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March 01, 1985 - Image 26

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1985-03-01

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

26

Friday, March 1, 1985

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

FOCUS

GARDEN RAVIOLI

The Jewish Homemaker's Guide to Delicious Italian Cooking .
Calls for Chef Boy-ar-dee Cheese Ravioli.

2 packages (10 oz. each) frozen
chopped broccoli
2 tablespoons grated Parmesan
cheese
1 /2 cup finely chopped onion

L

1

Judenstat

1 medium clove garlic, crushed
1 /4 cup chopped red or green peppers
1 tablespoon butter or margarine
2 cans (15 oz. each) Chef Boy-ar-dee
Cheese Ravioli in Sauce

Cook broccoli according to package directions; drain well. Add
Parmesan cheese and mix well. Saute onion, garlic and peppers in
butter until lightly browned; combine with broccoli: Place Ravioli
in saucepan over low heat; stir occasionally until thoroughly
heated. Add half of the broccoli mixture to Ravioli; save half for
garnish. Arrange in shallow or 11/2 quart serving dish. Garnish
edge with remaining broccoli. Serves 4 to 6.

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Continued from preceding page

J

fering from Nazism as Jews
would not have been able to
enter Israel.
"Knowing this attitude, the
State of Israel recognized that
six million Jews died. Or-
thodox Jews don't question
this number; only anti-
Semites question. it. This
number was never based on
the Orthodox definition. It was
always based on the Nazi defi-
nition in the Nuremberg
laws."
Should Jews allow Nazis to
define who is a Jew? Huppert
disagrees, but adds that
changing the Israeli Law of
Return to read that only those
converted according to
Halachah (in effect, by Or-
thodox rabbis) "would ex-
punge from the Jewish nation
many of the victims consid-
ered Jewish.
"Should we check again the .
holy ashes of our Jewish mar-
tyrs to -see which of them fol-
lowed the Orthodox defini-
tion?" Huppert asked.
His solution to the problem
of Who is a Jew is to allow each
Jewish denomination to define
for itself who its members will
be. He calls it an "open
Judaism" from a national
point of view.
"Judaism, while being con-
verted into nationalism and
having the infrastructure of a
sovereign state, can no longer
exist as a ghetto-like entity,"
Huppert says. "The state was
established as a shelter for
every Jew who suffers as a Jew
and is looking for a shelter in
his own country. This is the
real goal of Zionism."
Huppert says that religious
pluralism is the main subject
of discussion in Israel and the
Diaspora. Exposing the Or-
thodox attitude, he says, gives
the Jewish people an idea of
how "disastrous this can be,"
and he advocates the forma-
tion of a non-Orthodox lobby
in Israel and the Diaspora to
work in the Knesset against
passage of the Who is a Jew
amendment. Huppert fears
that a political crisis in Israel
could lead to a strengthening
of the religious parties' role
and ultimate passage of the
amendment.
"After the Holocaust, the es-
tablishment of Israel, and
emancipation (life outside the
ghetto), we cannot exist as a
key club. We are becoming
again a vital, great, flourish-
ing nation, including all the
elements. We can not commit
ethnocide."
In a final. knock at Israel's
Orthodox establishment,
Huppert illustrated his point
with the<ex ~ er tie Cat*tbA're-

Uri Huppert: Fighting for
pluralism.

cent aliyah from Ethiopia.
"Ethiopian Jews, with no oral
Torah, succeeded in being
Jewish for 2,000 years in such
a marvelous way without
being led by Galician or Hun-
garian rabbis. Now they are
not being allowed to continue
in their Jeivish tradition while
being repatriated into their
homeland (Israel). They are
being converted to 'Or-
thodoxy.'
"Have they no right to be
religious Jews in their own
way? Do they have to be con-
verted to Mizrachi or Agudat
Yisrael?"

NEWS

Daubings
In Montreal

Montreal (JTA) — Police are
investigating a spate of incidents
in which homes and cars of Jewish
families in the Snowdon and Mont
Royal districts have been daubed
with swastikas, according to Ar-
thur Hiess, executive director of
Wnai B'rith for Eastern Canada.
"This is not just ordinary
graffiti but a form of anti-Jewish
violence," Weiss said. "Whoever is
doing it knows who they are hit-
ting." Hiess said there had been
30 such incidents since last Oc--
tober.
Bernard Finestone, president of
the Canadian Jewish Congress,
Eastern Region, told the Jewish
Telegraphic Agency after a meet-
ing he had with the Montreal
police that "We are working hard,
hand in hand with the police to
apprehend and put in jail those
vandals who are spraying swas-
tikas on Jewish homes, cars and
other properties." He said the
vandals appear to be "unstable
elements in our society who try to
take advantage of the rising ten-
sion generated by the recent hunt
for Nazi war criminals."

J •

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