its THE ONE. THE ONLY. " J E W E L E R S FINAL 10 DAY EVENT! Store Closing Sale ends Sept. 21 ONCE THE SALE IS OVER, IT'S OVER! HUNDREDS Watch for GRAND OPENING of our NEW STORE 101 Willits Street • Birmingham, MIU MU% will be sold for as little as on the dollar $2.00 SEPT. 12-18, 2013 / 8-14 TISHREI 5774 29333 Northwestern Hwy • Southfield • 248-356.7140 Mon. - Sat. 10 am - 6 pm • Thurs. 10 am - 8 pm *Does not apply to previous purchases or offers and some items excluded theJEWISHNEWS.com A JEWISH RENAISSANCE MEDIA PUBLICATION » Looking For Hosts JCC organizers are gearing up for fifth Maccabi Games in Detroit. See page 18. » Renewing The Bonds Americans and Israelis renew ties forged with Community Birthright. See page 37. DETROIT JEWISH NEWS cover story Walk4 Friendship » Perfect Parodist Allan Sherman helped invent the Jew of today. See page 56. A Living Legacy L Annual fundraising walk draws nearly 5,000 participants. Workers plant the Anne Frank sapling at the Holocaust Memorial Center in a memorial garden. SEE STORY ON PAGE 10. Jessica Curhan and Hayley Sakwa, both NEXTGen summer interns Esther Allweiss Ingber I Contributing Writer Sapling from Anne Frank's famous tree now grows as an uplifting symbol at the Holocaust Memorial Center. Printed In Michigan 1942 - 2013 Covering and Connecting Jewish Detroit Eve y Week 1 1 8 0880 I M ention the Holocaust and people frequently recall Anne Frank, the Jewish teenager in the Netherlands whose famous diary was published in 1947. She died two years earlier in the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp in Germany. The Diary of a Young Girl, also depicted on stage and screen, remains a powerful piece of writing. Describing the day-to- day reality of hiding with others in the secret annex of her father's company building in Amsterdam until their discovery in August 1944, Anne stayed optimistic. With evil all around her, she maintained an unshakable belief in the better nature of people. Several passages in the diary speak of a large horse chestnut tree visible from one window. Cheering her through two years of hiding, the tree was Anne's sole link to the natural world, representing freedom and her hope for humanity. CONTINUED ON PAGE 8 9336 5