Arts entertainment Prime Ticket Service Cover Story 7421 Orchard Lake Road HOSPITAL 248-865-6000 from page 49 www.primeseat.com "First 10 Rows" All DTE concerts - Orchestra Pit Seating ilea/ 248 • A VV A V - Red Wings/ Pistons! 865-6000 C" ) t;661 1, 01 16 s,thbotis, armington Hills Kosher Catering Under supervision of Detroit Council of Orthodox Rabbis Located in the Adat Shalom Synagogue RESERVE ALL FOUR BUFFETS AND GET 20% OFF PACKAGE OF FOUR MUST BE PAID IN ADVANCE $20 adults $10 children under 13 NO CHARGE children under 3 *TEXAS BARBECUE — SUNDAY, AUG. 10, 2003* *ALL AMERICAN — MONDAY, AUG. I 8, 2003* *ITALIAN — SUNDAY, AUG. 24, 2003* *CHINESE — TUESDAY, SEPT. 9, 2003* For further information call 248-626-S702 ROSH HASHANAH CARRY OUT 2003 Now Taking Orders • WEDDINGS • BAR/BAT MITZVAHS • • SHOWERS • CORPORATE & SOCIAL EVENTS • • TRADITIONAL BRIS/BABY NAMINGS • Call our Catering Department 248-626-5702 For Reservations on Dates Call Adat Shalom Synagogue 7/25 2003 50 • • 248-851-S100 29901 Middlebelt Road • Farmington Hills MI 48334 • A A • Not long after finishing her mission ferent choices as a wife and mother of in Iraq, Dr. Fink returned to Bosnia. two. "I met Sheri at a swim club when She went earlier this month to mark we were in different junior high the eighth anniversary of the fall of schools, and we've been close ever since. Srebrenica and the massacre of 8,000 "I'll always remember the fun we had Muslims. She attended a ceremony to going to Florida on spring break when bury 280 men and boys recently iden- we were seniors in high school. Sheri has tified, and she was with doctors who been very loyal, and we have great times had become the subject of her book. just talking about what's been important "Ilijaz Pilav, a physician-hero I wrote to us. I respect all that she has done." about, invited all of the doctors who As Dr. Fink has taken on dangerous had worked in the Srebrenica hospital assignments to provide care for desper- for the ceremony, and that included ate people, she has been the subject of people from Doctors Without national news reports on television. Borders, who also are in the book," Amid the rush of her projects, she takes Dr. Fink says. "It was very emotional time to evaluate her experiences but is to be there and a real honor to go not sure what she will take on next as a back to the hospital with them. long-term commitment. "The hospital has been frozen in time. The equip- ment has been left right where it was in 1995. Even the med- ical scrubs that the doctors wore are still there littering the floor. Some of the doctors found notes that they them- selves had written. As far as I know, there aren't any plans to renovate." Dr. Fink says she avoids stress in her dangerous work by not dwelling on decisions after they are made. Dr. Fink's grandmother, Mary Fink, has more difficulty dealing with the stress of knowing about the travels to war zones. A resident of the Meer Jewish Apartments in West Bloomfield and an Eight-Over-80 senior-adult honoree for her volunteer work, Mary Fink tries to keep those worries to herself. Clockwise from lower left: Dr. Sheri Fink with her "Everybody in the building father, Herschel Fink; mother, Annette Fink; brother, knows Sheri because she stays Marc Fink; and grandmother-, Mary Fink. with me and has dinner here when she's visiting the area," says Mary Fink, who remem- bers reading to Sheri and Sheri's broth- "What's impressed me most through er, Marc, when they were very young. my work has been how people go on "Sheri's always been very loving and with their lives," she says. "When I caring and takes things in her stride. went back to Srebrenica, it was amazing I'm very proud of her, and I pray for that Muslims who survived the worst her every day." massacre in Europe in 50 years have During the years that Dr. Fink moved back to the town where that worked on her book, she was based in happened and where some of the peo- New York City and enjoyed taking ple who committed those crimes are breaks by going to theater and attend- still living. ing concerts. Her dad says that she's "Some of them are not doing well, very eclectic in her leisure interests and but they're optimistic. I'm also opti- likes playing the piano, dancing and mistic in many ways," Dr. Fink says. going to parties. "I'm still, of course, very upset when Amy Vine, a longtime friend, also I see evidence of war crimes, horrible knows Fink's lighter side. atrocities and killings. But I still have "I think that the life Sheri has chosen hope in humanity —although I am is right because she's so excited about much more realistic than when I start- it," says Vine, who has made very dif- ed all this." 0