ROLEX Holocaust survivor Asher Aud dances with the Israeli flag at the Izaak Synagogue in the Old City of Krakow. rom Despair To Joy FIDF mission to Poland and Israel runs the gamut of emotions. Harry Kirsbaum Contributing Writer oining a throng of 50 IDF soldiers and 50 Israel sup- porters from the U.S. and Panama, Beth Wolpin Gans marched into Birkenau carrying Israeli flags. As part of a Friends of the Israel Defense Forces "From Holocaust to Independence" mission on April 28-May 9, the group traveled from the depths of Jewish Beth Gans despair in the Nazi death camps in Poland to the State of Israel, where they celebrated Israel's Memorial and Independence Days. At Auschwitz-Birkenau, Gans and the others watched as Asher Aud, an Auschwitz survivor who now lives in Jerusalem, told his survivor story to the group while standing in the bar- racks where he once lived. "He was dancing the hora, and these soldiers put him on their shoulders" said Gans, who lives in Franklin. She would have called this a high- light of the trip, but nothing about Poland was a highlight, and she said she would never return. "Once you see it, that's it. It was very upsetting and sad" she said, "especially traveling with Asher who told these stories that were just horrific. You see it on television, or go to museums, but when you're standing there and you're looking at an area where they were so horribly treated ..." This was her fourth mission to Israel, but it was the most emotional, she said. "We took an army plane from Krakow to Tel Aviv, and we landed in a certain area on the tarmac in Israel" said Gans, a Temple Israel member and mother of two grown OYSTER PERPETUAL SUBMARINER DATE GREENSTONE'S FINE JEWELRY SINCE 1925 430 NORTH OLD WOODWARD • BIRMINGHAM, MI 48009 (248) 642-2650 ROLEX siV OYSTER PERPETUAL AND SUBMARINER ARE TRADEMARK_ 1898700 34 July 17 • 2014 children. "How amazing it was to come from Poland, where the Jews were destroyed, and to land in Israel with singing and dancing right on the tarmac. "It was great to be with the Israeli soldiers, and for them to see what they're fighting for, and what hap- pened" she said, adding that among the Israelis on the mission was the mother of a fallen soldier. "They bring them because they want them to see — this is why we have to fight to keep the State of Israel because of the people who died for us" FDIF national chairperson, Nily Falic, called the trip a life-changing journey. "A journey through the depths of despair and the chilling devastation of the Auschwitz-Birkenau death camps, to the heart of Jerusalem, where Jews from around the world celebrated proudly together 66 years of indepen- dence in our Jewish state. Throughout this journey, the FDIF delegation had the honor of being accompanied by brave IDF soldiers and commanders, without whom we would never have the state to call home" While in Israel, the group visited other Israeli soldiers and command- ers on IDF bases across the country, observed live fire military exer- cises and met with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Minister of Defense Moshe Ya'alon. Maj. Gen. (Ret.) Yitzhak Gershon, FDIF national director and chief executive officer, said commemorating Israel's Memorial Day and celebrating its independence pays tribute to the young men and women of the IDF, and thanks them for protecting the Jewish homeland. "The FDIF delegation sends a clear message to the world, that we know the past, we appreciate the present, and we will stand with the State of Israel and its brave soldiers now and forever" he said. ❑