THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
Schindler Criticizes Reagan Administration
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Friday, November 18, 1983 45
•
HOUSTON (JTA) —
Rabbi Alexander Schindler,
president of the Union of
American Hebrew Congre-
gations (UAHC), denounced
the foreign and domestic
policies of the Reagan Ad-
ministration as neither
principled or pragmatic.
In his address last Friday
to the 3,500 delegates at-
tending the 57th biennial
assembly of the UAHC and
the 34th biennial conven-
tion of the National Federa-
tion of Temple Sisterhoods,
Schindler was especially
critical of the Administra-
tion's policy in Central
America.
The Reform leader
charged that President
Reagan's foreign policy is
one of "an obsession with
force," imposing "military
solutions on crises that are
political, economic and so-
cial in their essence."
Schindler said that while it
is true that the Cubans and
Russians "cynically exploit"
the miseries of the peoples
of Central America, Rea-
gan's response was "largely
counter-productive" be-
cause the Administration
has its eyes "fixed on the
superpower game while ig-
noring all the local pawns."
Schindler called for
"an end to U.S. military
intervention in El Sal-
vador and Honduras"
and "an end to the covert
War against Nicaragua."
He proposed, instead,
that the Reagan Admin-
istration "seek a
negotiated solution, prof-
fer unqualified support"
for neighboring Central
American countries "and
make a permanent com-
mitment" in foreign pol-
icy "to democracy,
economic reform and so-
cial justice."
Schindler was also shar-
ply critical of the Reagan
Administration policies in
the Middle East. He said Is-
raeli officials with whom he
met recently, including
Premier Yitzhak Shamir,
President Chaim Herzog
and Knesset members,
"were much concerned
about the vagueness and
the vacillations of Ameri-
can diplomacy." He added
that "the constant and cap-
ricious shifts" in U.S. policy
"perplex them."
Rabbi Schindler also
criticized the Reagan Ad-
ministration pressures on
Israel in Lebanon and the
Soviet Union's policies to-
wards its Jewish citizens.
Turning to the role of Re-
form Judaism in the area of
religious activities, Schin-
dler urged the delegates to
approve a new Reform
Jewish unit to study all ph-
ases of conversion to Reform
ADS; Women
Honor Three
NEW YORK — Com-
edienne Phyllis Diller, de-
signer Pauline Trigere, and
Anita Perlman, past inter-
national president of Bnai
frith Women, were honored
at a luncheon sponsored by
the Women's Division of the
Anti-Defamation League
Appeal.
Judaism.
He described the goal
of the present UAHC
Outreach Task Force as
that of a "positive effort
to come to grips with the
reality of intermarriage,
to contain the loss it
threatens to our numeri-
cal strength, and, if at all
possible, to convert that
loss into a gain. He said
that the goals of the Out-
reach program were "to
make certain that the
majority of interfaith
marriages will result in
the conversion of the
non-Jewish partner to
Judaism, and that the
majority of the children
issuing from such mar-
riages will, in fact, be
raised as Jews."
Schindler called for crea-
tion of an Institute for Re-
form Jewish Public Policy to
study all elements of mixed
marriages and conversion.
Thirty-five new Reform
temples became affiliated
with the UAHC during the
last two years, bringing the
total number of Reform
temples in the United
States to 770, with 1.25
million members.
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