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January 29, 1988 - Image 22

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1988-01-29

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

I ANALYSIS I

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YAMS A L'ORANGE

Makes 8 Servings

6 cups sliced cooked yams
2 medium oranges,
pared &
sli

1/ 4

3 tablespoons

FLEISCHMANN'S

Sweet
cup firmly packed
brown
Unsalted Margarine.
sugar
14 cup
chopped walnuts
16 cup orange
juice
Orange slices for
garnish,
optional
Arrange halt
of yams in greased
111 2 quart casserole. Top
of orange slices; sprinkle with 2 tableso
wit h half
layers. Combine orange
pons brown su gar
j uice and
lure. Sprinkle
Repeat
with waln uts
margarine; pour over yam mix-
Bake at 325°F for 50 to 60 minutes, spooning orae
yams occasionally,
until
over
orange slices, if desired. yams are done. Garnish with sauce
additional

©Kosher

For a truly unusual side dish. try this delicious
recipe for Yams a L'Orange. It's made with
Fleischmann's., Margarine so it not only tastes
great, it's good for you. ReischmannS Margarine
is made from 100% corn oil, has 0% cholesterol
and is low in saturated fat.
One bite and you'll agree: There's never been

a better time for the great taste of Fleischmann's.

FLEISCHMANN'S GIVES EVERY MEAL
A HOLIDAY FLAVOR.

22

FRIDAY, JANUARY 29, 1988

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Israelis Tired

Continued from Page 1

one which violates every prin-
ciple of human decency and
betrays the Zionist dream."
The policy, he warned,
threatened to erode support
among Israel's friends in the
United States, who were
dismayed by what they saw
on television and read in their
newspapers.
Similar cries of anguish
have come from from Bert
Gold, executive director of the
American Jewish Committee;
from Ruth Popkin, president
of Hadassah; and from Jacob
Stein, a former chairman of
the Conference of Presidents
of Major Jewish Organi-
zations.
Most alarming of all, how-
ever, was a report on Israel
Radio at the weekend that
Morris Abram, current chair-
man of the Conference of
Presidents, had called Rabin
at the weekend with a stark
warning.
Abram, according to Israel
Radio, would not presume to
tell the Defense Minister how
to conduct himself, but at the
same time, American Jewish
communities would no longer
be able to defend Israeli
policy.
Olmert, a member of the
powerful Knesset Foreign Af-
fairs and Defense Committee,
undoubtedly speaks for at
least half of Israel's national
unity government — and a
good many Israelis — when
he reacts strongly to the pro-
tests emanating from Ameri-
can Jewish leaders.
"I don't like what's going
on, but I certainly don't like
shooting people," he says.
"I'm not happy with some of
the Defense Minister's state-
ments and I'm not happy
about innocent people getting
hurt, but when you are
fighting against a mob that
adopts brutal tactics, inno-
cent people sometimes do get
hurt.
"Look, the Americans tell
us what to do — they tell us
to do this and they tell us to
do that, but I'm not so sure
they have the answers. If they
are so smart, why don't their
solutions work in Central
America?
"And don't forget, the
Americans did not hesitate to
bomb Tripoli when they felt
their vital interests were at
risk. How many innocent ci-
vilians were killed in that
operation?
"Perhaps the Americans
should remember how they
handled student riots in the
60s, how they killed students
on the campus."
Olmert concedes that the
"sight of soldiers using force
against civilians upsets a lot
of people and generates con-
cern and protest."

Ehud Olmert:
Look at the U.S. record.

"We are in a no-win situa-
tion with regard to public
opinion and public relations,"
he says, "but I don't be-
lieve that Israel has a strik-
ingly different option at the
moment.
"What can we do when we
face violent demonstrations?
Here and there mistakes
are made, and I regret them.
But what do they expect
Israel to do?"
Prof. Daniel Elazar, the
American-born director of the
Jerusalem Center for Public
Affairs, "started to see red"
because he believes that the
morality of the American
Jewish leaders is flawed: "I
believe they identify chiefly
with what they perceive as
their own self-interest.
"Had they not dumped on
us over every other incident
my reaction would not be so
strong, but they treat Israel
as a pet dog that has soiled
the carpet — and how dare
we!
"Israel is not a summer
camp for American Jews," he
says. "We have to survive
here and I find the preaching
of American Jewish leaders,
whose sons are not on the
line, to be self-serving and
not, in any case, represen-
tative of grass-roots American
Jewish opinion."
Harry Wall, director of the
Israel office of the Anti-
Defamation League, deals
daily with the fall-out from
the past six weeks of unrest in
the territories.
Part of his job is to provide
visiting U.S. congressmen,
non-Jewish community lead-
ers, law-enforcement officials
and others with background
to the conflict and to present
a picture of an Israel "that is
not under siege, where life
goes on normally."
But he admits that Rabin's
"ill-considered statements —
let alone the policy itself —
has made our lives and our
work very, very difficult."
Nevertheless, while Amer-
ican Jews are clearly dis-
tressed by the policy, he
believes "they are not about
to take to the bunkers."

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