Exceeding Your Expectations 4 AMER1011 1- Se nior Living! Q 3emor fl9V,„,„ 10 . Arts Entertainment Designed exclusively for Seniors 55 or older. American House offers elegant apartments with many luxuries included. Southfield West Bloomfield • 1 Bedroom-940 Sq. Ft. • Two Meals Served Daily & Continental Breakfast • 2 Bedroom-1280 Sq. Ft. • Housekeeping Services Sharing Her Story Holocaust survivor/author will be part of Hill& fourth annual Kristallnacht commemoration in Ann Arbor. • Laundry and Linen Services • Social and Poolside Activities • Transportation Provided in our Bus • Barber and Beauty Shop • Recreational and Social Activities • Transportation in our Bus • 24 Hour In-House Staffing • Continental Breakfast SUZANNE CHESSLER • On-Site Beauty and Barber Shop • Laundry/Linen • Personal Care Services Available Optional Services Available • Dinner • Supper • Housekeeping • Efficiencies • 1 Bedroom • 2 Bedroom • Deluxe 2 Bedroom F • 1 Bedroom widens Call Anytime for Lunch and a Tour SOUTHFIELD WEST BLOOMFIELD 27577 Lahser 5859 Maple Rd. 248-353-5835 248-538-5283 671690 THANKSGIVING Catering THANKSGIVING FEAST Whole Gourmet Turkeys •Complete Dinners •Fabulous Side Dishes •Luscious Desserts A Little Bit Of New York Right Here In Bloomfield Hills Chanukah Parties TRADITIONAL ,41 FOODS W Homemade Latkes... DELICIOUS! BLOOMFIELD PLAZA I1/22 2002 78 6646 Telegraph Rd.• At Maple (i5 Mile) (248) 932-0800 out an Auschwitz or Treblinka." Heller wants to communicate that peo- ple do not have to be bystanders in hor- anya Gottesfeld Heller rendous times and that there's still some always keeps a piece of bread good to be found in the midst of evil. in her purse. A Holocaust She speaks with students at all levels survivor who went on to from elementary school to college, and personal and professional successes in her book is in the curriculum at many America, she can never fully leave schools, including Princeton behind her teenage years of hiding and University, Yale University and Israel's groveling for food in Poland. Bar Ilan University. Heller retains an innate fear she's Heller's first goal in writing was to let going to face starvation again even her children know who she was and though she and her late husband eventu- why she was overprotective with them. ally were able to provide for Her second was to themselves and their three encourage others to children and she was able to keep on going and dia- earn a master's degree in logue across religious psychology, write a book, and other boundaries. support Jewish projects and "My children knew I lecture around the world. was saved by Christians, Among Heller's most but they didn't know satisfying experiences is the whole story," says relating to young people Heller, who ultimately — first through her auto- underwent therapy to biography, Strange & overcome the issues that Unexpected Love: A Teenage remained after World Girl's Holocaust Memories War II. (KTAV Publishing House; "I think they bond- $16.95), and later through Heller's autobiography is ed with me more after talking about the dangers included in the Holocaust reading the book, but she confronted and con- curriculum of many colleges. some survivors were necting them to the diffi- very upset with me cult problems others must face. because I discussed sexuality." Heller, who survived with the help Heller describes in detail the affair she of a family friend and a militiaman in had with the gentile militiaman who love with her, soon will bring messages shielded her and how she grew to love of triumph to Michigan by addressing him even knowing he was a collabora- a Hillel audience in Ann Arbor. She tor. She also talks about another young will be part of the organization's woman forced into an unwanted affair fourth annual Kristallnacht commem- with a Nazi in order to hold on to life. oration on Monday, Nov. 25. The author, even after therapy, con- tinues to be haunted by the actions of her grandfather. Although she knew Rising From The Ashes him as a good man before the chaos of "I will talk about Jewish life before the battle, she has to cope with also know- war and the rampant anti-Semitism ing he turned in his wife and family even before Hitler, our relationship members to the Nazis, wrongly think- with Christians, women's issues over ing this would save his own life. the years and how good people can "Therapy was the beginning of my react adver s ely just to stay alive anoth- healing," she says. "I cannot change er minute," says Heller, 78. the world, but I can do a little bit." "I think of myself as a role model because I show one woman's power to Returning To Religion come from the ashes and find a new life. I come from the killing fields, where Heller, whose book is in its third print- people were murdered on the spot with- ing, hopes to have her story released Special to the Jewish News 673320