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March 31, 2000 - Image 141

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 2000-03-31

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

of Farmington Hills

CC6fitit Tualf
Ziattut, $41,34414,

144,

VOICES OF THE SHOAH

concentration camps and a rabbi who
went to Europe to help survivors.
Volume IV includes the personal
account of a woman who survived in a
small Polish village by hiding her
Jewish identity, and the attitudes of a
second-generation survivor in dealing
with the legacy of the Holocaust.
The complete box set is available at
record stores and other retail outlets at
a suggested retail list price of
$69.98/CD and $54.98/cassette, or
directly at www.rhino.com .

• Healthy Middle Eastern Cuisine • Juice Bar
• Gift Certificates Available
• Large Selection of Vegetarian Entrees
• Catering For All Occasions
Lunch Starts at $323 5

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Rhino Records' four-volume set
documents the Holocaust.

in six concentration camps, is among
those of 180 men and women inter-
viewed in the United States, Canada and
England and heard in a unique four-
hour oral history, Voices of the Shoah:
Remembrance of the Holocaust.
The poignant stories of the sur-
vivors, from their early childhood to
old age, have been collected in a four-
volume box set narrated by actor
Elliott Gould that is available in both
CD and audio cassette.
Rhino Records, which describes the
set as the first-ever audio docuinentary
of the Holocaust, will donate all pro-
ceeds to the Jewish Federation of
Greater Los Angeles, which participat-
ed in the project.
The audio collection, the culmina-
tion of a five-year project, is comple-
mented by a 100-page hardbound
book, with complete transcripts of the
spoken testimonies, historic photos,
explanatory essays, a timeline of
events, maps, charts and a glossary.
In addition, there are suggested
questions and activities for parents
and teachers and a list of additional
teaching resources and Web sites.
The Rhino production has no con-
nection to Steven Spielberg's widely
publicized Shoah Foundation, which
has videotaped the stories of some
50,000 survivors.
Volume I of the set features sur-
vivors' remembrances of life in Europe
before World War II, the rise in anti-
semitism as Hitler gained power and
the Jewish experience in ghettos and
concentration camps.
Volume II includes survivors' mem-
ories of liberation, life after the war,
adjustment to freedom and emigration
to Israel or the West.
Volume III deals with Jewish
American and Japanese American sol-
diers who witnessed the horrors of the

as.

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,

Honored Artists



• •

s

ti



At a performance by the Festival
Dancers in celebration of Jewish
Women's History Month on Sunday,
March 26, at the Jewish Community
Center in Oak Park, 10 local Jewish
women were honored for their contri-
butions to the arts. They include:

DANCE:

Margo Cohen — Dance patron,
Birmingham
Paula Kramer — Choreographer,
Huntington Woods

HAKATA
I* OP

LITERATUILM

Esther Broner — Writer/feminist
activist, New York City
Ruth Redstone — Writer, Detroit

OPEN 7 DAYS • LUNCH & DINNER

featuring

VISUAL ARTS:

AUTHENTIC JAPANESE CUISINE

Ruth Adler Schnee — Interior design,
Southfield
Harriet Gelfond — Painting,
Farmington Hills
Deena Sperka — Installation art, Oak
Park
Norma Penchanslcy Glasser —
Sculpture, Ann Arbor

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• Sushi Bar • Private Japanese Rooms
• Cocktails including 30 Different Kinds of Sake

Lunch: Mon.-Fri. 11:30 - 2 p.m. • Dinner: Mon.-Sat. 5:30-10:30 p.m.
Sunday 5 p.m. to 9 p.m.

771EATER

Yolanda Fleisher — Director, West
Bloomfield

32443 NORTHWESTERN HWY.

(Between Middlebelt & 14 Mile)

(248) 737-7220
Fax (248) 737-7223

Visit us on the web www.hakatasushi.com

MUSIC

Sonny Lipenholtz and Vivian
Stollman — Southfield

Correction

THE GALLERY RESTAURANT

The correct address for the
comprehensive van Gogh Web
site maintained by David Brooks,
tided "The van Gogh
Information Gallery," ("Jewish
Connections," March 10) is
http://www.vangoghgallery.com .

Enjoy gracious dining amid a beautiful
atmosphere of casual elegance

BREAKFAST LUNCH DINNER

OPEN 7 DAYS: MON.- SAT. 7 a.m.- 9:30 p.m. SUN. 8 a.m.- 9 p.m.
West Bloomfield Plaza • 6638 Telegraph Road and Maple • 248-851-0313

(
( I

3/31

2000

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