ever For HARRY KIRS BAUM Staff Writer T here is no easy way to talk about the Holocaust, nor should there be," said presi- dential candidate Bill Bradley. "No words can describe the evil, but we will have to speak about it because, by speaking about it, we will remember, and only by remembering can we learn about it." Bradley, a Democrat, spoke to about 1,300 guests at the Holocaust Memorial Center's 15th anniversary dinner held Oct. 10 at the Marriott Hotel in Detroit's Renaissance Center. During a night filled with tales of war and survival from evil, Bradley's keynote speech to supporters of the West Bloomfield center was sincere but lacked punch. A U.S. senator from New Jersey for 16 years, Bradley said his former con- stituents who were survivors taught him that "the human heart is capable of such malignancies as the Holocaust, but it is also so large and strong that it can overwhelm such evil." Speaking of silence and hate in America, he cited the Jewish Community Center shootings in subur- ban Los Angeles, the dragging death of African-American James Byrd in Texas Harry Kirsbaum can be reached at (248) 354-6060, ext. 244, or by e-mail at hkirsbaum@thejewishnews.com 10/15 1999 At Holocaust Memorial Center dinner, Bill Bradley emphasizes the importance of remembering and learning from survivors' experiences. $1 million donation he gave to the and the death of Matthew Shepard, HMC in his wife Mignon's memory, who was gay, in Wyoming. Said told the crowd it was a bittersweet day Bradley: "When people do evil, each of for him. us must respond forcefully" by taking a "Just this morning we gathered at more active role in speaking out against the cemetery to dedicate the head- hate. He urged teaching tolerance to stone of my wife's grave," the children earlier in their curriculum. Bloomfield Hills resident said. "I wish "Hate crimes and vocalizing hate she could be here physical- are not in the same cate- gory as the Holocaust, Above, left to right: ly, but I know she's here in spirit." and never will be," he Honoree Eugene Kraft Dr. Ernestine Schlant said. "But the Holocaust says HaMotzi. Bradley, a professor of did not appear in one Sol Allweiss, Rabbi German and comparative day. Genocide begins Charles Rosenzveig of the literature at Montclair State with a single hate Holocaust Memorial University in New Jersey, crime." Center, Franciszka was the link between Earlier, Franciszka Olszewska, Zyga Allweiss Bradley and the HMC. Olszewska of Detroit, and Wladyslawa Rzeznik Before introducing her attending with sister during the Righteousness husband, she took a Wladyslawa Rzeznik of Award presentation. moment to talk about her Chicago, received a Bill Bradley book, The Language of Righteousness Award in Silence: West German honor of her family, the Literature and the Holocaust. She Dudziks, who hid brothers Zygie and explained that the tremendous burden Sol Allweiss of West Bloomfield, in of the Holocaust not only is on the sur- Poland during the war. The families vivors, but the German people as well. found each other on the Internet last A native of Germany, Dr. Bradley winter and were reunited. said her book about the avoidance of Also, Eugene Kraft, honored for the addressing the Holocaust in West German literature from 1949-1990 took her 10 years to write, and covers a complicated subject. "When you avoid, you're avoiding something you already have knowledge of," she said. "When you point out the silence, you can also point out that this is a very specific silence, words cover- ing up what we don't want to say." Yet she let the crowd know that no one in Germany would deny the exis- tence of the Holocaust. "This is totally impossible," she said. There is debate raging from govern- ment levels down to the citizens in Germany on an honorable way to remember the Holocaust, she stated. "The literature reflects the attempts and confusion. There's no clear answer." Dr. Bradley alluded to the redeeming quality of art. "If you can resurrect in art something that is gone, at least you can give it — not a real life back — but you can give it a life back in memory." Summing up, her husband said the lessons of the Holocaust can be learned by going to the source. "Survivors are aging, but only they can teach us the horrors of that time," Bill Bradley said. "They are all, in their own ways, prophets; they all have something I hope the rest of us will never see. "If you are a survivor, please teach us," he said. "For those of us who are not survivors, we must commit our- selves to learn from you." 7