Tnr.777. 7 OW 7 • TVvo Elections ALAN HITSKY Associate Editor INI ew Orleans — The No- vember elections in the United States and Is- rael were a major topic for Council of Jewish Federation delegates. Tom Dine called the elections "a moment of change" because of a new U.S. administration, a new Congress, a new government in Israel and "a new campagn by the PLO aimed at the United States." Dine, executive director of the American Israel Public Affairs Com- mittee, predicted Jim Baker will be one of the most infleuntial secretaries of state in recent history. He said- foreign aid and cooperation with Israel will remain high, but he also expects the Bush administration to propose a major arms sale to Saudi Arabia. The election boosted already strong support for Israel in the House and Senate, Dine said, and support for Israel over the Arabs is running at 4:1 in the national polls. But the American Jewish community must remain vigilant because of arms pro- posals and local initiatives supporting the Arab cause. Israel Ambassador to the United States Moshe Arad said the Israeli election displayed "a popular consen- sus to continue the search for peace in the Middle East and a healthy distrust of the Palestinian leader- ship?' The new Israeli government pri- orities will be to reduce violence in the territories and strengthen cooperation between Israel and the United States. Voting Like The Unemployed Using statistics from exit polls on Nov. 8 and CBS/New York Times poll data, Dr. Larry Sternberg of Brandeis University concluded that American Jews vote more like the unemployed and Hispanics than any other white group in the United States. Israel, he said, is the bottom-line interest of American Jews, but both the Republican and Democratic par- ties offered strong support for Israel. "Despite the Jesse Jackson factor, Jews still voted Democratic because Jews are more liberal than the rest of the nation on social issues?' Sternberg said. His data shows: • 75 percent of Jews support social welfare programs. Shoshana Cardin Mandell Berman Max Fisher • 88 percent support homosexual rights. • 81 percent support abortion. • 90 percent support gun control. • 70 percent support affirmative action. "The Jews are at home in the Democratic Party?' Sternberg said. "We have to leave home to vote Republican. Just as the Democrats are held hostage by forces on the left, the Republicans are held hostage by forces on the right." On the same panel, Dr. Gilbert Kahn of the Synagogue Council of America described the SCA's Jewish voter registration drive in Chicago, Los Angeles, Boston, San Francisco and Philadelphia (New York has its own effort). "Jews vote 20-25 percent more than the national norm?' Kahn said, "but overall the numbers are dropping." The registration drive was started after a 1983 study in south Florida showed declining registration among permanent residents. In Dade Coun- ty, 70 percent of eligible Jews were registered to vote in 1983. In Broward, the figure was 56 percent, and in Palm Beach County 36 percent. 75 percent of American Jews do not believe anti-Semitism is a serious problem. "We perceive anti-Semitism is high, and blame blacks and fun- damentalist Protestants," he said. "We believe conservatives and Republicans are more anti-Semitic than liberals and Democrats. And we have a strong disposition to see our enemies as anti-Semitic?' Cohen said studies in the last 20 years show that blacks are 41 percent favorable to Jews and 9 percent un- favorable. Catholics are 45 percent favorable and 11 percent unfavorable. Protestants are 45 percent favorable and 6 percent unfavorable. Cohen's perception is that the more Jews are involved in Jewish organizations, the more inclined they are to perceive anti-Semitism. He said anti-Semitism is defined loosely by Jews as any antagonism, when its true definition is an irra- tional and illogical hatred. Cohen met with a storm of criti- cism during the question period following his talk. Delegates de- scribed anti-Semitic incidents in their hometowns. "How much do these individual events affect us?" Cohen responded. "Do you believe there is the possibili- ty of a Holocaust in America?" The audience responded yes, but Cohen said this is not possible because, unlike Nazi Germany, anti-Semitism is not institutionalized in the United States. "I am not saying there is no anti- Semitism, but it is not the threat you are making it out to be," Cohen said. "Which hurts you more: Jewish children who do not know Jewish history or gentiles who do not know the beauty of the Jewish people?" The intifada, fundmentalists, Jesse Jackson and Middle East developments have made American Jews nervous, Cohen said. The same thing happened in 1981 during the Lebanon war, giving Jews the percep- tion of increased anti-Semitism. Ted Comet of the CJF took the middle ground, saying that anti- Semitism in the United States did not increase despite the convictions of Ivan Boesky and other Jewish finan- ciers, the linkage of Israel to the Iran-Contra scandal, and the Jona- than Pollard spy case. Comet said anti-Semitism must be counteracted, that organizations must listen to their grassroots, but that a Holocaust was not coming in the United States. Unpopular Look At Anti-Semitism Jewish perceptions of anti- Semitism are largely inaccurate, acor- ding to Queens College political scien- tist Dr. Steven Cohen. Contending that Jews and Jewish organizations spend more money than necessary to fight anti-Semitism, Cohen said recent surveys show that Berman Looks At The Future At the CJF General Assembly's opening plenary, President Mandell Berman of Detroit compared the growth of Jewish federations in North America over the last 20 years to pro- jections for the next 20. Berman said the federations ex- hibited a "new kind of consciousness" 20 years ago after Israel's Six-Day War and the 1967 riots in the United States. The federations moved from solely providing human services to helping maintain and enhance the Jewish community. And the Soviet Jewry movement began. Twenty years later, Jewish federa- tions have moved from a $360 million THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 43