Jewish Groups Take Sides On The Abortion Question MIKE ROSENBAUM T Special to The Jewish News Taba, the disputed beachfront area south of Eilat, was awarded to Egypt by an international arbitration panel earlier this month. While Israel has agreed to abide by the ruling, the Likud and Labor parties are accusing each other of contributing to Taba's loss. Yesh G'vul Activist Seeks 'Extraordinary Response' DAVID HOLZEL Staff Writer ne year ago, there were only a half-dozen Israeli groups dedicated to withdrawl from the administered territories. Now there are 60, according to Peretz Kidron, a leader of one of those groups, Yesh G'vul. The reason for the mushrooming of Israel's "peace movement" is the 10-month-old intifada, or Palestinian uprising, he said. Yesh G'vul — mean- ing both "There is a Limit" and "There is a Border" — was formed in the early 1980s by soldiers who refus- ed to serve in the Lebanon War. Today, the organization en- courages Israelis to oppose the oc- cupation of the Palestinians in the territories by refusing to serve in the territories. "We are not pacifists. We are in and of the military," Kidron said of Yesh G'vul members and supporters. Kidron was in Detroit this week as part of a nationwide tour to raise money for Yesh G'vul's support fund. The fund aids the families of those who have gone to jail for their refusal to follow orders. His visit here was Continued on Page 22 . i he volatile abortion issue is on the Michigan ballot next month, and Jewish groups are taking an almost-unanimous position against Proposal A, which would end the use of state funds to pay for Medicaid abortions. Many Jewish secular and religious groups are against the pro- posed ban. No group has voiced com- plete support for it. While the Or- thodox view is still anti-abortion, the Detroit Council of Orthodox Rabbis calls the proposed law too vague for it to support. Some individual Or- thodox rabbis do support it. There are, undoubtedly, a variety of opinions among individual Jews. One confusing aspect of the ballot issue is what exactly a yes or no vote means. Those who oppose the use of Medicaid funds for abortions must vote yes. Those who believe that Medicaid funds should be available for abortions should vote no. The issue of funding Medicaid abortions has reached the desk of Governor James Blanchard and his predecessor, Governor William Milliken, many times since federal funds for Medicaid abortions were cut off about 10 years ago. by the Hyde Ammendment. Both Republican Milliken and Democrat Blanchard vetoed every bill which would have ended state funding for Medicaid abortions. Anti-abortion groups used a peti- tion drive to pass Public Act 59. It pro- hibits the use of tax funds to pay for I abortions of persons receiving public assistance, unless necessary to save the life of the mother. Pro-abortion groups, led by the newly-formed People's Campaign for Choice (PCC), counter-petitioned. They used the referendum procedure to put the issue on the November ballot. Major Jewish groups opposed to Proposition A are working under the umbrella of the PCC. They include the American Jewish Congress, the National Council of Jewish Women and the Jewish Community Council. The Religious Coalition for Abortion Rights, a multi-religious group, is also part of the PCC. It includes the NCJW, the Union of American Hebrew Congregations, the Central Conference of American Rabbis, the National Federation of Temple Sisterhoods, the United Synagogues of America, the Reconstructionists, Na'amat and B'nai B'rith Women. Those who favor Medicaid fun- ding for abortions say the vote is not a referendum on the abortion issue. Rather, they see the possibility that poor women will economically lose their legal right to an abortion. Miriam Schey says the Jewish Community Council has a well- established "pro choice" position on abortion. "In recent years," she adds, `_`we've taken a position in favor of con- tinued Medicaid funding. The issue as we see it in this particular ballot question is not even a pro-choice or not pro-choice, but basically a fairness issue, in that, for women who have the means to be able to afford to make the choice, that choice is already available and has been since 1973, Continued on Page 20 ROUND UP Two Facing Jail Sentence Sentencing is expected in six-to-eight weeks for two Oak Park men who plead guilty to harassing an at- torney for Sinai Hospital in violation of court orders. The two face up to five years in prison and a $250,000 fine. David Nerenberg and David Cohen will be sentenced after an investigation by the Federal District court proba- tion department. The two men admitted that they rammed the door of the garage at the Bloomfield Hills home of attorney I.W. Winsten on several occasions, slashed his car tires and threw a rock through a window. Winsten, of the Honigman, Miller, Schwartz and Cohn law firm, was defending Sinai Hospital in a law suit brought by Nerenberg in 1986. Nerenberg taught at • Akiva Day School during the teachers strike in 1984-1985. After he was not retained by Akiva, he purchased Lincoln Kosher Meats in Lincoln Center. The following sum- mer he accused Sinai, the Council of Orthodox Rabbis and the Kollel Institute of conspiring to deny him a con- tract to sell kosher meat to the hospital, claiming he was being discriminated against because he was a Lubavitcher. Nerenberg closed his shop several months after filing the suit. He had owned the store for less than a year. Cohen worked for Nerenberg in the store. The Council of Orthodox Rabbis paid Nerenberg $5,000 to settle the case, and the Kollel paid a $1,000 set- tlement. But a federal judge dismissed Nerenberg's $1 million suit against Sinai. Nerenberg used the title of rabbi, but court records show- ed that he could not provide proof that he had been ordained. PLO Moving To Name State Jerusalem (JTA) — Leaders of the various Palestine Liberation Organization fac- tions have agreed unanimous- ly to declare an independent Palestinian state, according to reports in Israel. The decision was adopted over the weekend during a three-day meeting of the PLO leadership in Tunis. It was reported by Salah Khalaf, a senior PLO official popularly known as Abu Iyad. The unified command of the Palestinian uprising in the administered territories issued a statement Sunday urging the Palestine National Council to declare an in- dependent state. "Communi- que No. 27" suggested that such a state be put under in- ternational auspices for the present. According to Khalaf, the PNC will convene to act on the matter before the Israeli elections on Nov. 1. Close aides to Yassir Arafat have endorsed the idea, but the PLO chairman himself has appeared unwilling to make such a move without achieving a consensus among the terrorist organization's rival factions. 65 AIDS Cases In Israel Geneva (JTA) — Israel has confirmed 65 cases of AIDS, according to the latest survey of the spread of the disease through the first six months of 1988. The total number of cases worldwide at the end of that period was put at 119,818. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 5