Metro Holocaust Remembrance Yom HaShoah annual event honors victims and survivors. MEMBER TB A Zekelman, keynote speaker Tibor Rubin, Shaarit Haplaytah President Abe Weberman B'nai B'rith International member Bill Braun of Farmington Hills reads names of children killed during the Holocaust as part of the group's "Unto Every Person and HMC President Michael Treblin There is a Name" project. Dr. Charles Silow of CHAIM, HMC Interim Director Guy Stern, event co-chair Alan Keri Guten Cohen Story Development Editor A n overflow crowd of about 450 packed the Holocaust Memorial Center for the annual Yom HaShoah or Holocaust Remembrance Day commemoration Sunday, April 19. This was the first Yom HaShoah event since the death four months ago of HMC founder Rabbi Charles Rosenzweig, who always set the tone for this solemn com- memoration. Guy Stern, HMC interim director, called for a moment of silence to remember the rabbi as well as Saul Waldman, a HMC supporter and an ardent Zionist who died April 10. Waldman was instrumental in building the original HMC adjacent to the Jewish Community Center in West Bloomfield as well as its new permanent home in Farmington Hills. "I'm having a hard time without the rabbi on the dias," said Alan Zekelman, event co-chair with HMC President Michael Treblin. "We will redouble our efforts to build on his legacy as we stand upon the foundation he build for us." He called Waldman an unsung hero who spent his entire days working on the new building, while running his business, too. Before introducing the guest speaker, Stern told the audience, "Today we honor both victims and survivors. We recall both their suffering and their incredible courage ... we say to all of them: We shall never forget you:' Keeping His Promise U.S. Army Cpl. (Ret.) Tibor Rubin of Arizona employed both tears and humor to tell the story of a promise he made to himself and kept without fail. A Hungarian Jew, Rubin was 13 when he was captured by the Germans and taken to the Mauthausen concentration camp. He lost most of his family in the Holocaust. A 49-year-old man he met in the camp gave him advice: Stay away from the Germans; steal what you can; and try to stay alive so one day you can tell your Jewish brothers and sisters what hap- pened. Rubin did stay alive. He was liber- ated in 1945 by U.S. troops. "They were so nice to us, and we were sacks of bones loaded with lice he said. "I promised myself that if I go to America, I will become a GI Joe." In the U.S., he tried to enlist, but flunked the English test twice before other recruits allowed him to peek at their answers. By sheer luck, he earned the highest score. He ended up in language school and then overseas with the 29th Infantry Regiment during the Korean War. He earned his first military medals when a prejudiced officer left him all alone to guard ammunition on a hill. "I prayed to God, Jesus, Buddha, Moses to get me outta here Rubin recalled. He fooled the North Koreans into thinking more men were atop that hill as he lobbed grenades and used other weapons. He rejoined his outfit and when they went back to get the ammunition, they found hundreds of dead enemy soldiers. Later, he and other soldiers were cap- tured by the Chinese. Men were dying of illness at the rate of 40 per day. When the Chinese tried to let him go because he was Hungarian and not an American citizen, he refused. Instead, he used skills learned while foraging for food during the Holocaust to save the lives of 40 men. Among his many medals is the coveted Congressional Medal of Honor. "Today I have shalom, peace he said. "This is the best country in the world. I have never been as free In a separate program outside the HMC, from noon to 5 p.m., B'nai B'rith International Great Lakes Region orga- nized volunteers to recite the names, coun- tries and ages of about 4,000 of the 1.5 million children killed in the Holocaust. Part of an international program called "Unto Every Person There is a Name readers came from 16 community groups, including Holocaust survivors, represen- tatives from the Archdiocese of Detroit, teens from Jewish youth groups and mem- bers of the Michigan Board of Rabbis. "It is important to remember the children's lives because many died with their entire families and they have no one to say Kaddish for them," said Lila Zorn, project co-chair with Micki Grossman and Jeff Kahan. U.S. Rep. Gary Peters, D-Bloomfield Hills, read names of children from Holland. He found the experience so meaningful he didn't want to stop, Zorn said — even when he was told he was 20 minutes late for his next appointment. "When you read names they become personalized for you — you're involver Zorn said, adding that's why it was so important to get teens to participate. Following the recitation of an original composition by Shari Ferber Kaufman of West Bloomfield based on her father's Holocaust experience, Shaarit Haplaytah members and their families came up to light candles in memory of victims and fallen Israeli soldiers. Inside the HMC, the commemoration ended appropriately with all gathered say- ing Kaddish. ❑ April 23 2009 A15