THE 2004 ANN ARBOR BOOK FESTIVAL
This event is presented by the-81 Institute for the Humanities and the Center for European Studies
BERNARD-HENRI LEVY
VISUAL REMINDERS from page 73
Who Killed Daniel Pearl?
Friday, April 23, 1:00 PM
Hussey Room, Michigan League
911 North Uniersity, Ann Arbor
iternardlienri Levy will discuss his controversial theories about the death of
Daniel Pearl, thAVall Street Journakeporter kidnappe4 then decapitated,
in Karach4 Pakistan, on January 30, 2002.
Joan Cole and Javed Nazir will join the conversation, moderated by
Daniel IlerwilZ director of the-lifInstitute for the Humanities.
At the conclusion, Bernargfirenri Levy will autograph copies of his book
Bernard Henri Levyis France's leading philosopher and
Juan Cole professor of Middle
Javed Nazici former editor of the Frontier
one of the most esteemed and bestselling writers in Europe. He
has also served oirdiplomatic missions for the French
government—most recently, to Afghanistan after the fall of the
Taliban.
Eastern and South Asian history at the
University of Michigan, is the author of
Sacred Space and flay War.
Post, an independent English-language newspaper
in Pakistan. After religious extremists torched his
newspaper office, he fled to the US and now
teaches in the U-M's Communication Studies.
Free and open to the public / For more information: (734) 936-3518, or humin@umich.edu / www.aabookfestival.org
827710
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2004
Child Friendly Materials
IDS.PITA L
tems created by Jennifer Perlove
Siegel, a graduate student in archi-
tecture and design at the
University of Michigan, allow the
images to dangle on the gallery
walls.
"The way they are displayed has
allusions to something that's kind
of cold and hard and confining, so
that the frame around the image is
more than just a way of holding it
to the wall. It's an expression or a
continuation of the image," Siegel
said.
"I think the images give a sense
of the individual lives that were
shattered during the Holocaust,
but they also do an excellent job of
universalizing the experience and
making it applicable to all the Jews
who perished or suffered," she
added. "And the images also speak
to the ongoing pain and emotional
wounds the survivors live with."
The two met at a JCC exercise
class and collaborated on this dis-
play that will connect the genera-
tions and ensure stories like Brysk's
aren't forgotten.
"I think by creating these images
Miriam is sharing with us a piece
of her soul and also the Jewish will
to survive," Siegel said.
Brysk, who just completed writ-
ing a book, My Shattered
Childhood, said that as a child sur-
vivor and a member of the last
generation of survivors, she and
others in the Detroit area want to
leave something behind to educate
generations to come.
"We're really dedicated to
remembering and to teaching, to
document in any way we can what
happened during the Holocaust,"
she said.
Ann Arbor resident Greg
Napoleon said he found the collec-
tion moving, raw and evocative.
"They capture the immediacy of
reality and then they distort it a
little so you get that sense of picto-
rial representation enhanced artis-
tically," he said. "So you have both
what you'd get from a simple pho-
tograph and the depth of feeling
the artist brings to it." ❑