metro >> 'Resistance in Red' Leizer Selektor, then and now CJ Frankel symposium explores the role of Soviet Jewish combatants in WWII. Sheftl Zisser, then and now Yaffe Klugerman I Special to the Jewish News T hey were not what one might consider to be typical Holocaust victims. They were Soviet Jewish soldiers who had experienced the con- sequences of Nazism firsthand, and they were determined to fight. Their inspiring story of perseverance will be explored at events organized by the University of Michigan's Frankel Center for Judaic Studies, beginning with a sym- posium Oct. 25 called "Resistance in Red: Soviet Jewish Combatants in World War IL' examining the approximately 500,000 Soviet Jews who fought in the Red Army during the war; only 300,000 survived. "Surprisingly little is known about what happened to Jews in the Soviet Union during World War II," said U-M Professor Mikhail Krutikov. Few realize, he said, "how they fought in the Red Army and among partisans, how they lived and worked in the Soviet interior, and the plight of hundreds of thousands of refu- gees from Poland" Nine local Jewish Soviet veterans will be attending, including Leizer Levikovich Selektor and Sheftl Abramovich Zisser. Selektor survived the Leningrad blockade and later served in a marine unit. Awarded with the Order of the Red Star, after the war Selektor worked at the Azerbaijan State Marine Academy, head of educational programming. "The attitude of each [Soviet] marine toward the enemy was the same as the attitude of a Jew [toward a German]: If you don't kill him first, hell kill you. The marines fought accordingly. To be taken prisoner was not an option:' he said in his Blavatnik interview. Zisser was a machine-gunner who fought until he was seriously wounded. He was awarded the medal "For Battle Merit" and an Order of the Patriotic War. "I returned home at the end of 1944, after I was wounded; he said in an inter- view in the Blavatnik Archive. "'You are still alive?' my neighbors asked. They were suspicious of my survival" Jeffrey Veidlinger, Frankel Center direc- tor, explained that the war experience was unique for Soviet Jews. "Many Soviet Jews today prefer to remember the war through the perspec- tive of victory rather than victimhood," he said. "They knew what they were fighting for and they understood the consequenc- es of failur' The symposium brings five scholars to campus who will participate in roundtable discussions with Frankel faculty mem- bers and symposium co-organizers Zvi Gitelman, Krutikov and Veidlinger about the Jewish military experience in the Soviet Union during the war and about the Holocaust in the Soviet Union. The symposium will conclude with the North American premiere of the newly discovered 1966 Soviet film, Eastern Corridor. One of the first films produced about the Holocaust in the Soviet Union, the Soviet government withdrew it from theaters soon after its release for failing to conform to the Party line on the war. The event also will kick off a multi- media exhibit about Soviet Jews in the Red Army during World War II that will be displayed at the Hatcher Gallery through Dec. 15, commemorating the 70th anni- versary of the end of World War II. The exhibit will contain materials from the New York-based Blavatnik Archive, an event co-sponsor, which collects docu- ments, personal letters, momentos and oral testimonies pertaining to the Jewish experience in the Soviet military. Gitelman said, "The Blavatnik exhibi- tion gives these soldiers a voice, and tells a powerful story that people of all genera- tions should see and hear:' * 1.112 OD Ti'] YOU + BOT at 11c1 Day School (For all 4 anc 5 year o cs} THURSDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2015 10:00 a.m.-11:00 a.m. or 1:30 p.m.-2:30 p.m. with a parent, grandparent, nanny or other special caregiver for a bot "n" good time Yaffa Klugerman is a program associate for the Frankel Center for Judaic Studies at the University of Michigan. details The symposium, 1:30 5 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 25, at Hatcher Graduate Library Gallery, 913 S. University Ave., Ann Arbor, will be followed by a reception from 5-6 p.m. See the film Eastern Corridor from 6-8 p.m. at UMMA Helmut Stern Auditorium, 525 S. State St. The multimedia exhibit runs through Dec. 15 at Hatcher Gallery. Events are free. - MUSIC STORYTIME TINKERING SNACK space is limited- RSVP by October 22 with name (s) of your child (ren) and adults (s) attending to: Amy Schlussel, 248-539-1484 or aschlussel@hillelday.org 2022810 October 15 •2015 23