■ ■ L kW s , I 101 1 1 I I t4 CVP91 I IMI M I" 65 Years from page 15 11111111111111111111IN r 1 Above: So many belongings were taken from Jews on the train that they spilled over into the space between barracks. GET LOST. Rose Bohm age 14 Rose Bohm today Friday Night Live!: Pianist Phyllis Chen and cellist Johannes Moser perform music featuring multi- media elements. Target Family Sunday: Storyteller Madelyn Porter shares the inspiring words of "dreamers" all over the world. Now on View: Government Support for the Arts: WPA Prints from the 1930s DETROIT INSTITUTE OF ARTS Ave. 313-833-7900 . "I — Now Offering PP- DETRorrs ORIGINAL GLUTEN-FREE SQUARE PIZZA $2 OffAny Party Tray Tre oar Offer not valid with any other coupon/discount. One coupon per person, per table JN Expires 2/21/10 N eff itfuiti-Grain Crust $3 OffAny 84quin Pim A uthinner" crust featuring 9 grains Offer not valid with any other coupon/discount. One coupon per person, per table JN Expires 2/21/10 Join Buddy's email club at www.buddyspizza.com 31646 Northwestern Hwy., Farmington Hills ph: 248.855A600 fax: 248.855.3849 Detroit • Warren • Livonia • Dearborn • Pointe Plaza • Auburn Hills • Royal Oak • Bloomfield Hills I Keep your company top of mind with our readers. ADVERTISE WITH US! CALL 248.351.5107 Visit theJEWISHNEWS.com 16 January 21 . 2010 .1N mi Bohm spent three months as an inmate at Auschwitz before being transferred to a work camp at Fallersleben, where she painted empty land mines. Liberated on April 14, 1945, she stayed for three months in another camp before returning to Prague and then to her hometown. She was reunited with her father and one remaining brother. Sadly, her mother, sister and two brothers had perished. For a while, Bohm lived in a displaced persons' camp in Germany. She mar- ried and, later in 1949, moved to Israel. In 1956, she and her husband immi- grated to Detroit. Bohm donated to the Holocaust Memorial Center her father's prayer book that was carefully hidden in the camp because of the danger of hav- ing such an item. On the inside cover are the signatures of many Auschwitz prisoners who wanted their lives to be remembered. Stephen Goldman, HMC executive director, said, "This exhibit puts a face to a horrifying, dehumanizing chapter in history. Lili Jacob's quick thinking back then and generosity later have enabled us to see what went on at Auschwitz-Birkenau. We're honored to open the exhibit in time to commemo- rate the 65th anniversary of the libera- tion of Auschwitz. We plan to display it through Yom Hashoah, April 11, 2010." Hannan Lis of Farmington Hills, who had served on the national board of the American Society for Yad Vashem, was asked to help raise awareness of the organization. The group searched for something compel- ling and the exhibit presented itself as the perfect opportunity. As a child of survivors himself, Lis finds this proj- ect very meaningful. "We are helping the museum to engage and promote the exhibit to the Jewish community and to the sons and daughters of survivors," Lis said. "It also provides a wonderful reason to encourage people to revisit the Holocaust Memorial Center." Recently, Auschwitz made news when five Polish men allegedly stole the "Arbeit Macht Frei" sign hanging over the gate to the camp. The sign, cut into three pieces, was subsequently recovered near one of the men's homes. 7 Robyn Gorell is a vice president at Marx Layne & Co. in Farmington Hills. How To Go Holocaust Memorial Center, 28123 Orchard Lake Road, Farmington Hills, (248) 553-2400, www.holocaustcenter.org . Hours: 9:30 a.m.-3:30 p.m. Sunday-Thursday, 9:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Friday. Docent-guided tours:1 p.m. Sunday-Thursday, two hours. Free admission; donations appreci- ated.