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January 18, 1985 - Image 47

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1985-01-18

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Friday, January 18, 1985

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Journey

Continued from Page 40

Father in Poland, but had not
returned since the war.
"I find myself, like many
Jews, hesitant about anything
concerning Germany. We
didn't want to make it appear
as if we were giving a chevser
(approval) on what happened
40 years ago. But the urge to
find out about the Jewish
community overrode the con-
cern about legitimizing his-
tory."
An emotional "lowlight" of
the trip, the rabbi reported,
was the group's visit to the site
of the Dachau concentration
camp. "It left me with a very
morbid feeling. But even more
than that, I realized that de-
spite the German effort to
atone for past sins, the Jewish
pain and suffering is lumped
in (by the Germans) with all
the others and it is, to an ex-
tent, minimized."
Rabbi Arm learned that the
German Jews are, like other
communities, reaching out to
American Jews for aid, but
that it is a different kind of aid
than the U.S. Jewish commu-
nity is used to providing. "We
help Israel through financial
contributions. We aid Russian
Jews by trying to provide them
with freedom. Germans don't
need our contributions and
they don't want to be taken out
of the country. They are ask-
ing for religious leadership.
They want rabbis; they have a
shortage of Hebrew teachers
that needs to be filled."
But the rabbi feels that
what the German Jewish
community needs most is
commitment and identity on
the part of its residents. Only
then, he feels, will the com-
munity be able to move for-
ward and continue to grow.
During their stay, the
Americans also met with and
received input from profes-
sionals in the German Foreign
Ministry and Arthur Burns,
the U.S. Ambassador in Bonn.
This, Rabbi Arm feels, was
largely an effort on behalf of
German officials to explain
and clarify their position vis a
vis Israel, which often seems
somewhat ambiguous. When
the group questioned the
ministry officials about their
support for a Palestinian
state, the officials were quick
to point out that Israel is Ger-
many's second greatest trad-
ing partner, following only the
United States.
Rabbi Arm found Burns, the
first American Ambassador to
Germany who is Jewish, to be
a very personable man and
added that being in Germany
has given the envoy "a new

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