Epstein Gallery in the Maple-
Drake Jewish Community Center, Zagier
TOGETHER page 12
ADAT SHALOM SYNAGOGUE
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opo lt Cehit
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SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 7
with
AL
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Because of the rules of Kashrut,
only food prepared by the Synagogue
may be eaten on the grounds.
Rabbi Efry Spectre
10
•
OR
Rabbi Daniel Nevins
blueD
11 A.M. - 2 P.M.
ROLLERBLADING
GIANT SLIDE
PONY RIDES
VELCRO WALL
PETTING FARM
ROCK 'N ROLL WALL
seRSVP
Pea 5100
851-
ay Septet
990
and featuring the great sounds of
Tke Eat& Aageta
•
Cantor Howard Glantz
•
Cantor Larry Vieder
2