obituaries Obituaries from page 69 LARRY YANITZ, 89, of Southfield, died Jan. 4, 2013. He is survived by his former wife and best friend, Barbara Weintraub; daugh- ter and son-in-law, Yanitz Sandy and Jay Stark of Bloomfield Hills; grandchildren, Eric Stark and Julie Elfand, and Michael and Danielle Stark; great-grandchildren, Morgan and Sloane Stark. Mr. Yanitz is also survived by Shelly Weintraub and Franklin Royal and their children, Faith and Eric, as well as Mr. Yanitz's devoted caregivers. He was the beloved husband of the late Jane Yanitz; the dear brother of the late Myron Yanitz. Interment was at Machpelah Cemetery. Contributions may be made to Temple Israel, Stark Family Fund, 5725 Walnut Lake Road, West Bloomfield, MI 48323, www.temple-israeLorg; or Parkinson's Foundation of Michigan, 30400 Telegraph Road, Suite 150, Bingham Farms, MI 48025, www.parkinsonsmi.org . Arrangements by Ira Kaufman Chapel. Anti-Semitic Incidents On Rise In Austria (JTA) — The number of anti-Semitic incidents documented in 2012 by Austria's Jewish community has doubled from the previous year, the leader of Vienna's Jewish community said. Oskar Deutsch told the Kurier newspa- per that the Jewish community registered 135 such incidents last year, compared to 71 in 2011. Still, Jews increasingly are immigrating to Austria from neighboring Hungary because of anti-Semitism in that country, he said. In comments published Monday, Deutsch named Hungary, Sweden, Norway, Finland, France and Greece as the European Union countries where Jews are most under threat. Ariel Muzicant, the former president of the Jewish Community of Vienna, said that his community last year began a program which helps Hungarian Jews emigrate and settle in Austria. The program, which now services some 20 families still in Hungary, includes subsi- dized German language courses to prepare the participants, as well as help in finding employment in Austria and finding hous- ing and Jewish schools for the children. The recent waiving of work permits between the two E.U. countries, as well as economic troubles in Hungary, have also served as a catalyst for Hungarian Jews to move to Austria, said Zsuzsa Fritz, the director of Budapest's Balint Jewish Community Center. Accused Nazi From Troy Loses Deportation Appeal (JTA) — A US appeals court upheld an immigration appeals board decision to deport an accused Nazi living in Troy, Mich. The 6th Circuit Appeals Court in Cincinnati, Ohio, on Friday upheld the deportation of John (Ivan) Kalymon, 91, who allegedly rounded up and shot Jews as a member of the Ukrainian Auxiliary Police during World War II. The U.S. Justice Department's Board of Immigration Appeals in September 2011 upheld a Detroit immigration judge's decision that Kalymon should be removed from the United States due to his participation in lethal acts of Nazi- sponsored persecution of Jews. Kalymon was ordered deported to Germany, Ukraine, Poland or any other country that will admit him. Kalymon served voluntarily as an armed member of the Nazi-sponsored Ukrainian Auxiliary Police in German-occupied Lvov, Ukraine. He is accused of shooting and killing Jews during his service, which he hid on his U.S. citizenship application. In 2004, the Department of Justice filed a lawsuit in U.S. District Court in Detroit seeking to revoke his citizenship, which he acquired in 1955 after emigrating from Germany six years earlier. A federal judge granted the request in 2007, find- ing that Kalymon had participated in the roundup and shooting of Jews during his time in the Ukrainian Auxiliary Police from 1941 to 1944. The evidence against Kalymon included a seized Aug. 14, 1942, report, handwritten by Kalymon, in which he informed his Auxiliary Police superiors that he had personally shot to death one Jew and wounded another "during the Jewish operation" that day, according to the Justice Department. Other evidence included reports from Kalymon's com- mander that Kalymon had fired his weapon during forcible roundups of Jews in which they were killed and wounded. WEB STREAMING FROM ANYWHERE Online funeral video streaming is now available from our Chapel, any temple or synagogue, graveside or a cemetery chapel. Our commitment to this community. No Cost. No Password. Anytime. Anyplace. THE IRA KAUFMAN CHAPEL Bringing h Together Faith & Community 18325 W. 9 Mile Rd. Southfield, MI 48075 • 248.569.0020 • IraKaufman.com id 1775370 70 January 10 • 2013 Obituaries