46
Friday, June 14, 1985
THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
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j.;
The 8,000 Jews left behind in Ethiopia because they are too young
or too old to escape will soon die if they are not saved, an activist
charged.
Jewish editors by Prof.
Howard Lenhoff, past presi-
dent and now director of
research for the American
Association for Ethiopian
Jews. He said that with the
famine spreading in Ethiopia
and the new Sudanese
military government more
hostile to Israel, the only
hope of saving the Ethiopian
Jewish community is to press
the government of Ethiopia
for a family reunification plan
— a humanitarian gesture
which is not against Marxist
doctrine.
Lenhoff said that logically
the Ethiopian government
would be willing to decrease
the number of mouths to feed
and win favor with the West
by letting its Jewish popula-
tion leave. But he warned
that family reunification
"will only take place if we
make it a number one priori-
ty on the Jewish agenda."
Unfortunately, he said, that
is not the case.
For many years a lone
voice for the cause of Ethio-
pian Jewry, the AAEJ was
criticized by establishment
Jewish organizations for be-
ing too strident and critical of
Israel's quiet diplomacy ef-
forts to rescue Ethiopian
Jews. Now, said Lenhoff,
most American Jews are too
busy knelling (taking pride)
for the rescue of thousands of
Ethiopian Jews. Virtually
every major Jewish organiza-
tion has an Ethiopian Jewry
project to support. "That is
good," he said, adding: "it is
also good fund-raising."
Lenhoff charged that had
the leadership of the Israeli
government, the Jewish
Agency and major American
Jewish organizations been
more sensitive to the plight
of Ethiopian Jewry ten years
ago, "all of them could have
been saved."
Speaking, he said, as a life-
long Democrat, he praised
President Reagan for approv-
ing American participation in
Operation Moses and the
subsequent airlift from
Sudan which together
brought almost 9,000 Ethio-
pian Jews to Israel.
Lenhoff called for more
media attention on the dif-
ficulties and complexities of
the absorption process in
Israel, the worry and fear
among Ethiopian Jews in
Israel for their families left
behind, and an aggressive
campaign to save the remain-
ing Jews in Ethiopia.
Mediation Rather
Than Litigation
In a major policy decision,
delegates to the annual Jew-
ish Press convention over-
whelmingly approved a pro-
posal by AJPA president,
Robert Cohn, editor-in-chief
of the St. Louis Jewish Light,
to deal with the numerous di-
sputes between Jewish Fed-
erations and Jewish news-
papers in various parts of the
country.
Taking noteikf the AJPA's
"long-Standinloncern" over
disputes between Federa-
tions and Jewish newspapers,
the delegates "urged the par-
ties involved in such disputes
in American Jewish commu-
Continued on Page 48