56 Friday, February 18, 1977 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Services Aiding .Adjustment of , Soviet Immigrants Described in Former Detroiter's Year Book Article NEW YORK - Soviet Jews who have come to the U.S. in recent years by and large have become self-supporting and well-adjusted within a few months, according to an article on "Soviet Jews in the United States" in the 1977 edition of the American Jewish Year Book. Of the 11,000 such im- migrants who have come to this country in the past decade, the article states, almost half have settled in New York and almost all have been aided in ad- justing to their new lives by local JewiSh social and communal agencies. The Year Book, the au- thoritative record of -events and trends in Jewish life, is published jointly by the American Jewish Committee and the Jewish Publication Society of America. In the article, Joseph Edelman, who is research director of the Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society and former - director of programming and com- munications media for the Jewish Community Coun- cil of Metropolitan De- troit, points out the dif- ficulties most Soviet Jews have in making the transi- tion from a closed, to- talitarian society to an open society demanding individual initiative and responsibility. He writes: "For the first time, they must cope with the fact that in this country, fees have to be paid for medical services; that to attend a univer- sity costs money; that one has to seek actively an apartment and assume a financial risk when going • also become accustomed to the American way of paying for their needs, such as bank loans, mortgages, credit cards - all strange to them." The author describes this group of immigrants as having had "a high de- gree of training and ad- vanced schooling. - Of those in the labor force, 28 percent were profession- als, 11 percent engineers, and- 12 percent techni- cians. The preponderance of professionals and aca- demics, the article re- lates, has made for prob- lems in job placement. "This is not only in terms of numbers and the relaL tively limited positions av- ailable, but of their qual- ifications. The almost total isolation of Soviet society for many years meant that they, like all Russians, were denied, or were li- mited in access to informa- tion from abroad about new developments and the literature in their fields of specialization. JOSEPH EDELMAN "This tended to create into business; that there large gaps in the know- is job competition in the ledge and skills of most job market, and that they professionals, particu- might not always be able larly of physicians, who to find positions in occu- often are unaware of new pations for which they drugs and techniques de- considered themselves veloped in the Western fully trained. They must world, and engineers, Speaking About the Weather BY DAVID SCHWARTZ (Copyright 1977, JTA, Inc.) The country is ex- periencing an exception- ally cold winter. One way perhaps of coping with it is to think ahead - of Spring. Take down your Bible and turn to the Song of Songs: "For lo, the winter is gone, the flowers appear on the earth and the voice of the turtle dove is heard in the land." Think of that turtle dove singing. Don't you feel warmer at once? Some of the rabbis of old have_ shown ways of get- ting warmer in winter. I like especially the story of Rabbi Hayim Au- erback of Lutzitz. One cold winter day, a poor man visited him with tears in his eyes. His wife had just given birth to a baby and there was no wood to heat the room in which the mother and__ child lay. Rabbi Auerbach then knocked on the window of a wealthy Jew who was a neighbor. "Come in, rabbi," cried the rich man, "and tell me what you want. Why stand out there shivering" But the rabbi would not go in. "No," said the rabbi, "you must come out." The rich Jew then came out and the rabbi told him the story of the Jewish mother and child lying in the cold. "But you could have told me that on the in- side," said the rich man. "No I wanted you to come out in the cold, so you would appreciate the situ- ation better." The rich man 'im- mediately saw to it that the poor man had his wood for fire and also I be- lieve the rich man himself felt warmer inside. Another 'rabbinic story that warms the heart is told of Rabbi Wolf Barazer. One time, he suddenly disappeared right in the middle of a Jewish festive gathering. They went looking for him and found him stand- ing outside freezing be- side the hackman's horse. The rabbi had seen the hackman standing freez- ing and told him to go in and warm hiinself for awhile and he took his place standing and freez- ing, guarding the horse. So a mitzva can keep one warm. Samuel Gompers, presi- dent of the American Fed- eration of Labor, in his early days was a cigar maker and he told of a novel way one of his fellow cigar makers kept warm. The cigar maker could have bought an overcoat, but he figured out a more economical way. Two drinks of whiskey made him as warm as though he had an over- coat and since he only needed an overcoat for the two coldest months, he concluded it was cheaper to use the two drinks method. But there is a better method