DIVORCE FOCUS is the last step. 111111111MININ Don't speculate. The emotional and financial benefits of knowing the facts are too important. Tug Of War Continued from preceding page AARAGON INVESTIGATION AGENCY Specialists in domestic investigation 25 W. Long Lake Rd., Suite 201, Bloomfield Hills 646-2090 • • a discreet and confidential approach • BE A WINNER, PLAY THE CLASSIFIEDS Call The Jewish News Today 354-6060 MIME • The watch more people are watching is Citizen. Bruce Weiss Jewelry has all the leading Citizens with all the pretty faces ...and the most adorable prices from 5 69.95. 26325 TWELVE MILE ROAD, SOUTHFIELD, MICHIGAN IN THE MAYFAIR SHOPS AT NORTHWEST ERN HIGHWAY 10:00-9:00 Mon.-Fri., 10:00-6:00 Sat., 11:00-4:00 Sun. (313) 353-1424 74 "Friday, -Jaiiiiin; 1 1987 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS aliyah was taboo at Jewish gatherings in the "affluent Diaspora." Answering a question on the conflict in Israel between reli- gious and secular extremists, Herzog said that American ohm could raise the level of democratic debate and tolerance in Israel. Calling the conflict "the most serious prob- lem Israel faces today," he added somewhat cryptically, "I would say that the source of many of these problems lies in the United States, in the American Jewish community . . . But I have to emphasize here again that many of the peripheral problems that we have, racist problems, extreme fanatical forms of Orthodoxy that really do not recognize the State of Israel, these are prob- lems that have come from the United States and are, inciden- tally to this day, funded from the United States." Also speaking at the opening session were Israel's Deputy Prime Minister David Levy and Leon Dulzin, chairman of the Jewish Agency and World Zionist Organization execu- tives. Levy, who spoke in Hebrew with simultaneous English translation, declared to fervent cheers that "the essence of Zionism is the return to Zion." He argued that the Jewish world is dividing into two camps, one in Israel ("the place where we shall build and be re- built"), the other in the Dias- pora. "Can we keep (Israel) alive if the greatest part of the Jewish people lives abroad?" he asked his listeners. Ours is the most privileged of generations, he said, for we are able to rebuild Zion. There- fore, he thundered, "the call to Jews all over the world, indeed the demand: Arise, make aliyah, come, and together we shall build what belongs to us." Dulzin recounted how the Zionist movement has "adopted to changes in the needs of the Jewish people," in- cluding the "Zionization" of the Jewish Agency. Only the Zionist movement, he asserted, can fight the trends of assimi- lation and low fertility among Jews. He described the ladder of Zionist commitment, with identification with the goals of Zionism as the lowest rung and aliyah and "Zionist fulfill- ment" as the highest. "Aliyah is the beginning of Zionism," he said, "not the end." If so, argued the aliyah ac- tivists, why is all the power in the AZF in the hands of middle-rung Zionists, while the top-rung Zionists, those who are planning to make aliyah, have no voice in Zionist decisionmaking? "The leadership has to be more than people who walk down Fifth Avenue in the Sa- lute to Israel parade," argued Gil Preuss, general secretary of Hamagshimim of Hashachar, Hadassah's Zionist youth movement. "I'm getting the same thing from the (non-Zionist Jewish) feder- ations as I'm getting from the Zionists," he charged. Aliyah activists decried their lack of separate repre- sentation in the WZO and what they believe is minimal AZF support of aliyah. "We're in a Catch-22 situa- tion," Preuss explained. "They say the aliyah budget is small because there isn't much aliyah, but aliyah would be greater if more was spent on it." The aliyah activists were "manipulated" and "used as symbols" during the Assembly, he argued. Concrete proposals by the activists were not given a serious hearing. A resolution that the AZF leadership be commited to aliyah and that one-third of the 152 -U.S. delegates to the up- "The UJA and JNF belong on the agenda of a Zionist conference. They are our main fund raising bodies." coming World Zionist Assem- bly be from the Federation of Tnuot Magshimot (Aliyah movements) was voted down by the resolutions committee before the Assembly opened. Another proposal, to estab- lish an emergency loan fund to allow potential olim with money troubles to make aliyah, and olim with out- standing debts to stay in Israel, received only "encourage- ment" rather than "commit- ment" from the AZF, Preuss charged. The AZA attempted unsuc- cessfully to reach a com- promise with the activists, ac- cording to AZF Executive Di- rector Karen Rubinstein. Re- garding representation, the ac- tivists "don't take advantage of the representation powers they do have," she said. Naam, the North American Aliyah Movement, for example, has five members on the national board. Fifteen members were invited to the convention, but only two showed up, she said. Rubinstein asserted that "there is an interest in (the AZF) leadership for better communication" with the ac- tivists. She stressed that this requires working within the system. The assembly was a beehive of activity, with events often occurring simultaneously. While Simcha Dinitz, Labor Party Knesset member, ad- dressed the main body of the Assembly on Israel's security situation, in a room directly be- low, Avraham Burg, an ad- visor to Foreign Minister Shi- mon Peres, held a heated dis- cussion with about 25 young activists. As the audience