soul French Filmmaker Claude Lanzmann Dies At 92 of blessed memory continued from page 47 JNS.org EMILY ERIN SITRON, 24, of West Bloomfield, died June 29, 2018. She had an infectious smile. She was witty and never afraid to speak her mind. She was always will- ing to help her family and Sitron friends, including running errands, picking up treats or making special deliveries to her cousins. Emily loved to read and travel. She had recently started a quest of visiting presidential museums. She was also a board member of NEXTGen, a young adult division of Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit. Ms. Sitron is survived by her parents, Bruce and Susan Sitron; sister and brother-in-law, Hayley and Patrick Greenleaf; aunts and uncles, Beverly Goldberg, Peter and Marge Fein, Penny and Vernon McGarity, and Marilyn Dizik; cousins, Jessica McGarity and Keith Nichols, Stacey and Bob Shelton, Michael Byck, Seth and Samantha Byck, Robert, Amy, Zachary, Jordyn and Olivia Singer, Alyssa, Joshua, Cady and Charlie Tobias, and Jason and Emily Dizik. She is also survived by her extended family, Suzie Merkle and Alan Silverman, and their children, Brittany, Brad and Jenna. She was the loving niece of the late Howard 48 July 12 • 2018 jn Goldberg and the late Ted Dizik; the cherished granddaughter of the late Mildred and the late Sidney Wise, and the late Ruth and the late Harold Sitron. Interment was at Beth Abraham Cemetery. Contributions may be made to Congregation Beth Ahm, 5075 W. Maple Road, West Bloomfield, MI 48322, www.cbahm.org; Jewish Senior Life of Metropolitan Detroit, 6710 W. Maple Road, West Bloomfield, MI 48322, www.jslmi.org; or to a charity of one’s choice. Arrangements by Ira Kaufman Chapel. MARVIN SPINNER, 93, of Royal Oak, died July 6, 2018. He is survived by his daughter, Shelley Spinner of Royal Oak; brother and sister- in-law, Chuck and Judy Spinner of Shelby Township; daughter-in-law, Estelle Spinner; grandchildren, Rachel Spinner and Sam Lahasky, David Spinner; great-granddaughter, Maya Lahasky; nieces and nephews; cousin, Cynthia Valencia. Mr. Spinner was the beloved father of the late Warren Spinner. Contributions may be made to Kadima, 15999 W. 12 Mile Road, Suite 2, Southfield, MI 48076; or to a charity of one’s choice. Interment was held at Clover Hill Park Cemetery in Birmingham. Arrangements by Hebrew Memorial Chapel. • C laude Lanzmann, a French filmmaker perhaps best known for the nearly 10-hour oral-history project Shoah, died July 5, 2018, at the age of 92. Originally from an Eastern European Jewish family who moved to France, Lanzmann was born in Paris on Nov. 25, 1925. He, his brother Jacques and his parents, Armand and Paulette (Grobermann) Lanzmann, went into hiding during World War II. From an early age, he was moti- vated to fight power through the means he had at hand. At age 17, he joined the French resistance. He opposed France’s war in Algeria and signed the anti-war “Manifesto of the 121.” War remained a resounding theme in his life. He made numer- ous films that touched on its many themes, including Israel, Why (Pourquoi Israel) in 1973; Sobibor, Oct. 14, 1943, 4 p.m., in 2001, about a partially successful uprising against camp guards; and two years later, The Last of the Unjust, an interview with Rabbi Benjamin Murmelstein, a Jewish administra- tor of the Theresienstadt ghetto. His life’s work, however, was Shoah, comprised of interviews from World War II survivors — both victims and those who perpe- trated crimes. Viewing it has been described as a journey, emotion- ally and physically, through a long, meandering treatment on film that is replete with both words and significant gaps of silence. The film pointedly did not include actual footage from the war; it concen- trates on the after-effects, on the lives of those who lived through it. Natan Sharansky, outgoing chairman of the Jewish Agency for Israel and a former Soviet refusenik who spent nine years in Russian prisons, said, “Claude Lanzmann was single-handedly responsible for keeping the memory of the Holocaust alive in the hearts and minds of so many around the world. “May his memory be a blessing.” Lanzmann married three times and fathered two chil- dren, Angélique, 68, and Félix Lanzmann, who died in 2017. For most of the 1950s, he lived with French writer, philosopher and feminist Simone de Beauvoir. •