Metro
TIME TO
REMEMBER
Yom HaShoah from page 11
m
4
From left to right: Shaarit Haplaytah President Abe Weberman, HMC
President Gary Karp and HMC Executive Director Stephen Goldman
46 years of kindling the light within our children
Sunday, May 2, 2010 • 5:30 p.m.
Lag b'Omer
Adat Shalom
Farmington Hills, Michigan
$180/person
JOIN US IN HONORING
Ahavat Torah Awardee
Rosa Chessler
Alumna of the Year
Cheryl Jerusalem
Featuring Guest Speaker
Rabbi Steven Well
Executive Vice President of the Orthodox Union
RSVP by April 21
Register by email: banquet@akivak12.org
By mail: Akiva Hebrew Day School
21100 W. 12 Mile Rd.
Chairs
Southfield, Ml 48076
(Checks made payable to
Mr. & Mrs. Alan Zekelman
Akiva Hebrew Day School)
Dr. & Mrs. Howard Korman
By phone: (248) 386-1625
of Metropolitan Detroit
WE'RE PART OF THE TEAM
12
April 15 * 2010
very, very personal to us:'
"It is about our own families," he said.
"It is about our parents and grandpar-
ents, but also about our children and our
grandchildren. We children of Holocaust
survivors feel a special responsibility to
remember the Holocaust and what our
families went through. We feel a special
responsibility to pass on our families'
histories to the generations to come."
He added, "We pledge to you, the
survivors, that as the second generation
after the Holocaust, we will continue to
be strong, that we will remember and
that we will teach for the future."
What Legacy?
Tammy Betel of Farmington Hills spoke
on behalf of the HMC's Docent Advisory
Council. There are 65 active docents and
40 more enrolled in a docent training
program.
Betel, who has volunteered at the HMC
for more than 15 years and regularly
leads school and community groups
through the museum, was pleased that
docents were part of the program for the
first time.
"We all have our own personal rea-
sons for being here, but whatever those
reasons are, we are a group of committed
individuals united to teach the lessons of
the Holocaust," Betel said. "We know this
is a daunting task, yet it is one we accept
with honor."
To the many survivors who work
with the HMC in many ways, including
speaking to visiting groups she said,
"We learn from you everyday. We know
this is not easy for you. Without you
this would not be possible. You are our
teachers. May God bless you with long,
happy and healthy lives."
In spite of all the assurances offered
and the pride in the HMC, many survi-
vors remain concerned that the legacy
of the Holocaust will be lessened, if not
forgotten, when they are gone.
Erma Gorman, speaking on behalf of
the Hidden Children Association, posed
Yom HaShoah on page 14
In Hitler's Time
'Could it be the Vatican felt closer
ties to the Nazis than to the Jews?'
Professor Susannah Heschel,
the Eli Black Professor of Jewish
Studies at Dartmouth College,
shared research
from her recent
book, The Aryan
Jesus: Christian
Theologians
and the Bible in
Nazi Germany,
in a Sunday
9
evening Yom
4
i
Prof. Heschel
HaShoah program
at the Jewish
Community Center in West
Bloomfield.
The Holocaust Remembrance
Day program, co-sponsored by
the Holocaust Memorial Center,
the JCC, the Jewish Federation
of Metropolitan Detroit and the
Michigan Board of Rabbis, included
a candlelighting ceremony, read-
ings and prayers.
Stephen Goldman, executive
director of the HMC, welcomed
the establishment of the commu-
nity commemoration, calling it a
"momentous occasion."
"The Holocaust Memorial Center
is a part of this Jewish community
and should not be apart from it,"
In Hitler's Time on page 14