ANN ARBOR] Reaching Out Ann Arbor takes up the cause of Central America LINDA BENSON Special to The Jewish News entral America seems to be on everyone's mind in Ann Arbor. The city is twinned with Juigalpa, Nicara- gua. In 1986, it sent a delegation in- cluding Mayor Ed Pierce and State Rep. Perry Bullard to Juigalpa and Ann Arborites later raised money to provide the town with a garbage truck. And while Ann Arbor is on record as supporting humanitarian aid for Nicaraguans, whose Sandinista government the United States seeks to overthrow, some of the city's Jews are trying to help another segment of the troubled region: refugees from the United States' Central American allies. Temple Beth Emeth's Rabbi Robert Levy took up the cause of persecuted dissidents in friendly countries after attending "A Con- sultation of Conscience," a 1985 sym- posium sponsored by the Reform movement's Union of American Hebrew Congregations. His subsequent efforts bore fruit in 1987. Mario Vasquez, a Honduran Catholic adopted by the temple, was brought to Ann Arbor and granted legal asylum. Vasquez's family join- ed him earlier this year. When American Jews pursue this sort of humanitarian work, are Jews in distress left wanting? Why is Tem- ple Beth Emeth the only Jewish con- gregation in Michigan to work on behalf of Central American refugees? Those escaping Soviet client states such as Nicaragua and Cuba are routinely granted asylum in the United States. Refugees from friend- ly Honduras, Costa Rica, Panama, El Salvador and Guatemala — some with abysmal human rights records — are not. Rabbi Levy rails at what he calls the politicization of the U.S. Im- migration and Naturalization Service. "Here were honest-to-God refu- gees, leaving their countries because of fear, political harassment and in- timidation, and we were not accepting them because their governments are considered friends and allies." Rabbi Levy's fervor was con- tagious. His congregation followed his lead and joined the Sanctuary move- ment. Sanctuary aims to provide a haven for Central American refugees, often breaking U.S. law in the process. Rabbi Levy stresses that Ann Arbor Sanctuary activities stay within the law. In 1986, Rabbi Levy enlisted the support of the Ann Arbor New Jew- ish Agenda and St. Claire's Church, which shares a build- ing with Temple Beth Emeth. Nationally, 70 Jewish organi- zations have joined Sanctuary. Some Sanctuary members have followed their cause to its moral and emotional lim- its, straying beyond the law. Milwaukee's Temple Emanu- el was threatened with a law- suit by the INS for acting as an accomplice in defying immigration procedures. Other groups are con- tent with making politi- cal statements. The na- tional New Jewish Agen- da for example, supports the right of self-deter- mination for all Latin American countries, in- cluding Nicaragua. For a refugee to be granted political asylum in the United States, INS officials must determine that he has a "well-founded fear of persecu- tion" in his homeland. The INS places a high burden of proof upon these from friendly nations.. Statistics sup- port this conclusion. Since Sanctuary was formed in 1981, 800,000 refugees from friendly countries have sought asylum in the United States. Only 3 percent have been granted asylum. Rabbi Levy cites Jewish history as his rationale for making Sanctuary his primary cause. "As Jews, we have a specific responsibility to help refugees because we have been refugees throughout history." The rabbi says his congregation's Sanctuary activities do not detract from work on behalf of Jewish issues like Ethiopian and Soviet Jewry. Jewish support of non-Jewish Central Americans "does not dilute support of other Jewish issues;' adds Glen Stein of the UHAC's Religious Action Center. He cites the 200,000 persons who rallied in Washington, D.C., last December for Soviet Jewry. Some observers note that Sanc- tuary, with its non-sectarian appeal, is the perfect cause for a Jewish con- gregation which shares space with a church in a town with liberal-to-leftist leanings. Other Detroit-area congregations have been lukewarm to Sanctuary. "Even though Detroit is a port-of- entry city, Sanctuary has not semed to catch on here," says Rabbi Lane Steinger of Temple Emanu-El in Oak Park. "Our social action committee felt the movement dealt with matters of legal jeopardy rather than just con- science and did not wish to become in- volved." "Some congregations are leery of supporting politics that contradict the Reagan administration," says Rabbi Ernst Conrad of Temple Kol Ami in West Bloomfield. "After all, the ad- ministration has been so supportive of Israel." And, Rabbi Conrad adds, "be- coming accomplices in illegal ac- tivities is very serious." "What most groups do to help Some Sanctuary members have followed their cause to its limits, straying beyond the law. Neil Beckman these refugees is legal," Glen Stein counters. There are three main illegal activi- ties, he says: providing per- manent residence to an alien in a manner that would avoid his detection by au- thorities; providing transpor- tation to avoid detection; and providing employment to some- one of illegal and undocu- mented status. "When we create a climate that supports all refugees fleeing persecu- tion, it helps Jews;' argues Stein. "There is a growing awareness I see around the country. Jewish values kick in and the only normal instinct is to be of service?' THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 73