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June 02, 2005 - Image 40

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 2005-06-02

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

World

CATERING

VISIT OF CONSEQUENCE from page 39

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recognize there are many hoops that
individuals and nations have to jump
through to bring it to a halt. If aware-
ness is heightened, people will find
their own way of responding."
Rev. Dulin said his hope is that the
Holocaust museum's Darfur exhibit
can be duplicated into a traveling
exhibit that will enlighten people
across the country.
Rev. Dulin, Dr. Benjamin Baker of
the New Light Baptist Church, Rev.
Kenneth J. Flowers of the Greater New
Mount Moriah Missionary Baptist
Church and Dr. Darryl W. Robinson
of the Community of Faith Baptist
Church, all of Detroit, joined Rabbi
Jonathan Berkun of Congregation
Shaarey Zedek, Rabbi Arnold
Sleutelberg of Congregation Shir
Tikvah and Rabbi David Nelson of
Congregation Beth Shalom on the trip.

.

Rabbi Nelson said the U.S.
Holocaust museum exhibit about
Darfur was very moving to him.
"It changed me, and I'm going to
be speaking of that — screaming at
the top of my lungs — for a long
time," he said. "We all have to. We
said, Never again,' and we watched as
Rwanda in 1994 was subjected to
genocide, and we didn't say anything.
"Now we're watching genocide
again, and it's not enough to wring
our hands and say, 60 years after
Auschwitz, we let this happen.
The rabbi continued: "We have to
prevent the recurrence of genocide, to
reverse the ethnic cleansing and to put
an end to violence.
" That's our religious obligation, an
obligation for every human being on
this planet — to make our voices
heard" ❑

Historic Images

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6/ 2
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40

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Ron and Andrea Hurwitz of Bloomfield Hills, right, attended
the opening reception of Detroiter Spencer Partrich's historic
Israeli photos exhibit at the Palm Beach Photographic Centre's
Museum in Delray Beach, Fla. Partrich, left, a resident of Palm
Beach and Farmington Hills, wants current and fixture genera-
tions to see what happened in the history of Jewish state based on
Israeli press photographer Paul Goldman's 1943-1961 work.
Also pictured above is David Rubingen the Time-Life photojour-
nalist who discovered the negatives in Goldman.'r daughter's
apartment attic near Tel Aviv Partrich bought the 40,.000 nega-
tives and had a Jerusalem photo lab restore them.

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