The Craig Fahle Show cadet The view from inside the overpass with the hateful sign partially torn down some nasty messages on his blog; some accusing him of "censorship:' But, Wilcox stands by his decision to remove it. "If that horrible sign was an act of free speech, then so was us tearing it down:' he says. "The person who made the sign chose imagery that is radioactive and unacceptable and they displayed it in a public place with apparently no concern for who it would injure. If it's street art or graffiti, then it exists according to the rule of the street. That means it can get buffed or written over or destroyed:' Community Outrage Heidi Budaj, regional director of the Detroit chapter of the Anti- Defamation League, condemned the Auschwitz message, pointing out the infamous slogan was used by Nazis to taunt and dehumanize prisoners. In a strongly worded statement, she called the graffiti an "intentional and malicious act" The Anti-Defamation League is the world's leading organiza- tion fighting anti-Semitism, prejudice, bigotry and hatred. "The prominent display of this quote at a historic Detroit landmark is disturbing and deeply offensive to vic- tims of the Holocaust and those who fought valiantly in World War IL" she said. "The fact that the perpetrators inverted the letter B, in a copy of the distinct lettering in the original sign at Auschwitz, is especially chilling. This message strikes at the very memory of a symbol representing the cruel cynicism of Nazism. This sign greeted more than 1 million prisoners as they were herded into the Auschwitz night- mare with the duplicitous message that 'work sets you free:" According to the initial Free Press report, Huntington Woods resident, David Schulman, 53, reported the sign to the ADL. He told the newspaper he came across it while driving past the area recently. He also said his grand- mother had family members murdered in the Holocaust. "It's a form of hate speech:' Schulman is quoted as saying. "It really appalled me:' Schulman did not respond to calls or a Facebook request for comment. The Packard Plant, designed by architect Albert Kahn, dates back to the early 1900s. In its heyday, it employed 36,000 workers; the last Packard luxury car rolled off the assembly line in 1954. The city of Detroit and state of Michigan fore- closed on the property in 1993. While the Detroit City Council has approved demolition, the 3.5-million-square- foot facility just sits there, deteriorat- ing, on a more than 40-acre site. Fires break out regularly and scrappers, graffiti artists, photographers, home- less people and other curious onlook- ers trespass constantly. There's a legal dispute over who owns the infamous ruins. Troy attorney John Bologna rep- resents Dominic Cristini who says he is the plant's owner. "This is a disgusting act:' Bologna is quoted as saying. He told reporters he intended to have the sign taken down, but Leibovitch and Wilcox got to it first. Stephen Goldman, executive direc- tor of the Holocaust Memorial Center in Farmington Hills also spoke out about the Packard Plant sign and said he was glad to hear a Holocaust sur- vivor's grandson helped take it down. It's unclear who posted the message or why. In blogs and other online forums, people debated whether it was an act of hate or some kind of artistic state- ment on the downfall of manufactur- ing. "There is no good point; what is the point?" Goldman said in a TV inter- view. "Who are they trying to get a message to and what is that message? The only thing it shows is that there are anti-Semites, Holocaust deniers and those people who just don't care what their fellow citizens think. Our survi- vors are appropriately dismayed:' ❑ 101.9 fm 4 While You're Living Your Life Craig Is Getting Ready if 4 ././.r.'A You Can Count On The Craig Fahle Show Weekdays at 10 a.m. & 7 p.m. WDET is a WAY N E STATE UNIVERSITY service of 1804550 February 14 • 2013 11