for saving the price of an overcoat and reducing the fuel bill- go to Israel. You won't usu- ally find much snow there. That's why it at- tracts so many birds. The bird population of Israel has grown greatly since the Jews moved back there. The birds seem to be some of our , best friends. TABLE I. SOVIET JEWISH ARRIVA1.S IN DESIGNATED AREAS, 1966-1975 I- HAS-Assisted USSR ;Migrants 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 Grand Total 36 - 11 72 _ 92 156 2 9 - 15 124 3 214 24 12 5 3 8 7 453 11 17 - 26 33 1,449 196 46 - 11 71 3,490 398 119 - 13 90 5,250 847 305 47 20 207 - 11,336 1,476 526 47 • 105 413 96 - 182 135 265 540 1,773 4,110 6,676 13,905 31,652 33,477 16,816 8,531 111,007 Destination United States Canada Australia New Zealand Latin America Europe 4 3 2 52 4 - 76 I Totals USSR A rrivals in Israel 2,054 1,403 224 3,019 992 12,839 who could not . keep ab- In New York, where the reast with discoveries af- NewYork Association for fecting their work. New Americans is re- "Consequently, aside sponsible for their ab- from coping with lan- sorption, an average cash guage difficulties, many allowance of $4,200 is highly educated and provided for a family of trained emigres must ac- four to cover rent, food, quire the, knowledge and clothing and medical care skills long utilized by for an initial period that Western professionals. varies with each family's As a result, they are often needs, the article states. With this assistance, and frustrated because they cannot immediately re- in spite of severe adjust- bl Russia R i n sume the skilled occupa- men t problems, tions for which they feel Jews who arrive in the Un- they have been trained." ited States show an ex- traordinary degree of The author describes achievement in a very the work of HIAS in pro= short time," states a cessing the immigrants NYANA report quoted by from the time of their ar- Edelman. "It is perhaps to rival in Vienna until they be expected: those who reach the U.S. He also have reached the United discusses the immense States were not only wit- variety of services in job ling to take the risk of ap- placement„ housing, clo- plying for exit permits thing, medical care and from the Soviet Union, but counselling that local had the energy, the deter- Jewish welfare agencies mination and the persis- provide for them in cities tence to overcome all the throughout the U.S. obstacles which they faced TABLE 6. INITIAL Baltimore Boston Chicago Cleveland Detroit Los Angeles Metropolitan N.J. Miami New York City Philadelphia Pittsburgh St. Louis San Francisco Washington, D.C. Others Total "Despite all the economic and social obs- tacles, within one or two months after their arri- val, 80 to 85 percent of all to Russian newcomers have found their own apartments. Within four to six months, if there are no unusual vocational, medical or other special problems, the average Russian family is by and large self-supporting and no longer requires finan- . vial assistance." These successes, the author concludes, are due to the joint efforts of var- ious Jewish agencies and the commitment of the Jewish community. The Russian Jews, he de- Glares, "like the genera- tion of their grand- fathers, are a rich source of potential spiritual and cultural contributions to American Jewish life." SETTLEMENT OF HIAS-ASSISTED USSR MIGRANTS IN SELECTED AMERICAN COMMUNMES, CITIES during their wait for depa- ture. Jewish Population 94,000 180,000 253,000 80,000 80,000 463,000 95,000 225,000 1,998,000 350,000 52,000 60,000 75,000 112,500 1971-1975 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 3 - 7 2 3- 16 - 1 138 13 4 4 2 16 27 4 23 5 5 276 4 2 - 1 36 49 73 60 49 90 25 16 731 85 7 11 83 83 146 113 120 229 62 94 1,572 195 27 37 150 140 260 145 157 428 67 124 2,247 - 281 43 77 . 276 274 502 347 333 786 159 240 4,964 578 83 125 6 40 69 10 27 121 48 __2.020 10,856 5 - 1,614,500 22 84 201 662 11 1,051 5,732,000 214 453 1,449 3,490 5,250 Total Gaza Strip Agriculture Boom Attributed to Special Climate GAZA - In the 1940s, instructor Mohammed due to its special climatic Hamdan, Gaza witnessed conditions, the Gaza reg- a serious regression in its ion furnished a good deal vegetable growing. of early spring vegetables In the 1960s there was to the markets of man- such a lack of fresh veget- datory Palestine. abler in the strip that large In the 1950s, under the quantitities had to be im- mark with income exce- ing $45 million. Vegetables are grown on some 5,500 acres - 500 acres under plastic covers -yielding over 55,000 tons of produce. ported daily by rail, from Instead of importing growing was introduced Port Said. fresh vegetables, the into the strip, and groves "Today," Hamdan says, Gaza Strip has made its rose at every possible "That is history. In the debut as an exporter of its place, even where water strip we grow 17,500 acres produce to Europe. "In containing a high degree of citrus." 1976, 250 tons were ex- of chlorine should have There are eight mod- ported and we are looking prevented the planting of ern, automatic packing forward to reaching the citrus fruits. houses and the 1976 yield 1,500 ton mark," Hamdan According to vegetable topped the 240,000 ton says. I 1