metro >> around town Tangible Reminder 0 n the 10-year anniversary of the tragic events of 9-11, Lilly Epstein Stotland spoke to people gathered at Birmingham's Adams Fire Station to recount her personal story of survival and to dedicate a remnant of steel from one of the World Trade Center towers. On Sept. 11, 2001, Stotland was working for Goldman Sachs and Company just a few blocks from the World Trade Center. Sitting at her desk on the trading floor, she heard and felt a significant crash and saw the smoke and flames erupting from the north tower. Moments later, the second plane flew next to her window before it crashed into the second tower. "After multiple attempted evacuations:' Stotland told the crowd, "I was stuck with hundred of others in a smoke-filled basement when the towers fell. When I attempted my escape, gone was that clear beautiful, sunny autumn day. The scene was indescribable; a cloud of gray swirling haze and you couldn't see 5 feet in front of you. I was utterly terrified. "Lower Manhattan had become a battle- ground, and we were untrained, unsus- A 9-11 survivor and her family fund a memorial in Birmingham. pecting civilian soldiers. On that morning, I ran arm in arm with a colleague and ran and ran and ran, pulling our blouses over our eyes as air filters. The scene around us was completely devastating. I was one of those people you might have seen on TV, completely covered from head to toe in a thick powdery dust. But I was a lucky one, I was alive, and so completely grateful." Stotland is general manager of Southfield-based Vesco Oil, a family busi- ness. Its Marjory and Donald Epstein Family Charitable Foundation funded the costs of transporting the steel remnant and creation of the memorial at the fire station. "This memorial reflects an important part of our history, and I believe it will help future generations understand the magnitude of the events on that day:' Stotland said. "This memorial represents something that I believe in. It represents our American spirit. This steel, designed right here in Birmingham, by the archi- tecture firm of the late Minoru Yamaski, was bent but not broken. It is remarkably symbolic." U.S. Congressman Sander Levin, D-Mich., with Lilly Epstein Stotland A close-up of the steel remnant from Lilly Epstein Stotland stands beside the the World Trade Center 9-11 memorial at the Birmingham fire station. Torah Dedication Reconstructionist Congregation of Detroit celebrates its first Torah. A Torah restored by Rabbi Levi Kagan of Oak Park was dedicated Sept. 11 by the Reconstructionist Congregation of Detroit (RCD), which was founded in 2000. Purchase and restoration of the con- gregation's first Torah was made possible through individual donations and a gift from the family of Judge Avern Cohn. RCD's first president, Matthew Schenk, carried the Torah down Rivard Street in Detroit to the education building of Christ Church Detroit, where RCD's sanctuary is located. Father John Talk and members of his congregation shared a meal with RCD congregants after the Torah was placed in its ark. I I Matthew Schenk, flanked by Anthony Dillof, carries the newly dedicated Reconstructionist Congregation of Detroit's Torah in a procession down Rivard Street in Firestone, Carol Weisfeld, Matthew Schenk, Harriet Saperstein, Rabbi Levi Kagan (Torah scribe), Anthony Dillof, Glenn Weisfeld, Janis Ackerman and Barbara Lewis September 22 = 2011 iN R abbi Robert Gamer of Congregation Beth Shalom in Oak Park was a rabbinical student at the Jewish Theological Seminary in New York City on 9-11. He told congregants during a prayer service on Sept. 11 about his experience seeing thousands of people from all different walks of life walking up Broadway. Many were covered in white dust from the collapse of the towers. He recalled how finally he and his wife, Wendy, could drive over the George Washington Bridge toward their home in New Jersey. He was fond of looking back at the twin towers of the World Trade Center, but that day he saw only towers of smoke. "It was a chilling experience I will never forget:' Gamer said. "I can still close my eyes and see that view of the smoke from Ground Zero. "I found it amazing that over the days and weeks that fol- lowed how kind people were being to each other. Somehow we all experienced a traumatic moment that made us recognize the frailty of life in New York City." Li Detroit. Behind Schenk are his sons, Jared and Dan. Reconstructionist Congregation of Detroit board members Alan Schenk, Lydia Meyers, Elissa 18 Remembering 9-11 Rabbi Gamer of Congregation Beth Shalom in Oak Park leads parents and students in a prayer for 9-11 victims.