frontlines >> letters }low to Send Letters We prefer letters relating to JN articles. We reserve the right to edit or reject letters. Letters of 225 words or less are considered first. Longer ones will be subject to trimming. Letter writers are limited in frequency of publication. Letters must be original and contain the name, address and title of the writer and a day phone number. Non-electronic copies must be hand signed. Send letters to the JN: 29200 Northwestern Highway, Suite 110, Southfield, MI 48034; fax (248) 304-8885; e-mail, letters®the jewishnews.com . We prefer email. I Remember Burton Gordin: Gracious, Helpful, Dedicated I was truly moved by the story, "Who Killed Burton Gordin? (April 4, page 1). Publisher/Executive Editor Arthur Horwitz's portrait of the slain civil rights pioneer asks, "Does anyone remember?" Yes, there is at least one person who remembers him — me. Not long after his arrival in Detroit, I invited Gordin to meet with the newly formed city of Lansing Human Relations Commission to advise us on hiring our first director. Gracious and to the point, he shared useful insights with this group, which had been begrudgingly formed by the city council. At that time, I was the "out- state" vice president for the Michigan Anti-Defamation League. A few years after the murder, I was employed by the Michigan Department of Civil Rights and the picture was just as you described; no acknowledgement of Gordin's exis- tence, a politically fractured admin- istration, the black nationalist disre- gard for discrimination toward any- one other than black men ... Gordin's high ground had disappeared along with his name. Betty Goodman Krohngold East Lansing High School Debate Coach Has Long Local Legacy Thank you for the article about debate coach John Lawson ("Changing Young Lives," April 11, page 12). John Lawson's influence lives on in other ways as well. The Bloomfield Hills School District boasts a robust forensics program (competitive speech and drama). Bloomfield Hills Middle School's team is coached by among others, Richard Elias and Alan Ruby, both of whom were coached in debate by John Lawson at Southfield- Lathrup. Andover High School is coached by, among others, Jan Frank who was coached by 11." at Southfield-Lathrup as well. Joe Inwald, another former Lawson debater, judges for Andover and the Detroit Urban Debate League. All of the adults mentioned have children who have enjoyed forensics success at the state level. There are many more adults and their children — too many to be listed here — who owe their public speaking skills to John Lawson. At Andover, we often coach our kids to the following standard: "Was that speech good enough to earn a top score from JL?" John Lawson's legacy ... l'dor vador. Jan Frank, assistant forensics coach Andover High School Bloomfield Township Orchestra Hall Was Fitting Venue For Shoah Requiem On April 8, the premiere of I Believe — A Shoah Requiem by Hazzan Daniel Gross was performed in Orchestra Hall (April 11, page 22), but most attendees would not have known how poignant that venue real- ly was. During World War II, it was the Paradise Theater, the vaudeville house that entertained the auto work- ers who produced the heavy weap- onry that defeated Hitler and ended the Shoah. My husband, Martin Adelman, recalls his family's personal connec- tion with the Paradise Theater. Orchestra Hall was built in 1919 to accommodate the requirements of Jewish conductor Ossip Gabrilowitsch before he agreed to come to Detroit as music director of the Detroit Symphony. In 1939, the symphony left because of the Depression, and Orchestra Hall fell vacant. My husband's father, Oscar Adelman, was the lawyer for the brothers Ben and Lou Cohen, who owned movie theaters on Woodward Avenue. In fear that a competitor would buy Orchestra Hall and put in a movie theater, they tried to think of what they could do with the space. Oscar suggested a vaudeville house, since these were doing well across the country during the war. This is how the Paradise Theater was born. Oscar left his law practice to manage the theater and hire the acts. Then Lou Cohen died, the war was over and television began. In 1951, the Paradise Theater closed. It was not until the late 1960s, when birds were flying into the abandoned building through holes in the roof, that an effort began to renovate the theater. Hazzan Gross is a descendent of Holocaust survivors. A number of survivors were in the audience, and Irene Miller, a survivor, read the last passage on stage. Both the partici- pants and the audience contained a cross-section of southeast Michigan. As we marveled at the beauty and sadness of Gross' great work, we looked around at the beautiful audi- torium, at the Detroit pastors on the stage and at the diversity of the audi- ence. In that space, the grandparents of many of these same people would come to see Ella Fitzgerald or Duke Ellington between day and night shifts on the line, where they toiled to create the very same military equip- ment that made it possible for many in the audience to be alive today. ELAj TrOtif May 22, 2013 I 6-9 pm at The Detroit Zoo Susan Adelman, M.D. Southfield Anti-Zionism Is Just The Same Old Anti-Semitism Yes, anti-Zionism is anti-Semitism, but not because of anyone's feelings. Anti-Zionism is that same old Jew- hatred because it is based on those same old anti-Semitic canards, the age-old demonization of the Jewish people that is now focused on the Jewish state. To accept the expression of these lies as somebody else's "truth" in conflict with my own "truth" gives validity and life to the lies. The lies against Israel and the Jewish people are evil and must always be confronted and con- demned. There will always be a divide between good and evil and between the Jews and those who hate us because we are Jews, even when they deceitfully define their hatred as "anti-Zionism." There can be no com- promising with this evil. That's wonderful that Brenda Rosenberg and Samia Bahsoun are now friends and can work together. But if Bahsoun still believes that Zionism is racism and a "terrorist Jewish expansionist movement," and if Rosenberg believes that there is a moral equivalence between anti-Sem- itism and "Islamophobia," nothing has been solved because lies are still being accepted by Rosenberg as part of Bahsoun's "narrative." Must we also approve The Protocols of the Elders of Zion, stories of a "Jewish blood ritual;' Mohammed al-Durah and the "Jenin Massacre" as part of somebody's narrative in order to get along? I don't think so. A true peace cannot be based on allowing uncontested lies to circulate and evil to flourish. That is the way toward continued misery. Harry Onickel Ferndale SpringElation 2013 ART CONTEST CALLING ALL ARTISTS! Pre- school through sixth grade! JARC needs your creativity! PRIZES $100 gift card grand prize winner $25 gift cards honorable mention winner from each age category DEADLINE May 3, 2013 Download entry form at www.jarc.org (see EVENTS section) For more information contact Lindsey Fox-Wagner at 248.488.7524 or lindseyfoxwagner@jarc.org BUY TICKETS TODAY! www.jarc.org/jarc-events April 18 • 2013 5