LIFE IN ISRAEL CONTROL ELECTRONICS, INC 37450 ENTERPRISE COURT FARMINGTON HILLS, MI PHONE 553.3400 Systems for Business at Affordable Prices 1-1.1.1.11.1.161 2010111111 111.A\ ‘71 1 .1 • Complete Line of XT/AT/386 Systems • Choice of Monitors, Hard Drives • 19" CAD & Desk Top Publishing Monitors • Multiuser Systems: Zenix, Novell • Accounting Software-Consulting, Setup • Systems Repair & Upgrade 386-20MHZ From $ 2,400.00 286-10MHZ From $ 1,200.00 XT-10MHZ From $ 700.00 F... DESIGNS IN DECORATOR LAMINATES Martin F. Stein, national United Jewish Appeal chairman, joins Ethiopian students at the Hofim Youth Center for the blessing after meals. For High Quality Formica Always At A Great Discount Mental Anguish Is Continuing For Rescued Ethiopians Jews SPECIALIZING IN • Bars • Wall Units • Bedroom Groupings • Dining Rooms • Credenzas EDWARD SEROTTA Special to The Jewish News T ALSO SPECIALIZING • Woods • Glass • Marbles • Lucites IT DOESN'T HAVE TO COST A FORTUNE . . . ONLY LOOK LIKE IT! LCALL LOIS HARON 851-6989 NEED PHYSICAL THERAPY? DO YOU KNOW THAT YOU HAVE A CHOICE? If you are referred for physical therapy, you may receive this service at the location of your choice. A private practice physical therapist can offer you — • Prompt service — no waiting list • Individualized programs • Extended office hours • Reasonable charges For more information call 474-5516 23800 Orchard Lk. Rd. '- Suite 101 F Farmington Hills, MI Physical Therapy 48024.3488 armingt 44 FRIDAY, JANUARY 20, 1989 P.C. all, lanky and black, Uri Abraham, an Ethiopian Jew now liv- ing in Israel, remembers well his arrival in the Holy Land. "The first thing I saw was a man in uniform, just like the soldiers who shot Jews dead back in Ethiopia. Then someone took me by the arm, and said, `Uri, I want to show you something you've never seen before: a Jewish soldier.' And the soldier smiled, shook my hand and said, 'Welcome to Israel, welcome home. " The Jews of Ethiopia, persecuted by Marxists, their farms ruined by famine, began their quiet and treacherous exodus in 1980. After 8,000 had reached safe- ty in Israel in 1984, the Israeli government launched the top secret Operation Moses. Between November 1984 and March 1985, 7,000 were airlifted from the Sudan to Israel. But when the story broke in the press, an angry Sudanese government halted the rescue. It has not yet been allowed to resume. Approx- imately 10,000 Jews remain in Ethiopia. Of the 15,200 Ethiopian Jews in Israel, almost all have family still at home. The men- tal anguish is great, but Operation Moses is a story of remarkable progress. "The first thing we learn- ed," said Morton Dolinsky of the Jewish Agency's Im- migration and Absorption Department, "is whatever you thought you could take for granted, you couldn't. These are people who had never seen a door, a faucet. You see, when you tell so- meone class begins at 8:00, you have to tell them how to use a clock. But are they ever fast learners . ." Although the majority of Ethiopian men had never even seen a metal tool before, the Amishav Agency set up technical schools to teach plumbing, woodworking, and machine work, placing 2,000 men in factory jobs, and scores of women in nursing. Young men are now serving in the Israeli Army. Many have already been absorbed into the general society. Hofim, an educational center for Ethiopian children, funded largely by the UJA/Federation Campaign, was established with everything from kinder- gartens to computers. Rabbi Nachum Cohen, its director, says, "We have 94 boys in their eary 20s. Our goal is simple — to provide 2,000 years of technical train- ing and make them job- marketable in 24 months. "And they work harder than anyone I've ever seen. They know what they've left behind. "And we know Operation Moses is, for us, ongoing. They have great pride, these Ethiopians, but there will be pain for years to come." UJA Press Service Boom Will Continue In Posthumous Aliya NECHEMIA MEYERS Special to The Jewish News W hile ordinary aliya from the United States remains in the doldrums, posthumous aliya is on the upswing. Over 1,000 Americans have been buried in the Eretz Hahayim (Land of Life) cemetery, which was special- ly created for them several years ago at Beit Shemesh, some 12 miles southeast of Jerusalem. Another 10,000 Eretz Hahayim burial plots have already been sold to in- dividuals as well as to organizations (like American Agudat Israel and the Yeshiva University Alumni Association). So it is reasonable to assume that posthumous aliya will con- tinue to boom. Burial in the Holy Land, and particularly in the