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34

Friday, November 28, 1986 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

•Previous
Orders
d
E

Anti-Semitism

Continued from Page 32

farm crisis in the Middle
West and that in the recent
congressional elections none
of the 254 candidates running
under the banner of Lyndon
LaRouche were elected.
But added Suall, while anti-
Semitic hate groups have
been declining in numbers,
they have been increasing
their use of violence. And
although no LaRouche can-
didates won, many "got far
' too high a vote"
Also, anti-Semitism has
been increasing among
Blacks. Young whites are less
likely to be anti-Semitic than
their parents, but young
Blacks are more likely to be
anti-Semitic.

And while there have been
some improvements in the
general population, some
anti-Semitic attitudes are
becoming more popular. In
1964, 10 percent of non-Jews
thought Jews had too much
power. In 1981, that had risen
to 25 percent. In 1964, 39 per-
cent of non-Jews thought
American Jews were more
loyal to Israel than to the
United States. In 1981, that
rose to 48 percent.

"We live in uncertain
times," said Suall. "We can't
know if things will remain
good. All could come tum-
bling down. History has
taught us that over and over."

Jewish Women:
No More Stereotypes

y

ou've come a long way,
bubeleh.
Jewish.women aren't
what — or who — they used
to be. In fact, the changing
demographics of women, said
Gary Ibbin, is the "single
most radical change in the
Jewish community in the last
20 years."
Ibbin, a professor at the
Center for Modern Jewish
Studies at Brandeis Universi-
ty, spoke at a forum on "How
Different Will Women Be in
the Year 2000?" Using data
from 24 Jewish communities,
big and small, all across the
United States, Tobin laid out
the emerging profile of the
American Jewish woman.
One thing that hasn't
J
changed about Jewish
women, he said, is that they
are the most educated women
in the country. At least half
of all Jewish women have had
a college education, with 20
percent of them earning an
advanced degree. Those num-
bers are expected to rise over
the next 10 years.
What has "radically"
changed, said Tobin, is what
women are doing with their
education. Previously, most
Jewish women became social
workers, teachers or nurses.
Now, said Tobin, they're
becoming instead lawyers, ac-
countants and doctors. There
has also been a big shift into
managerial positions and
self-employment.
Fifty percent of Jewish
women now work for pay out-
side the home. The percen-
tage is even higher in Balti-
more where 75 percent of
Jewish women between the
ages of 35 and 44 work. aven-
ty years ago, only 31 percent
of Baltimore's Jewish women
worked.
But working doesn't mean
that Jewish women aren't

Gary Tobin

having children. Half of
American Jewish women
have jobs and a child under
five. But today's Jewish
woman usually has children
about 10 to 12 years later
than her mother did. Inter-
estingly, noted Tobin, Jewish
women today are having their
families at about the same
time as their grandmothers
did.
Most important, Tobin
said, while Jewish women are
getting married and having
their kids later, they are,get-
ting married and having kids.
"Eventually," he said "almost
all Jewish women get mar-
ried. And by the time they
reach 40, nearly all have had
one child and usually two."
This, said Tobin should
reassure those who worry
that no Jews will remain if
their present reproductive
rate continues. Noting that
Jewish women have always
had low fertility rates, Tobin
said that Jewish women to-
day are having children at
replacement levels.

