Go v Victor Slepak and Ida Nudel as possibilities. "The purpose will be to make us forget our struggle as a whole. But we must work not just for the well known few but for all of our brothers and sisters." Shcharansky says that Glasnost has included positive reforms and a will- ingness to establish a new relationship with the United States. But it has not meant open borders or mass emigration. Gorbachev is a realist, Shcharansky says, who recog- nizes the importance of having Western technological assistance. That is why Soviet Jewish emigration is a real possibility — if Gorbachev becomes convinced that the United States will only coop- erate on the condition that the emigration gates are opened wide. Shcharansky's plan is to first mobilize American Jewry, who will in turn put political pressure on their political representatives and mobilize non-Jews. This will foster positive media attention, culminating in what Shcharansky envisions as a huge protest rally in Washington on the eve of the Gorbachev visit. How many people does he hope to draw to the rally? "Last year, I spoke of 400,000 people — one for each Jew in the Soviet Union who took the first step to emigrate. But I was criticized by Jewish leaders who told me that was much too high a number and that it is dangerous to speak of such numbers and then not come close. • "The professionals analyzed why it could not be," he said in an interview. "The cold weather in November, the difficulty in bringing to Washington so many people. But I told them it is colder in a cell, and that Jews in Mos- cow would walk to Jerusalem if they had the opportunity. I told the Jewish leaders that their job is not to analyze. Their job is to do. Otherwise they should retire. Their job is to make the impossible possi- ble." After all, that is what Natan Shcharansky has done. He has not only been one of the leaders of a movement that rekindled the - spark of Judaism and Zionism in a land where both were forbidden, but he endured, alone, and managed to achieve his dream of living in Israel with his family. In doing so, he has become a hero, and a symbol of Jewish resistance. But he is not comfortable with either image. When told that he is a hero to Ameri- cans, he slyly notes that Oliver North was also such a symbol. And he adds that he has struggled, since his release 18 months ago, "to be a human being, not a symbol. It's unfortunate that people treat me as a symbol." What is clear is that Shcharansky can draw, and excite, a crowd, and is able to transcend the intra-Jewish squabbling that has become increasingly prevalent. During his whirlwind visit to Baltimore, he spoke to a crowd estimated at 5,000. Standing on a box on the makeshift podium to reach the cluster of microphones, Shcharansky smiled as the crowd cheered and waved placards proclaiming "Let our people go." He had just learned of the release of friends, and long-time dissidents, Yosef Begun and Victor Brailovsky, but warned the crowd not to be satisfied until hundreds of thousands of Soviet Jews are released. Addressing the audience in English in a heavy accent, but with an excellent command of the language, he said the Soviet Union has never been as successful as now in "deceiving us" about conditions within the USSR, where, he said, anti-Semitism has grown worse. "Before," he said, "our main enemy was the KGB and, inside of us, despair. But today that de- spair has been replaced by complacency." He urged the crowd to work toward the success of the planned mass rally in Washington to greet Gorbachev's arrival. After an hour-long private interview with The Jewish News, Shcharansky met for an hour in private with Jerold Hoffberger, chairman of the board of governors of the Jewish Agency for Israel, and Shoshana Cardin, president of the Council of Jewish Federations. Shcharansky has often been critical of the Jewish establishment in general, and the Jewish Agency in particular regarding the absorption process in Israel. In his next address, to major United Jewish Appeal contributors and local Soviet Jewry activists, he focused on his main themes. Responding to questions, Shcharansky estimated that if all Soviet Jews were allowed to leave, "there would be a snowball effect" and that at least half of the two million Jews would emigrate. And how many would go to Israel? 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