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September 07, 2001 - Image 98

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 2001-09-07

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

David Klein Gallery

presents

Fernando
Botero

from page 77
and director of the Berlin
Philharmonic Orchestra, he was in a
socially elevated position. Although
he tried to distance himself from the
Nazi regime, it was extraordinarily
difficult. Nevertheless, he was able
to help many of his Jewish musi-
cians. After the war, Furtwangler was
investigated by the Allies, who
doubted his morality. The cast
includes Harvey Keitel, Stellan
Skarsgard, and Oleg Tabakov. Born
in Budapest, Hungary, Szabo's other
films include Meeting Venus,
Offenbachs Secret and Sunshine.
Screening: 9:30 p.m. Thursday,
Sept. 13, Roy Thomson Hall; 12:30
p.m. Friday, Sept. 14, Uptown 2.

REEL TORONTO

Paintings, Drawings and Sculpture

Saturday, September 8 — October 20, 2001

Opening

Saturday, September 8

1-4

pm

Preview the exhibition at dkgallery.com

163 TOWNSEND BIRMINGHAM MI 48009
TELEPHONE 248.433.3700 FAX 248.433.3702

HOURS: MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY 1 1 - 5:30

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27903 Orchard Lake Rd. (NW corner of 12 Mile)
Farmington Hills

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Open 7 days a week

Mon-Sat 11 am - 10 pm
Sunday 4 pm - 9:30 pm

KISSING JESSICA STEIN
(USA; 2001; 94 min.)
Directed by Charles Herman-
Wurmfeld — and based on Heather
juergensen and Jennifer Westfeldt's
play Lipschtick — Kissing Jessica Stein
takes a comic look at New York sin-
gles, Jewish families and dating.
Type-A Stein works for a publisher
with her best friend Joan and her
former boyfriend Josh. But after a
catastrophic dating spree, she turns
to the personal ads, which turn up a
surprising twist. Kissing Jessica Stein
won the 2001 Los Angeles Film
Festival's Audience Award for Best
Feature.
Screening: 7 p.m. Monday, Sept. 10,
Isabel Bader Theatre; 12:45 p.m.
Wed., Sept. 12, Uptown I. ❑

The Toronto International Film
Festival is currently showing
films, and runs through Sept. 15.
Advance tickets are available for
$13 (Canadian funds) at the fes-
tival box office. Same-day tickets
are available only at the theater
box offices on the day of the
screening (S13.75 Canadian).
Rush tickets for sold-out per-
formances may become available;
be prepared to get there early and
be flexible about seeing other
films if your first choices are sold
out. For more information, go to
the Web site at
www.e.bell.ca/filmfest/2001/,
where tickets may be ordered
online. Tickers also are available
at the box office, located in the
Toronto Eaton Center, Level
One, Dundas Mall, or by calling
(416) 968-FILM.



from page 71
who liberated the Lithuanian sur-
vivors at Dachau; and Ganor, who
took photos after being liberated.
The photos include one of Ganor as
a young boy in a ghetto street selling
bread baked by his mother. Some
materials were obtained from the
Simon Wiesenthal Center and the Yad
Vashem Martyrs' and Heroes'
Remembrance Authority.
"I try to see what I do as educating
young people," says Ganor, whose book
has been compared to The Diary of
Anne Frank. "I want them to know
what can happen if they don't get politi-
c a lly involved. The majority of Germans
didn't vote when Hitler was elected."
Ganor, who divides his time between
the United States and Israel, has traveled
the world to speak about the experiences
described in his book, which has become
an integral part of the Holocaust educa-
tional curriculum in Germany. He tells
of the horrors of the ghetto where he
lived and the concentration camps
where he subsequently was sent.
The author, who maintains friend-
ships with people he knew from pre-
war Kovno, also relates how he assist-
ed the U.S. Army hunting for Nazi
perpetrators and how he joined the
fight in Israel's War for Independence.
Kramer, who is planning a private
family dinner for Ganor, wants to
hear his recollections of the ghetto her
parents escaped before the war ended.
Sylvia Perlman, Kramer's mother, was
able to dupe a Nazi guard into think-
ing she would meet him after he let
her sneak away, but she instead came
up with a plan to escape him as well.
Although her family had been
destroyed, Perlman convinced the
guard that other people she knew
were family members, and he released
them with her. One became her hus-
band and Zina's late father.
"It's been exciting to work on this
exhibit," says Kramer, who was too
young to remember her life before com-
ing to America in 1947. "I'm thinking
of traveling back to the area where
Sugihara's wife will be honored by the
Lithuanian government. I want to get
my children (David, 28, and Lisa, 26)
involved so they can pass all this infor-
mation down to their children."

SOLLY'S STORY



"Light One Candle: A Child's
Diary of the Holocaust" runs Sept.
12-Oct. 2 at Somerset South. An
opening reception will be held
6:30-8:30 p.m. Wednesday, Sept.
12. (248) 203-1499.

I

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