toarel Ymae to h kAt easar eMz/z,i Oakland Press g2 /yeetf ma/‘e a comdad uz _gam lm Observer & Eccentric streets, members of the Polish -Union of Jewish Students, a Passover seder in Lublin, a Jewish kindergarten in Warsaw, abandoned cemeteries and a Polish soldier who serves with the United Nations peacekeeping force in Lebanon and wears an Israeli army uni- form when he returns to his hometown of Kielce. "I am from Poland," he says, "but I am not a Pole." The author and photographer are both American descendants of Polish Jews; Mayer is the son of Holocaust survivors and his text includes reportage and personal reflections. The memoir The Girl in the Red Coat (St. Martin's; $25.95), by Roma Ligocka, begins with a scene in a beautiful hotel in the Cote d'Azur in France, where the author is vacation- ing. At lunch, surrounded with luscious fruits, she sees a young girl nearby with her parents; she writes, "I feel as though I am sitting across the table from myself in another life, another time." The young girl reminds her of the little girl she once was or might have been; this girl seems to have the kind of safe and happy childhood — filled with loving parents, chocolate and toys — that she never had. Suddenly, she is pulled back into "the abyss of memory, back into the dark hole. The Ghetto." And she flashes back to her story. The author was inspired to write this memoir when she saw the Polish premiere of Schindler's List and was haunted by an image of a young girl — about the age she had been — in a red coat, just like the strawberry red coat her grandmother made for her. But unlike the girl in the movie, Ligocka survives, along with her cousin director Roman Polanksi. Here, she tells of her childhood in the Krakow Ghetto and of her later life in Poland under Communism and her involvement in the Polish human rights movement. Also, she writes with candor of the guilt of survival, the joys of being alive, the search for meaning and beauty. Illustrated with photos throughout, the memoir has been translated into 10 languages. The Gold Train: The Destruction of the Jews and the Looting of Hungary (Morrow; $26.95), by Ronald W. Zweig; reads like a story of espionage and politics. This is the story of the fate of hun- dreds of millions of dollars worth of property — including jewelry, Old, gems, cash, furnishings, silver, rugs — taken from the 437,000 Hungarian Jews deported to Auschwitz and loaded onto a train in 1944 to be transported out of Hungary as the Red Army was approaching. The fate of this property has been the subject of rumors and conjectures since the war. Zweig, a senior lecturer in modern Jewish history at Tel Aviv University, explains what happened to the train, and the ongoing disputes, based on newly available archival records. The people involved include Hungarian and German Nazis, American and French armies, Jewish leaders from Hungary and Palestine and officials with international refugee organizations. Among the book's bold claims is that American soldiers were among the looters of the goods. In The Case for Auschwitz: Evidence from the Irving Trial (Indiana University Press; $45), Robert Jan va Pelt provides an account of the trial of David Irving vs. Penguin Books and Deborah Lipstadt before the British High Court, in which he served as an expert witness. Here, as in the trial, the author makes the case forcefully for historical evidence of the gas chambers at Auschwitz, refut- ing the Holocaust deniers. The author is professor of architecture at the University of Waterloo in Canada and co-author with Deborah Dwork of Auschwitz 1270 to the Present. The new book they have recently completed together is Holocaust: A History (Norton; $27.95). ❑ Open 7 days a week! Sunday-Wednesday V Not Good with any other offer. Expires 4/30/03. Thursday- Saturday OFF r% TOTAL %, BILL Not Good with any other offer. Expires 4/30/03. FRESH SOUPS, SALADS & CREPES 172 N. Old Woodward (NE corner of Maple & N. Old Woodward) (248) 283-0260 ts), - •7 trat recv-,944 CB me/ to-My-Act/7k t, I I Night stay at Breakfast For 2 at I Tango & $60 Dinner Gift Certificate r to Musashi. Tax & gratuity not included .4, HAPPY HOUR Monday - Friday 4:45 to 5:45 pm 50% OF FOOD & BEVERAGE MUSASHI ) VjAkiatig"..; ': A.004.4::;, 4 i,l ,' . i;L::1;;K:A'.;,:•;' , :',.;,g.:..a.3:'.', e-• ,--, ..,. ,.. ;\ OAPANESE CUISINE *'. AND SUSHI BAR Since 1985 Catering & Delivery NOW OPEN for 'Lunch 11:30 to Large & Small Private Rooms Available FREE Garage Parking 248-358-1911 • 2000 Town Center, Southfield , — Judy Bart Kanci gor - •• Beyond the Kindertransport: A Memoir of Music, Love, and Survival (Warner Books; $23.95). Lisa Jura was one of 10,000 Jewish children saved from the Nazis by the British and sent on the Kindertransport to safety from Eastern Europe. This at once heartbreaking and uplifting tale weaves the stories Golabek's mother told her about pre- war Austria, the gut-wrenching separa- tion from her family, life at the orphanage on Willesden Lane and the Thurs....ins ca ki t.d . e o s r :Sun. Night iiF,:;; p:: : ,! ,,p r:, :yF;r,f . 7.!f , : I. T . 7:7.V . f g ! , : 7 ,17 : ! f 1 , ; . t ' l rgl .!t . p t ' ?t17': , :. :::„:' : "I :cy. ' l I - 5 1 00g;' '1 ,4 ) ;'. 10,S t i:;j:, l:' firle',. i y':44,. Iv SOUTHFIELD-DETROIT 4 4 , ienna 1938. In the city of Mozart, Schubert, Beethoven, and Strauss, 14-year-old musical prodigy Lisa Jura looks forward to a promising career as a concert pianist. Hitler has other plans. With the breaking of glass on Kristallnacht, Lisa's dreams are shattered. Internationally celebrated concert pianist Mona Golabek, with journalist and poet Lee Cohen, has crafted a lov- ing, lyrical tribute to her mother, Lisa, in The Children of Willesden Lane — THE WESTIN $139 ,1 `The Children Of Willesden Lane' concert hall and closes with the fulfill- ment of that dream as she makes her debut before an exhilarated crowd. power of music to help her survive. And, in between, the pages burst As Lisa's mother, Malka, puts her on with melody: Lisa pounding the caden- the train, she says the prophetic words za of the Grieg Piano Concerto to drown that will sustain and inspire her daughter out the sounds of bombs during and future generations: "Hold on to your London's blitz; Lisa visualizing Chopin fleeing a flaming music. Let it be your best friend." Warsaw as she strug- In a world turned ugly, the gles with the somber beauty of music becomes Lisa's coda of the Ballade, strength, and, against tremen- Lisa remembering dous odds, with the help and °LAB:7K Atrtt LEE COHEN her mother's Sabbath encouragement of the 30 other candles as she plays displaced children at the orphan- the soleffin opening age, she wins a scholarship to of Beethoven's London's Royal Academy. Pathetique. - "Each kid saw something in On her syndicated my mother's music that radio show, The reminded them of what they Romantic Hours, had left behind in which highlights stir- Czechoslovakia, in Austria, in ring writings against Germany," says the Grammy a musical backdrop, nominated Golabek, "and that's author Golabek often quotes the poet what I tried to do in the story, not only to pay homage to my mother, but Jean Pail Richter: "Life fades and with- to all these kids and to their bravery." ers behind us, but of our immortal and sacred soul all that remains is music." The book opens with Lisa's tantaliz- ing daydream of performing in a great OFF TOTAL located next to The Westin on Lodge Service WWW.Musashi-inti.com www.detroitjewishnews.com Find out before your mother! 4/ 25 200 3 83