Insight 55 YEARS LATER from page 26 otherwise. The Dudziks did not sub- scribe to the usual anti-Semitic atti- tudes. "Jews are very good people. My father very much liked your grandfa- ther," she told me. Anya's family members in the next generations continue to show their compassion. In May, her daughter Ursula and granddaughter Maggie went on a trip with a school group to clean up Jewish cemeteries in Poland and elsewhere. Anya is excited about the posthu- mous honor for her parents and fami- ly and is hoping her sisters from Chicago can join her for the special evening Oct. 10. Rabbi Charles Rosenzveig, execu- tive director of the HMC, noted the healing that finding Anya has brought ZYGA ALLWEISS Special to the Jewish News D wing World War II, I recall a bright light in the midst of evil and despair. This shining light was emanating from the home of Maciej and Zofia Dudzik of Chajkowa, Poland. The village of Chajkowa was about two miles away from my home village, jaslany. I met the Dudziks in 1943, after I escaped from a truck , delivering prison- ers, including my three sisters, from a slave labor camp, I3iesiaddca, which took them to be murdered and then_ buried in one mass grave. I did not 'mow the Duaziks before the war. I was 12 when the war started. My father was friends with them. When I returned from Biesiaddca and found my brother and father hid- Mg in a stable, they were surprised to find me still alive. We were all very happy. Nly father told us about the people he thought were good and would share food with us and not betray us. He spoke very highly of Maciej Dudzik, and told us that he had spent some time hiding in the Dudziks' barn. In the summer of 1943, my brother and I went to Mr. Duclzik's house at night to ask for a piece of bread. After giving us bread, Mr. Dudzik pointed out his large farm attached to his household with a private road running though the middle of the property. He to the Allweiss brothers. He said, "People like the ones that saved your family have given the world a right to exist. It is most unusual." Of the award Anya will receive that night, my father said simply, "She deserves it." 7 The Holocaust Memorial Center dinner, chaired by Dr. Stephen D. Grant, starts at 5 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 10, at the Marriott Hotel in Detroit's Renaissance Center. The main speaker will be presidential candidate Bill Bradley. For information, call Selma Silverman at the HMC, (248) 661-0840. n1 ,1003..w* . :5A:K.:* Ss? •.? said that we could stay in his fields as long as we needed. When it rained at night, we could go into the stable to warm ourselves. These wonderful people did more than they promised during 1943 and 1944, until we were freed by the Russian army. They gave us hot food and when the weather was very hot, their children would carry cool water to us as we hid in the fields. The Dudzik family did not have very much. Having nine children to raise during the war was hard enough. Yet they shared what they had with us. They risked their lives helping us. After the Russians freed our area, I volunteered for the army proudly using the name of Zygmunt Dudak, The Dudzik parents are deceased. Three of their daughters live in the United States. They were our water carriers during the wan We believe that the memory of Zofia and Maciej Dudzik should be honored by the Holocaust Memorial Center for their unusual kindness and bravery in a time of insanity. The Dudzik family makes all mankind proud. L1 Zyga Allweiss is a resident of West Bloomfield He and his brother SoL also of West Bloornfiel4 arrived in New York City in 1947, and moved the next year to Detroit Retired today from other busi- nesses, they are known to many in the community as the proprietors of Sol & Zygie's Mobil in Southfield. Detroiters Among Wealthiest he Detroit Jewish com- munity is well represented on Forbes magazine's annual ranking of Michigan's wealthiest people. Bloomfield Hills' William Davidson, 76, head of Guardian Industries, tops the list with an estimated net worth of $2.1 billion. Franklin's Max Fisher, 91, active in oil and investments, was ranked fifth ($975 mil- lion). Bloomfield Hills' A. Alfred Taubman, 74, a real estate magnate, was ranked seventh ($860 million). Microsoft Corp. Chairman Bill Gates led Forbes' national rankings with an estimated net worth of $85 billion, up from last year's $59 billion. He is one of 268 billionaires on the list of 400 richest Americans, who together have amassedd -a total net worth of $1 trillion. Rounding out the top five nation- ally were Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen ($40 billion); Warren Buffett, Berkshire Hathaway Inc. chair ($31 billion); Microsoft President Steve Ballmer ($23 billion); and Dell Computer CEO Michael Dell ($20 billion). Others among Michigan's top 10 were Jay Van Andel, ranked second ($1.9 billion); Richard DeVos, third ($1.8 billion); William Clay Ford, fourth ($1.4 billion); Thomas Monaghan, sixth ($950 mil- lion); Josephine Ford, eighth ($800 mil- lion); Richard Manoogian, ninth ($750 million) and Peter Karmanos, 10th ($690 million). Nationally, Davidson ranked 112th, Fisher 268th and Taubman 295th. The Oakland Press contributed to this report. Corrections The picture of Saul Bernstein of Windsor was misidentified on page 22 last week in "Looking Back: the year 5759 in pictures." He was incorrectly identified as Michigan Jewish War Veterans Junior Vice Commander Sandy Pliskow. Hillel third-grader Bradley Schlafer, not his brother Scott, was shown with dad Steve Schlafer last week on page 46 at the Hillel Day School bar- becue. The correct Web address to access Dr. Sidney Bolkosky's Holocaust survivor interviews is http://www.holocaust.umd. umich. edu Bradley and Steve Schlafer k„,k`M,N ,M,WeA,A,Z.a. 10/1 1999 Saul Bernstein