Presented by Elihu “Hugh” Baver

Sunday, March 29, 2026 at 9:45 AM
In person at The Zekelman Holocaust Center and on Zoom
28123 Orchard Lake Road
Farmington Hills, MI 48334

 FREE 

Two photos - one of Hugh Baver with David Ortiz (top) and one in front of a Holocaust memorial

Join us for a fascinating discussion connecting baseball, the Holocaust, genealogy and current events!

Hugh Baver is best known for his long-standing involvement and subject matter expertise in preserving and advancing the legacy of Sosúa, Dominican Republic—the only Jewish refugee settlement established during World War II as a direct result of the 1938 Evian Conference.

Through on-the-ground engagement and extensive research Baver has devised dynamic public programming working to elevate Sosúa’s global historical significance as a living case story of refuge, survival, and moral courage during the Holocaust.

The central theme of the presentation is to educate people on the little known Holocaust refugee and immigration history of what occurred back in 1938, and to compare and contrast it with contemporary challenges of refugees and immigration today (ICE seizures, etc) with Sosúa being a prime example of a role model of best practices where refugees/immigrants were not only welcomed/admitted/accepted but were given a path to citizenship and they became fully adopted and productive citizens. 


Elihu “Hugh” Baver is a cultural historian, nonprofit founder, and international project leader whose work centers on Holocaust memory, Jewish refugee history, and intercultural education in the Caribbean, Europe, and the Americas.

One of the world’s foremost authorities on the topic of the “Evian to Sosúa” unique Holocaust history, over the past 10 years, Baver has given dozens of lectures and presentations, as well as being the subject of multiple TV, Radio, and print media interviews in high visibility global venues.

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Jake Ehrenreich

Monday, November 8, 2010 at 8:00 p.m. at the West Bloomfield JCC

Join us as we co-sponsor Jake Ehrenreich, author of A Jew Grows in Brooklyn: The Curious Reflections of a First-Generation American, at the 59th Annual Jewish Book Fair this November.

“Barnum” and “Dancin’” star Jake Ehrenreich takes readers on a poignant journey through the past as he tells childhood stories, coming-of-age lessons and tales from the lives of his immigrant, Holocaust survivor parents.

A Jew Grows in BrooklynA companion to his popular Broadway musical comedy, A Jew Grows in Brooklyn is filled with memories of baseball, popcorn and realizing the American dream. A documentary about Ehrenreich’s life is in the works for release later this year.

Co-sponsored by the Birmingham Temple, Institute for Retired Professionals (IRP), the Jewish Genealogical Society of Michigan and ORT America-Michigan Region

About the Author

Brownsville Memoir-Growing up in Brooklyn, in the shadow of the Shoah.

When Jake Ehrenreich was growing up in Brownsville in the 1960s, he wanted nothing more than to be an American. But his Yiddish-speaking parents, who failed to understand the game of baseball or make sense of rock music, made it difficult for him to feel part of the mainstream culture. In his new one-man show, “A Jew Grows in Brooklyn,” directed by Jon Huberth, Ehrenreich explores how his family history, dominated by the shadow of the Holocaust, shaped the man he turned out to be.

Ehrenreich, 50, has appeared on Broadway in “Dancin,” “Barnum” and “They’re Playing Our Song.” He has also performed Yiddish music in two Off-Broadway productions, “Songs of Paradise” and “The Golden Land.”

His father’s Hasidic family had been one of the wealthiest in Poland, but during the war both he and his wife ended up in a work camp in Siberia, where one of their daughters was born. After spending time in a displaced persons camp, the family came to America, where they tried to give their children a life free from the taint of victimhood.

But it was not to be. Ehrenreich and his two sisters grew up feeling, as he put it, that existence was “tenuous” and that the “world could end at any moment.” Yet he also shares many wonderful memories of his youth, from playing stoop ball to attending Shea Stadium to vacationing in the Catskills, where Ehrenreich began performing in a band at the tender age of 12. Indeed, Ehrenreich tells much of his life story through music; he is backed by four instrumentalists, playing songs ranging from “Brooklyn Roads” to “Doo Wah Diddy.” One striking moment in the show occurs when Ehrenreich recalls learning that almost all of his favorite composers were Jewish like him.

“I don’t want to bring people too far into the black hole of the Holocaust,” Ehrenreich said, noting that his show is mostly upbeat and optimistic. “If people in the audience laugh,” he concluded, “it means that they trust me not just to take them to a more serious place, but to bring them out and make them joyous and grateful when they leave.”

For Ehrenreich, his show is ultimately a “celebration.” He quotes Billy Crystal, who quipped that performing a show about his life was like “a visit with my family every night.”

About the Author was taken from http://www.jakeehrenreich.com/about-the-author.html and can be attributed to The Jewish Week.

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