tV,4"Wzn,P-W4V kAtw\ean ....TiMmki.V4V*;s44 ,43V"'V vrir Special to the Jewish News 0 :gar- , tePt% v%:.„ ELIZABETH APPLEBAUM n the plane back home, Barbara Wiener handed her father a small piece of wallpaper. It was pink, with flowers. Abe Asner held the paper, looked at it, and said noth- ing. One month later, he asked to see it again. "I helped put this up," he said, quietly. "It was in my sister's room." For Asner, the wallpaper was a new memory. Much of what he endured during World War II remains clear, and he can tell story after story about his years as a partisan. For Wiener, the wallpaper was a tangible piece of a world that no longer exists, a piece of her own his- tory. She took it from a broken- down house in Lithuania where her father had grown up, and which, along with the family that lived inside, was almost entirely destroyed by the Nazis. Asner, of Windsor, recently returned from a trip to Eishishok in Poland (now Lithuania). The visit is part of a documentary, There Once Was a Town, which airs locally 10 p.m. Ro a dt Sunday, Oct. 1, on PBS (WTVS- Channel 56 in Detroit). The program traces the lives of four of the town's survivors, a jour- ney led by author and historian Yaffa Eliach. Asner went back to Eishishok at the invitation of Eliach, whom he has known since she was a young girl. Accompanying him were his daughters Cheryl Gold of Windsor and Barbara Wiener of West Bloomfield, as well as other family members. Wiener grew up in Windsor, then stayed in Michigan after she married her husband, Detroit native Jody Wiener. A former speech pathologist with the Detroit Public Schools, she wasn't exactly excited when she learned of her father's plans to return to his childhood home. "Eager?" she asks incredulously. "It was the last place I wanted to go. In fact, when my father asked me, I actually took the phone away from my ear and stared at it." Then she considered her parents' history. Both had been partisans who often spoke of their lives in Europe, "but there were so many holes," Wiener says. "It was like a jigsaw puzzle, and I could never get the pieces all together." In a new documentary, a Windsor man and his daughters return to the Poland of his youth, where nothing is the same. Asner was originally from the town of Nacha, now part of Belarus. His father died of pneumonia when Abe was 8. "It was such a tragedy for my mother," he remembers. "She was left with seven young children." Determined to see that her sons receive a Jewish education, Abe's mother sent her older boys to cheder, where they remained until 1938. The war broke out in 1939, and Abe and three of his brothers were draft- ed into the army. In 1941 his mother died. Abe was staying in nearby Eishishok, about 39 miles south of Vilna, where he worked building roads for the German gov- ernment. There were rumors that the Nazis were approaching. Most of the town's 3,500-member Jewish commu- nity, however, opted to stay — and virtually all were murdered. But several days before the Nazis came to Eishishok, Asner knew, instinctively, that he must leave. He went back to Nacha, but was soon ordered, with his three broth- ers, to the Radom (Poland) Ghetto. There, his job was to pick up the corpses that lined the dark streets. Asner knew that "tomorrow, if not today, they're going to kill us." So he escaped from the ghetto with his Left: Cheryl Gold, Abe Asner and Barbara Wiener in Nacha, where Abe grew up. "It was the last place I wanted to go," says Wiener. 9/29 2000 R48 Right: Abe Asner, second from right, went back to Eishishok at the invitation of author and historian Yaffa Eliach, center, whom he has known since she was a young girl. They are pictured in the men's cemetery in Eishishok. Above: Barbara Wiener of West Bloomfield in front of her father's home in Nacha: "I took a few things — I don't know why — pieces of brick and shutter, and a piece of wallpaper"