• •3$• mum:kw x,44:4,44;,' . 0 • page 47 Mazel Toy! Pre s erw PPS Sidney Bolkosky: "Everybody is obligated to know about (the Holocaust). Its part of our history — not just Jewish history. It a terrible condemnation of Western civilization." DIANA LIEBERMAN Staff^ Writer fry hen Sidney Bolkosky's son turned 14, he received a birthday card from a Holocaust survivor. It was signed with a name and serial number, and these words: "When I was 14, I was on my way to Auschwitz." The story shows the impact of living with a professor father who has interviewed more than 150 Holocaust survivors as founder and director of the Voice/Vision project at the University of Michigan- Dearborn. The influence of the Holocaust is overwhelming, Bolkosky said. "You can't escape it. And the survivors, every one of them, thinks about some aspect of their experience every moment of every day." A member of the UM-D faculty since 1972, Bolkosky, 55, not only runs the VoiceiVision project, but also carries a full teaching load. It includes German history, Holocaust studies, and such courses as "Language, Myth and Dreams." He is co-author of the Holocaust high school curriculum, Life Unworthy of Life, which is taught in more than 160 Michigan high schools; director of the university's honors program; and chair of the search committee seeking a new chancellor for UM-D. This year, Bolkosky, who lives in Oak Park, received the highest honor the campus extends to its faculty members — the William E. Stirton Professorship. Its a five-year appoint- ment with various perks, including a stipend and a public lecture. "Most important to me, it's a peer award," Bolkosky said. "There were letters of support from faculty mem- bers from all over the campus: engi- neering, arts and sciences, every- ), where. A historian whose doctoral research centered on German intel- lectual history, Bolkosky's first book, The Distorted Image, dealt with German Jews between the World Wars. His other works include Harmony and Dissonance: The Search for Jewish Identity in Detroit, 1914- 1967, and many journal articles. "Dr. Bolkosky is absolutely one of the most distinguished professors at the university," said Robert Simpson, UM-D provost and vice chancellor for academic affairs. "Versatility and originality are characteristic of his enthusiasm for his teaching," Simpson said. "And his Holocaust archive is a unique resource of inestimable value and, without a doubt, his greatest legacy." The magnitude of the project is hard to overemphasize. In total, 175 interviews have been conduct- ed, mostly of local individuals. Each interview spans 11-12 hours, with one having stretched 25 ,x4 hours. If the survivor agrees, Bolkosky or his staff then will videotape a two- to four-hour ver- sion of that person's testimony. Bolkosky also has established per- sonal relationships with many of the survivors, beginning with the late Dr. John Mames. The two met in the late 1970s, when both served on a Jewish Community Council of Metropolitan Detroit committee dealing with Holocaust education. Bolkosky, whose studies had involved the political, sociological and psychological atmosphere of pre- Holocaust Europe, had begun focus- ing more and more on Holocaust education after the 1978 broadcast of a popular television mini-series on the subject. "It was a terrible show, but about 100 million people watched it," Bolkosky said. "It was the first time many of them had heard of the Holocaust." \ks ., 1..•\N\ ••; A: H‘\ .' • 9/24 1999 Detroit Jewish News 41