Thursday, April 23 MEET THE DESIGNER AND SHOP TO SUPPORT voriefft" siotply IS. clloovhss" CARE House NINA.MCLEMORE See ad on page 17 for details of Oulthend County $2.00 APRIL 16-22, 2015 / 27 NISAN -3 IYAR 5775 theJEWISHNEWS.com A JEWISH RENAISSANCE MEDIA PUBLICATION >> Spring Cleanup Local organization spearheads sprucing of historic B'nai David Cemetery. See page 10. >> Counting The Omer A primer about counting the days between Passover and Shavuot. See page 43. DETROIT JEWISH NEWS metro Brotherly Love Next generation at Habatat Galleries keeps tradition, adds own style. See page 60. Second-generation Habatat Gallery owners Aaron Schey and Corey Hampson next generation A Twist Of Fate A Holocaust survivor marries ex-Hitler Youth in amazing love story. Harry Kirsbaum I Contributing Writer S everal typical lessons can be gleaned from most Holocaust survival books. Seconds count. Snap decisions can save your life. It takes more than a will to live to survive. None of them have a Romeo and Juliet, guilt and for- giveness twist like The Long Journey to Cleveland by Rudolf Rudolf Ruder Ruder, whose father, Simon, a Holocaust survivor, lost his first wife and two children when they were gunned down in a train station trying to flee transport to a death camp. Simon survived to marry Marile, a German Catholic nearly half Simon's age, and a former Hitler Youth member whose father was a train engineer employed by the Nazis. CONTINUED ON PAGE 8 Learning From Israeli Success Detroit entrepreneurs seek to emulate Israel's "Startup Nation." ADAM FINKEL SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS 1942 - 2015 Covering and Connecting Jewish Detroit Eve y Week 8 08805 93363 5 Members of the Entrepreneur Mission visit with students at an international boarding school started by an Israeli entrepreneur. wenty Detroit entrepreneurs sat around the conference table of one of Israel's most noted venture funds, Jerusalem Venture Partners. It was the 78th hour of the Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit's inaugural Entrepreneur Mission to Israel. Local restaurant mogul Zach Sklar asked the question of the week: How has Israel's economy thrived despite such enormous adversity? Without delay, Golani Brigade commander-turned-investor Yonatan Machado spoke up. "The Jewish people, and Israel, have been forced to solve problems ... as a matter of survival," he said. "Being entrepreneurial has been a necessity because of thousands of years of persecution." CONTINUED ON PAGE 48