Special Report NEW FRIENDS / ON THE COVER Celebrating Life Innovative program partners Holocaust survivors with young Jewish families. Shelli Liebman Dorfman Senior Writer W hen 9-year-old Drewe Raimi said, "The Holocaust will never be forgotten by me because I am learning about it from a survivor I love she epitomized half the success of an inno- vative program connecting survivors with local Jewish families. And when Holocaust survivor Eva Wimmer said, "I know when Drewe and her generation hear from us — not from books or movies — we are making a difference she voiced the rest of that success. Through the Mishpoch-Chai program, Drewe of Birmingham, along with her younger sister and parents, meet regularly with Wimmer of West Bloomfield. They have formed relationships that are enrich- ing all of their lives. Mishpoch-Chai partners Holocaust survivors with families who are young, American and Jewish. It is part of the 14 August 5 2010 Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit's Jewish Senior Life (JSL) Program for Holocaust Survivors and Families, which was developed to meet the psychosocial and emotional needs of aging survivors and their families. Of the 1,000 survivors in the Detroit area, nearly 400 are assisted by JSL and Jewish Family Service of Metropolitan Detroit (JFS), both based in West Bloomfield. "Many survivors are widows or widow- ers; some don't have families nearby and feel isolated;' said Dr. Charles Silow, director of the Program for Holocaust Survivors and Families, which he formed in 1993 at the former Sinai Hospital of Detroit. "So we first created ways for them to get together with other survivors, emotionally and socially. Then we created Mishpoch- Chai as a way for them to get together with young Americans." Silow, a clinical psychologist who speaks fluent Yiddish, specializes in working with survivors as they age. He says aging, corn- pounded by world events, often triggers survivors' feel- ings of anxiety, isolation and stress. Survivors, he says, typically struggle with anxiety and depression more than the general population. "As the son of a survivor, I saw the tremendous impact the Holocaust had on my mother's life said Silow, who also serves as president of Children of Holocaust- Survivors Association in Michigan (C.H.A.I.M.). Above: Harriet and Ella "On our mission, we spent time in Poland and Israel with a survivor, Morse during a visit in (Israeli) Eliezer Ayalon," York's apartment said Molly Chernow of Bloomfield Hills. "His ON THE COVER: incredible zest for life and Harriet, Lexie and Jillian desire to teach and to live Morse, survivor Alex inspired me to want to Greenberger and Ella and help the survivors in our Michael Morse during community." Nikki Raimi Mishpoch-Chai's summer of Birmingham had the barbecue event same feelings; together these women with exten- sive Jewish communal involvement developed Mishpoch-Chai. A New initiative "We wanted this program to be a place Mishpoch-Chai was created three years to involve our children so we could spend ago by two inspired participants of a time with them and also for them to have Grosfeld Leadership Mission, an annual the benefit of getting to meet the survivors Federation trip sponsored by Nancy and and develop relationships;' Chernow said. James Grosfeld of Bloomfield Hills for the Chernow and Raimi began with Silow, development of young adult Jewish com- who provided names of survivors. They munal leaders. provided the families. Morse, Sara York and Lexie, Michael and Jillian