30 Friday, January 24, 1986 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS BUBBIE AND ZADIE SITTING t‘ A locare a complete Hea lth Care Agency Call (313) 424.8377 -- 24 hours A DAVID ROSENMAN'S AIM MIK PIURCHAIIII/11 Offers You... the opportunity to purchase any new car at tremendous savings! v All makes, including imports. v Top dollar for your trade-in. Immediate delivery of in-stock vehicles or order the car of your choice. v Dealer reduced interest rates when available. v22 years experience. NEW & USED CAR BROKER CALL US AT (313) 851-9700 31471 Northwestern Hwy., • Farmington Hills, MI 48018 headquarters'.responsiveness to problems, Kershner suggests, are either uninformed Thursz cites the initiation of two publica- or unhappy. The competitive, widely used tions. "Tachlis" and "B'nai B'rith In- award system (for signing the most new sider," which go to professional and lay members, for outstanding leadership, etc.), leaders as far down as the lodge level. he thinks, might produce unhappiness Their mix of employee information, calen- among the unrewarded. dars, reporting on important meetings and B'nai B'rith, on whole, is too complex an decisions, inspirational messages, etc., is organization to sum up in a few brief one means of helping the "locals under- words. There are two, or more, sides to stand fully the challenge, (of giving) a clear, simple image and showing the magnificence of the whole realm of (B'nai B'rith) activities," says Thursz. BBI also publishes a monthly magazine that has a Max Baer circulation of 170,000 and reaches beyond B'nai B'rith Consultant the confines of the organization's On Planning And Research concerns. A sampling of the organization's diverse programs includes a $10 million world center in Jerusalem (now being designed); United Nations participation; senior citizen housing for 5000 people; 300 Israel investment clubs; a tour office; active retirees in Israel; book clubs and publica- tions; a lecture bureau and cult education. All the commissions' programs (except for members' insurance), are available to the Jewish public, as individuals or groups, regardless of B'nai B'rith membership. Warren Eisenberg, director of interna- tional affairs, says Jews abroad get "a sense of solidarity and strength by identi- fying with an international organization." He talks about the amazement Latin American and European Jews feel at the willingness of American Jews to identify themselves and tackle political battles. While working generally to increase grass roots support, Eisenberg says, BBI is also having specific successes, such as appeal- ing the tariff on imported meat which Sweden implemented after prohibiting every issue. The choice of Las Vegas as the kosher slaughtering. It also campaigned 1986 convention site is a sore point. Critics for passage of The Genocide Convention charge that the choice (by an organization by Congress and against a constitutional that held a convention in Israel as early convention that might have blurred the as 1956), shows a lack of identity. Leader- line separating church and state. ship maintains that it_is a cost-effective, Philip Kershner, the national member- carefully researched and democratically ship chairman and past president of selected locale that will overcome its poor district 5, -‘ (which encompasses the image. Likewise, the newly-formed softball Southeastern states from Maryland team which competed in this year's Mac- through' Florida), is typical of the many cabiah games and won a gold medal is leaders who aware of problems but re- viewed by some as an example of organiza- main undaunted. He offers the figures tional vigor and responsiveness. Others, of 25,000 eligible BBI members in the (like the one who scrawled "Who cares?" Baltimore area and 2,000 actual members, over a score sheet posted at BBI head- then proceeds to call B'nai B'rith a "go- quartes), don't. agree. ing, vibrant organization." The Maryland Cases can be made for those who see state association, he claims, is very active B'nai B'rith as sluggishly bureaucratic or and responsive to individual impetus. In- democratically deliberative, unappealing- dividuab, he boasts, came up with the ly general or invitingly diversified; I t inhap- ideas for having marshalls in the walk for pily demoralized 'or ambitiously Israel and in holding a Baltimore Sedor for frustrated. The coming year should be ex- the mentally retarded. Individuals, he citing, with deliberations between BBI claims, started BBYO, Hillel, ADL, senior and BIM coming to a head and a new, set citizen housing; the grass roots action of negotiators entering the BBI-Hillel tug- committee and ,a BBI softball team to of-war. Perhaps the struggle, alone, is the compete in the Israeli . Maccabiah games. best measure of B'nai B'rith's continuing . Those who "bad-mouth" the organization, presence. A post-war decline in membership, says Baer, •is a commonality shared by all Jewish organiza• tions. The older membership, he ex , plains, is a result of the population curve, not an inability of programs to attract individuals. 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