tell the families this is a program they have to commit to time-wise and with an emo- tional tie Raimi said."The survivors rely on the families to contact them and even to create family relationships if they don't have family here. We really stress the importance of reaching out and being at events. If the families are not at events and the survivors are, it doesn't work." Slow also meets with participants. "What the survivors talk to the kids about depends on the kids' age level': he said. "We always stress the importance of parents talking to their children about the Holocaust at an age-appropriate level. Should they see that their children are up- set, they can contact me to talk about it further. "The older children have more of an understanding of the Holocaust. For some, the survivors may just tell them that they had a very hard life, but that they're here. "We talk with families about survivors who have passed away; some are frail and elderly and have dropped out. We speak with the families about lose As a group, Mishpoch-Chai participants meet four times yearly at programs that this year include a "Coffee Talk" for the adults, a Rosh Hashanah basket program, a Chanukah party and a summer barbecue. The events are organized by volunteers, Slow and Sharon Silver Teweles, JSL special projects coordinator who also-helps other programs of the Program for Holocaust Survivors and Families run smoothly. "When we hold family programs, there is Making Matches always an activity for the kids, like a magi- "All Mishpoch-Chai families are paired with cian or another fun program:' Slow said. one or very few survivors to make the con- "We don't want this to be heavy or sad; and nection an intimate relationship that really the survivors enjoy watching the children flourishes': Raimi said. get balloons or dress up in Purim costumes Before the survivors and families meet, and dance each group undergoes an orientation. "We "First, we contacted members of the mission who had expressed interest; oth- ers just followed': Raimi said. The women also met with JSL's Carol Rosenberg. "She [and an early Mishpoch- Chai organizer, Ellen Cogen Lipton of Huntington Woods} helped us come up with the name Raimi said."Mishpoch from the Hebrew word mishpochah, mean- ing family, and chai, which means life and stands for the number 18, the amount of pairs of families and survivors we started with:' For most families, involVement with Mishpoch-Chai is their first connection with survivors. Typically, participant fami- lies have kids younger than preteen age. "They make nice, long-lasting relation- ships': Slow said. And the group has grown, by reputation, to 28 families and 28 survivors:' Rosenberg said the opportunity to increase the numbers is the result of gifts made to the program, which is underwrit- ten by an anonymous donor. "Families also contribute $180 when they start out, but many chip in more to cover the costs of programming and to be able to include more survivors;' she said. Funds raised for the program also provide a bus for survivors to go between the West Bloomfield and Oak Park Jewish community campuses, where many sur- vivors live and where their programs are held. Survivor Alex Greenberger, Molly Chernow, survivor Hertsel Lenchner, Nikki Raimi and survivor Otto Herczeg at a late July Cafe Europa program Memories Mishpoch-Chai is very much a program of reciprocating benefits, impacting both the families and the survivors. "Both groups can't do enough for one another; Slow said."The survivors feel a sense that people are interested in the Holocaust and are interested in them as people. We encourage as much socializa- tion as possible, like a call on Fridays to say Shabbat shalom or a visit just to see how they are; it all adds up to a special, mean- ingful relationship:' And through the relationships come memories. "The kids will grow up and will remem- ber that when they were young, they had a very special connection with a survivor with numbers on their arm who made proj- ects with them and came over on Shabbat," Slow said. Sometimes, the memories are more recent and simpler. "One child told us of the home of a survivor she visited who later passed away',' Slow said. "She said of the woman's '60s-style home: `It had silver and pink wallpaper and green carpet; my survi- vor lived in a Barbie house" Connecting Families Through Mishpoch-Chai, Molly Chernow, husband Aaron and children, Sophie, 10, Annie, 8, and Ethan, 6, have built a relation- ship with survivor Edith Cimmer of Oak Park. Molly also spends time with six of Cimmer's friends, also survivors, and has a special connection with survivor Otto Herczeg of West Bloomfield. Annie Chernow never met a survivor before Cimmer. But after having spent much time with her, she said, "What I know about her is that she survived stuff that happened to her during the war:' Her sister Sophie said,"I read The Diary of Anne Frank when I was in second grade so I had background and knew about survivors for a long time. But when I'm with Edith, we talk about normal things; I tell her about school and my friends. I'm excited for when we see her. She's almost like another grandmother:' Cimmer feels a familial connection as well. "Molly is like a daughter to me; I love her family with all my heart:' she said. "They are angels to be part of this program. I told Molly the story of my life, about the ghettos and the concentration camps and what I have seen, what I can't forget. I talk about when I was liberated and I was 18 and barefoot and hungry and slept in a barn at night. But for her children, ifs all right that I just hug and kiss them and that I don't talk about it right now:' Cimmer knows her story will be told to the children in time, either by her or by Celebrating Life on page 16 Expand Your Involvement Beyond Mishpoch-Chai, the Program for Holocaust Survivors and Families offers: • Dr. Charles Silow, program direc- tor, provides private counseling for survivors and their families as well as weekly support groups at the Oak Park JCC and JSL residences in Oak Park and West Bloomfield. • Cafe Europa, a monthly musical and social program at the JCC in Oak Park. • Ruth Kent Memorial Jewish- Yiddish Film Series runs rarely screened films. • Portraits of Honor displays photos and brief biographies of more than 300 Metro Detroit survivors. It will be housed as a permanent electronic exhibit at the Holocaust Memorial Center in Farmington Hills and will be Internet accessible next year. • 3Gs and 4Gs (third- and fourth- generation) group brings teens ages 13-18 together at social events that educate about the Holocaust. • Yad B`Yad, a service of the pro- gram and JFS, provides trained volunteers for visits to isolated Holocaust survivors. • In-services for health care pro- viders are conducted regard- ing the psychological needs of Holocaust survivors in their care and their families. • The program serves as a liaison with agencies, including JFS, Shaarit Haplaytah-Survivors of 1945, United Social Club, C.H.A.I.M., Hidden Children-Child Survivors of Michigan, Claims Conference, Jewish Community Center of Metropolitan Detroit and private donors. Dr. Charles Silow helps Allan Morse and Jadyn Raimi decorate flower pots. August 5 • 2010 15