"Let AL KLINE give you personalized attention and service like he has been for over 32 years at DETROIT'S ONLY CADILLAC-OLDSMOBILE DEALERSHIP." Cadillac-Oldsmobile•Aurora•Catera Serving Detroit For Over 76 Years 6160 Cass Ave., Detroit 313/875-0300 Conveniently located in the New Center Area Near GM & Fisher Buildings Coming Soon! 10/16 1998 To order your subscription or a gift s for family or friends, please call (248); us Detroit Jewish News The World Stein's canonization has sparked criticisms from Jewish leaders, who say she was killed because she was a Jew, * not a Catholic. Stein was born into an Orthodox Jewish family in Breslau, now the Polish town of WroclaW, on Oct. 12, 1891 — Yom Kippur of that year. In her unfinished autobiography, "Life in a Jewish Family," Stein wrote that as a child she was convinced she was "destined for something great and ,* that I did not belong in all the narrow, bourgeois circumstances into which I had been born." The brilliant, passionate Stein offers little insight into her decision to con- vert — "It is my secret," she wrote — but she does describe a visit to the widow of a friend who had been killed during World War I. The widow attributed her compo- sure and serenity, despite the loss she had suffered, to her recent embrace of Christianity. It was to be the most influential encounter of Stein's life. She soon set about devouring Catholic literature. On Jan. 1, 1922, at the age of 31, Stein was baptized a Catholic. Eleven years later she adopted the name Teresa -IP- Benedicta a Cruce — Teresa, Blessed of the Cross — and entered the Carmelite Convent of Cologne in Germany. But even as a converted Catholic nun, she was not safe from the Holo- caust. After she first entered the convent, Stein wrote about the Nazi measures 4 being taken against the Jews. "The fate of this people will also be mine," she wrote prophetically. After fleeing in 1938 from Ger- many to a Dutch convent in Holland, Stein was arrested at the convent on Aug. 2, 1942. She died in Auschwitz exactly one week later. Rabbi Daniel Farhi, a leader of France's Reform movement, said the canonization was an "ultimate injury to Holocaust survivors and the descen- dants of victims." "How can one not understand that it is a Jew converted to Catholi- cism that is being shown as an example to the Christian people?" he said. Eleanor Michael, a London writer* who has spent five years tracing the life of Stein, said categorically that Stein was "murdered by the Nazis because she was Jewish." "What had she done to provoke the Nazis who murdered her, other than being born Jewish?" Cl