metro » continued from page 28 as a representative of her 10 grandchildren and 14 great-grandchildren, all owing our very existence to her miraculous survival,” Salama says. Sonders was 16 years old in 1941, when her father and brother were shot and killed. She managed to escape by hiding, changing her identity and finding work in other countries before marrying and moving to the United States, where she raised three daughters, Rita Salama, Debra Feldman and Bonnie Levin. “I have been very close to my grand- mother and wanted to experience the area where she grew up,” explains Salama, who is putting together his grand- mother’s memoir as begun with the help and encouragement of the late Morton Horwitz, who was Sonders’ companion and also lived at Hechtman. Horwitz was the father of Jewish News Publisher/ Executive Editor Arthur Horwitz. RELIVING MEMORIES Roz Komisar Blanck, who shares the presidency of the David-Horodoker Organization with Norma Spielberg Gorosh and Amy Friedman Brody, all of West Bloomfield, made her third trip to the childhood neighborhood of her late paternal grandmother this past August. Also on the trip were local residents Susan Moiseev, Sara Braverman and Rachel Kelmenson. These descendants know about the Jewish townspeople who came to Detroit in 1909 and started the organization that grew with the growth of families. “Going with the Israelis was very spe- cial,” Blanck says. “Two cousins — one from America and one from Israel — were able to link up and cement a friendship that started long distance. “There are 600 families across the United States and Canada in the David- Horodoker Organization,” she says. “The travelers talked about the strong feelings experienced walking down the streets where generations of our families walked.” Blanck, whose grandmother came to America at age 12, made time to walk through the town on her own because of the strong emotions that surfaced. “I would look at the people and the buildings,” she says. “I would feel all the regret because of the absence of Jews who had been so involved with the town before the Nazis came.” Ziv Begun, who organized travelers from Israel, has been in charge of five such trips, two with Israelis and Americans. “I believe it is necessary to show our- selves at the town every few years to let the people and authorities understand the importance of maintaining the mass grave and other Jewish symbols,” says Begun, whose father was the only survivor of a 30 September 29 • 2016 “There are 600 families across the United States and Canada in the David-Horodoker Organization. The travelers talked about the strong feelings experienced walking down the streets where generations of our families walked.” — Roz Komisar Blanck Top: The memorial honors the Jews from David-Horodok killed in a mass grave during WWII. Left: David and Pauline Salama with David’s grandmother, Beatrice Sonders, who escaped from David-Horodok during WWII. Right: Beatrice Sonders in the David-Horodok room at the Holocaust Memorial Center. large family. “For me, going back is a mis- sion for life.” When Salama returned to Michigan, he showed his grandmother pictures of what he had experienced. She revealed being nervous about his trip without telling him, never forgetting how awful people had been and wondering what he would encounter. “Now that he has returned, I admire him for the drive he had to explore his roots,” she says. “He wasn’t going to Paris; he was going to a small town with nothing left of what it used to be. “While it was sad to see pictures of the mass grave, it was nice to see that a respectable memorial has been put there. Before he left, I held a few rocks, and my grandson put the family name on them and placed the rocks on the mass grave. “He also showed me that he lit a memo- rial candle in memory of my parents and brother. Seeing his effort to honor their memory was very moving.” *