yom hashoah » 0DUWLQ %HONLQ '2 is talking multiple sclerosis (MS) and treatment. DW 30 0LGGOHEHOW 5RDG )DUPLQJWRQ +LOOV 0, Save a seat for a friend. Accessible to folks in wheelchairs or who need assistance. Light meal served. Validated parking. Space is limited. Please RSVP by calling 1-866-682-7491. Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corporation East Hanover, New Jersey 07936-1080 12/15 T-XMG-1325053 0000000 44 May 5 • 2016 Garry and Viola Kappy at the dedication of the Anne Frank Tree Exhibit and Garden at the Holocaust Memorial Center A Mighty Tree A new book introduces Anne Frank to young readers, from the perspective of a chestnut tree outside her hiding place. Lynne Konstantin | Arts & Life Editor *LQRSROLV 5HVWDXUDQW © 2015 Novartis PHOTO BY JERRY ZOLYNSKY Get inspired. Meet medical specialists. Connect with others. All at a Novartis MS Education Link Event T here was a “bare chestnut tree glistening with dew, the seagulls and other birds glint- ing with silver as they swooped through the air, and we were so moved and entranced that we couldn’t speak.” From her hiding place in the attic, Anne Frank wrote of a horse chestnut tree, mentioning it three times through- out her diary as it gave her such pleasure and hope. In The Tree in the Courtyard: Looking Through Anne Frank’s Window (Knopf) by Jeff Gottesfeld, illustrated by Peter McCarty, the tree watches the goings-on in the city of Amsterdam and watches Anne, a girl who played and laughed and wrote in her diary before the war. It notices when the young girl comes to the annex with her family, saw her peek out of the curtained window — and when she and her family were taken away by uniformed men. The Tree in the Courtyard is a beauti- ful, moving and lyrically told picture book, made more so by its stunning brown-ink illustrations, each a work of art in itself. It is a gentle introduction to the story of Anne Frank for elementary school-age children and a keepsake for all ages. In the back of the book, a note tells the details of her story — along with the fate of the chestnut tree, which lived for 172 years before a storm snapped its trunk, the summer Anne would have turned 81. Not long before that, however, stew- ards at the Anne Frank House had the foresight to take grafts from the tree to create saplings, with the plan of offer- ing new “Anne Frank” trees to worthy recipients around the world as a symbol of hope and peace. Local readers of the book don’t have far to travel to see the tree’s next genera- tion: The Holocaust Memorial Center (HMC) Zekelman Family Campus in Farmington Hills is now home to a sap- ling (and mentioned in the book), along with the National Sept. 11 Memorial & Museum in New York City, Boston Common and a handful more around the U.S. Since its dedication in 2013, the young tree has flourished in the Viola and Garry Kappy Anne Frank Tree Exhibit and Garden at the HMC, named for the project’s major funders, Holocaust survi- vors themselves. “I like that when young people come to see the tree, the name of Anne Frank will never be forgotten,” Garry Kappy says. The sapling was planted just before the first of two polar vortexes, says Robin Axelrod, director of education at HMC. “The winter was really horrendous. We were very worried about this sapling — it was this tiny little thing,” she says. “It survived and it is thriving. It’s now three times its original size. It has the same stubbornness and will to sur- vive that the original tree had. It was a mighty, mighty tree. And the fact that it survived is so fitting. It needs to be there to bear witness to what happened. “The sapling speaks to the young, teenage kids who visit in a way that is very special,” Axelrod says. “They con- nect with it. It links them to someone their age that was there when this hap- pened.” The Tree in the Courtyard is available for purchase in the Eric and Doris Billes Museum Shop at the HMC. (248) 553- 2400; holocaustcenter.org. * Michigan Supreme Court Justice Richard Bernstein with Hillel student Noah Lovy Richard Bernstein Dispels Myths For Hillel Students Gabriella Burman Special to the Jewish News H illel Day School fifth- and sixth-graders sat in rapt attention last month as Michigan Supreme Court Justice Richard Bernstein, the state’s first blind judge, helped them dispel myths about living with a disability. “When you’re born blind, you don’t miss what you never saw,” he said. “It doesn’t mean it’s an easy life, but it can be an exciting one, and I know I was born for a purpose, as we all are. Mine is to use my position to do something powerful and to create a new world.” Bernstein had been invited to school by Noah Lovy, a sixth-grader who first met him at a Shabbat meal in a sukkah. Noah recalled being mesmerized by Bernstein’s story of competing in marathons and triath- lons despite his blindness, and he wanted very much to share his story with his classmates. “Just about everyone has a chal- lenge, but Justice Bernstein didn’t let that stop him,” Noah said. “Plus, he travels around the world helping communities become more welcom- ing to people with disabilities.” Hillel students reciprocated by welcoming Bernstein warmly. They peppered him with questions about how he navigates activities of daily life, athleticism and any fears he may have. He answered them all, saying, “The more personal, the better!” Noah, who overcame his own challenge with public speaking by delivering a soaring introduction for Bernstein, hopes the afternoon inspires his classmates to be the best they can be despite any adversity they face. If the reception Bernstein was given is any indication, they surely will strive to be. *