Obituaries
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18325 West Nine Mile Road, Southfield, MI 48075
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Dutch Rescuer
www.irakaufman.com
Of Jews Dies
We Get Questions
Q . My son is only three, but we
have several elderly relatives with
whom he has close contact. One of
them could die within a year. I don't
want to talk to him about death
before this happens, but what shoUld
I do when it does?
A:
I can recommend a couple of
children's books that deal with the
topic sensitively. I can also discuss
how to handle the matter when the
time comes. Please contact our
office at 248-569-0020 and I will
help "walk" you through the steps.
Jerusalem Post
The Holocaust Memorial
Center presents
"The Jews of Czestochowa"
Mon. July 17 -Tues. August 29,2006;
Holocaust Memorial Centel;
28123 Orchard Lake Road,
Farmington Hills
Originally curated by faculty
of the Jan Dlugosz Academy
in Czestochowa, Poland;
traveling, exhibit traces his-
tory and growth of the Jewish
community and recounts its
vitality and contributions
Why did Grandpa die?
which were virtually obliter-
ated during the Holocaust.
j
View documents from city
archives, books, and photo-
graphs from Jewish survivors.
Open to public.
No cost to attend.
Donations welcome.
Group reservations required.
For gimp lesenations carte
Gail of (248) 553-2400 ev. 10;
tour infannafion. Sebna, ell 12.
What does heaven look like: What is a soul? For 30
years. David Icchncr has been answering questions like these for kids of all ages. If you need help responding to your
children. call David, 248-569-0020; or e-mail him, dmtec5I almsn.com.
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DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
aap Penraat, an architect
and industrial designer
who helped 406 Jews
sneak out of Nazi-occupied
Netherlands and withstood tor-
ture to protect fellow members
of the resistance, has died, his
daughter said.
The 88-year-old died June 25
at his home in Catskill, N.Y. The
cause was esophageal cancer, his
daughter Noelle Penraat said.
Born in Amsterdam in 1918,
Penraat was in his 20s when he
began forging identity cards for
Jews. After being discovered,
he was imprisoned for several
months and tortured, but refused
to tell his captors anything.
After his release from prison,
Penraat and other resistance
members began .disguising Jews
as construction workers hired to
work on a wall Hitler was build-
ing along France's Atlantic Coast.
He made 20 trips, accompanying
about 20 Jews each time to Lille,
France. There they were met by
the French underground and
transported to neutral Spain.
Years later, when he began
speaking about his wartime expe-
riences, Penraat said he had sim-
ply done what seemed necessary.
"You do these things because in
your mind there is no other way
of doing it," he told the Pittsburgh
Post-Gazette in 2000.
Of the 140,000 Jews who lived
in the Netherlands before the
Nazis invaded, only about 30,000
survived. Poland was the sole
nation to lose a larger percentage
of its Jewish population.
After the war, Penraat became
a noted designer in Amsterdam,
moving to the United States in
1958.
He is survived by three daugh-
ters, four grandchildren and four
great-grandchildren. His wife of
52 years, Jettie, died in 2003. II
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