metro >> on the cover German Welcome Local Jews reclaim German citizenship, mostly for the benefits. Barbara Lewis I Contributing Writer CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 For those who spend a lot of time in Europe, a German passport can make life a lot easier. Richard Aaron, who teaches cello at the University of Michigan and the Juilliard School in New York, reclaimed the German citizenship his mother, Marianne, was forced to give up. His children, Noah, 18, and Sofie, 16, have also applied for German citizenship. Aaron travels frequently in Europe to perform and teach, and a German pass- port will make it much easier to travel within the European Union. Henri Bernard was born in Germany, in the small town of Beckingen near the French border. The family left Germany in 1938, when Bernard was 2 and his brother was 4. They came to Detroit because his Henri Bernard father had a sister living here. Wolf's father had lived in Gross-Zimmern near Frankfort. He left Germany with his first wife and two teenage sons in 1937 and settled in New York, where he had a brother. He married Wolf's mother, who had emigrat- ed from Austria, after his first wife died. Aaron's mother, Marianne, was 8 in 1938, when her family left Mannheim, where her father was a cantor, shortly after Kristallnacht. By then it was difficult for Germans to get visas to enter the United States. But Marianne Aaron's father been born in Belgium, and that was the break the family needed to get a visa. Bernard said he was thinking of his grandchildren when he decided to become a German citizen. Bernard, 78, of West Bloomfield, and his wife, Annaruth, have four children and 11 grandchildren, who range in age from 23 to 11. "Maybe eventually one of my grandchil- dren will study in Europe because of what I did:' he said. Starting The Trail A year ago, the Bernards traveled to Madagascar with Wolf and his wife, Mandy 8 January 1 • 2015 Above: Henri Bernard, 2, arriving in the U.S. with his mother and brother, Helmut, 4. Right: Isidor and Bertha Wolf in New York. Garver. Bernard shared the latest issue of the Forward with Wolf, who saw a notice about reclaiming German citizenship. When Bernard told him he had started the process, Wolf decided to look into it, too. "I wasn't sure I would qualify," said Wolf, 60, a retired Ford manager who lives in Bloomfield Township. Wolf didn't have any documents proving his father's German citizenship or even his father's birth certificate. Wolf did a Web search for "reclaiming German citizenship," found an application form and sent it to the nearest German consulate, in Chicago. Consul staff did all the research for him. The Germans have lists of everyone whose citizenship had been revoked and confirmed that Wolf's father was among them. Aaron said much of the research for his application was done by his older brother, David, a rabbi who teaches at Hebrew Union College in Cincinnati, who was the first in the family to reclaim his citizen- ship. Aaron's younger brother, Jonathan, has not pursued German citizenship yet. The German consulate told Wolf the application process could take up to a year, but less than a month later he was told his application had been approved. Bernard and Wolf went to Chicago to complete the process at the German consulate. Aaron and his children hope to make the trip soon. "I was treated like a VIP;' Wolf said. "I met with a vice-consul in a private office. She handed me the naturalization papers:' The vice-consul also gave him a "Welcome to Germany" packet, which included a booklet on "Germany for the Jewish Traveler:' The new Germans didn't have to take any sort of oath of allegiance to Germany. Both Bernard and Wolf said that would have been a deal-breaker. Wolf said he feels Germany is making a real effort to atone for the Holocaust. "I've met many young Germans, and they all acknowledge their country's past and want to make amends:' he said. Aaron agreed, saying he feels at home when he's in Germany. "It's a wonderful country," he said. His mother, who also lives in Ann Arbor, said she has visited Germany many times but sees no need to reclaim her citizenship. She said she agreed with a statement her brother once made: If Jews don't go back to Germany, Hitler will have won. Aaron said she has many Israeli cousins, and all have reclaimed their German citizenship. As German citizens, they can also apply for a German passport. Wolf and Aaron did so; Bernard did not. A German pass- port entitles holders to some discounts. Anyone with a German passport is required to use it when they enter Germany. "The only disadvantage is that if I get in trouble while I'm in Germany, the U.S. government won't be able to help me," said Wolf, because he'd be traveling as a German, not as an American. Bernard still has family in Germany. One of his father's brothers was in the Communist Underground during the war; he escaped to France with his wife and son. Unable to move to the United States because of his Communist affiliations, he returned to Germany. Bernard visited his German relatives in the 1980s, but his parents never went back. Wolf spent one day in Germany during a longer trip to Europe in the late 1970s. Now that he's a citizen, he wants to plan a longer visit. He says he may even study German, which his parents spoke at home when he was young. His father would have never dreamed of returning to Germany after he left, Wolf said. "He never spoke of his experi- ences in Germany or about leaving." ❑