Detroit's Premier Entertainment Location presents the Smash Hit Musical Spoof of the Movies! Mixed Media 1,7 ter show in town... it • Martin F: Enjoy a complete night of entertainment under one roof! •• '*<-0 0 .,* 313-963-9800 • 333 Madison Ave. E.: Group discounts available Call: (313) 962-2913 CENTURY :Mt 1•11• nuaseaaner wectickernastor.com Oakland Century Lodge #2692 B'nai B'rith Cordially Invites . . . Members, Honorary Members and Guests to our 27th Annual "Spirit of B'nai B'rith" ' & Scholarship Awards Night Tuesday, August 24, 1999 - 6:00 p. m. Honoring: Arnold Michlin Distinguised Oakland County Lodge Member - Reipient of "Spirit of B'nai B'rith Award" Oakland Century Lodge Scholarships: • The Rosenberg Family presenting a scholarship in memory of ALBERT (AL) SAUL ROSENBERG SOL MOSS • Irving and Sarah Pitt presenting a scholarship in memory of Light Dinner Buffet 6:00 p.m. - Preceding Program BBQ Chicken, Coney Hot Dogs and a variety of salads and all the trimmings Plus . . . Jeff Rosenberg's FABULOUS DESSERT TABLE Adat Shalom Synagogue - 29901 Middlebelt, Farmington Hills $12.50 per person for a wonderful evening . . Sport jacket attire Open seating Harold Samuels 248 356 3284 - - For more information call: Sol Kozloff 248-737-0088 Seymour Schwartz 248-356-8563 INTERNATIONAL NEWS PLUS 8/13 1999 92 Detroit Jewish News Former Vienna Philharmonic conductor Bruno Walter: `A great-hearted Jewish genius." SPONSOR (248) 645-6666 Austrian Atonement Austria will begin to exorcise its ghosts when the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra moves from its comfortable, gilded home for a concert in the very heart of darkness: the site of the Mauthausen concentration camp. From the time it plays the opening notes to Beethoven's Ninth Symphony next May, the country will at last begin to face up to what Chancellor Viktor Klima describes as "this dark chapter in our history" The concert, to be conducted by the distinguished British conductor Sir Simon Rattle, will be held May 5 at the quarry of what was Mauthausen. The event will mark the anniversary of the liberation of the camp where some 100,000 Jews, Gypsies and homosexu- als perished. The choice of Beethoven's Ninth — much admired during the Third Reich as a piece of Teutonic triumphalism — is being criticized as demonstrating a lack of sensitivity to deep historic wounds. But others overlook the music selection and are simply relieved that Austria is at last confronting its past. The Austrian government was moved to initiate the concert by the forced expulsions and murders in Kosovo, just a few hundred miles down the Danube River, and by domestic support for a far- right nationalist party in Austria. The concert is intended as much to sensitize the young to the dangers of racism as it is a tribute to the victims of the Holocaust. "We no longer want to sweep this dark chapter of our history under the carpet," said Klima, who has designated May 5 as an annual "Memorial Day for the Victims of National Socialism." Some have asked why the 157-year- old Vienna Philharmonic, the pride and joy of Austria's cultural set, should have to bear the burden of leading this act of repentance when the orchestra did noth- ing except play music during the war. Supporters of the concert say that is precisely the point. Members of the orchestra did nothing when their fellow Jewish members were expelled in 1938, and they did nothing when six were sent to the camps and executed. The band simply played on. Observers of the Austrian cultural scene are also astounded by the appar- ent indifference that the Vienna Philharmonic has continued to demonstrate to Austria's Nazi past. There was not, they point out, even a hint of shame when Jewish conduc- tor Bruno Walter agreed to return and lead the orchestra in 1947, having fled nine years earlier. "This should have been interpreted by the orchestra as a magnanimous gesture by a great-hearted Jewish genius," said one cultural commenta- tor, "but instead it was seen as a signal that all was forgiven and forgotten." — Douglas Davis Jewish. Telegraphic Agency