Michigan's Jewish Federations Study Joint Efforts, State Office ALAN HITSKY Associate Editor E Soviet Jewish kindergartners in the JDC-sponsored school in Ladispoli. Humor Is Helping Waiting Soviet Jews RICHARD PEARL Staff Writer A bit of black humor, Soviet-Jewish style, is making the rounds at the transmigration facility in Ladispoli, Italy. With most of the 7,000 Soviet Jews there hoping for refugee status in America but facing increasing doubt about receiving it, the emigrants have taken to calling themselves "refuseniks — but now they say they're American refuseniks," said Rabbi Norman Roman of Temple Kol Ami in West Bloomfield. "They told us, 'You were able to intervene (with the Soviet authorities) and get us out of Russia; now get us in- to the United States,' " Rabbi Roman said after represen- ting Detroit on last month's annual United Jewish Appeal Rabbinic Cabinet Mission to Europe and Israel. More than 90 percent of the Soviet Jews choose not to go to Israel when they reach Vienna, Austria, the first stop outside of the Soviet Union, even though they leave on Israeli visas. In contrast, said the rabbi, 100 percent of the Romanian Jews leaving their country choose to go to Israel. The rabbi expressed disen- chantment following the visit to Ladispoli, where most of the Soviet Jews the rabbis met exhibited ignorance on Jewish matters while show- ing keen interest in the material. "They tell you they want to go to the West and make a lot of money like your ancestors," he said. Due to the Soviet Union's anti-Semitism, these Jews "don't know what being Jewish is," Rabbi Roman said. A number did not recognize former refusenik Natan Sharansky's name, he said. "And you can't look them in the eye and say, 'Why don't you go to Israel?' I did and one of them looked me back with, `Why don't you go? Who are you to tell me to go to Israel? Why aren't you there?' "For 20 years I've been in- volved in the Soviet Jewry worked to free them so they could be Jews, not so they could come here and be millionaires. movement," Rabbi Roman said. "I worked to free them so they could be Jews, not so they could come here and be millionaires." But, he said, "They're Jews and they need help. Helping them is not an issue; there's no superior-inferior relation- ship here. We are in a position to help, so we will help them. We hope we can help them enough that they can repay the loans, but we're still going to help them. "We'll talk about what we should have done later," he said. "We should have en- couraged aliyah." He also urg- ed direct flights for Soviet Jews to Israel, bypassing Austria and Italy. "Most, most, most want to go to the United States," he said. Some have relatives in Canada, Australia and New Continued on Page 14 xploratory meetings in Detroit may lead to co- operative efforts bet- ween Jewish communities throughout Michigan. The executive directors of the Flint and Ann Arbor Jewish federations met this week with Martin Kraar, ex- ecutive vice president of the Jewish Welfare Federation of Detroit. Next week, leaders of the three organizations will meet with Joseph Cohen, director of the community services department of the Council of Jewish Federations. One proposal before the Jewish communities is the opening of a government af- fairs office in Lansing to serve as a lobby with the state government and legislature. The idea was discussed Tues- day at a meeting between Kraar, Earl Jordan of Ann Arbor, representatives from Flint and Dr. Steven Nasatir of Chicago. The Chicago federation has maintained a similar office for several years. Dr. Conrad Giles, president of the Detroit federation, said the cooperation idea goes beyond a Lansing office. "We want to create a network with all the Jewish communities. All will be hooked in, but they will take out as much or as little as they need," he said. Dr. Giles raised the issue of collaboration between Michigan's Jewish com- munities at the Detroit federation's annual meeting last September. Earl Jordan of Ann Arbor said it would be "foolish for us not to utilize expertise that is available" A national move- ment within the Council of Jewish Federations advocates a "continental approach" to solving Jewish problems, Jor- dan said. "Maybe we can af- ford things on a regional basis that we could not do locally. And there are gifted profes- sionals here that can help us?' The continental approach is coming, said Kraar. "The demarcation of local com- munities is becoming less and less marked" in terms of sharing speakers, resources and expertise. David Nussbaum, executive director of the Flint federa- tion, said he looks forward to cooperative efforts "as peers and equals. We view it as a partnership?' He said models for federation cooperative ef- forts exist in Illinois, Ohio, New York, California and other states. ❑ ROUND UP JFS Names New Director Alan D. Goodman has been named executive director of the Jewish Family Service. He replaces Sam Lerner, JFS executive director for the past 26 years, who is retiring. Goodman begins his new posi- tion May 1. Since 1982, Goodman has served as executive director of Jewish Family Services in Albany, N.Y. He also has worked as executive director of the Johannesburg Associa- tion for the Aged in South Africa, as senior staff associate in community organization and social plan- ning for the Syracuse, N.Y., Jewish Federation, and as a field psychologist with the Israeli army. Goodman holds a master's degree in social work from Yeshiva University and a bachelor's degree in psychology and sociology from Rhodes University in Grahamstown, South Africa. Ask Anything But My Age New York (JTA) — A worldwide Jewish population survey to be conducted over the next few years will in- vestigate age distribution, migration patterns, family size, economic status, occupa- tions, Jewish affiliation and activity, extent of Jewish education and patterns of in- termarriage and assimilation in Jewish communities. Demographic experts from throughout the world recent- ly met as part of the Interna- tional Scientific Advisory Committee of the World Jewish Population Survey. The committee was created in the wake of a resolution adopted by the 1987 World Conference on Jewish Popula- tion and endorsed by the World Zionist Congress. The American survey of some 2,500 households is set for May and June 1990. 100 Turn Out For Blood Tests More than 100 persons turned out Sunday to have blood samples taken for the national bone marrow registry in the United States and the Hadassah Hospital- Hebrew University registry in Israel. "In respect that we've had four or five blood testing drives in this community in the last six months, I think we did very well," said Susan Yorke, president of Greater Detroit Hadassah. Some were turned away, Yorke said, because they were over the age limit, had cancer radiation treatments in the past or had heart disease. Many contributed funds to help defray the $50 cost per test. JLC Sponsors Symbolic Fast The Jewish Labor Commit- tee is sponsoring a symbolic fast on Monday to show solidarity with farm workers boycotting the sale of grapes to protest working conditions and pay. The JLC's Selma Goode noted that Monday is also the Fast of Esther, and recalled the Isaiah 58 xerse, "Esther took it upon herself to help the oppressed to go free." Syrian Jews Focus Of Appeal — (JTA) Toronto Synagogues throughout Canada will offer prayers Saturday for the rights of 4,500 Jews to leave Syria. Saturday marks Shabbat Zachor, the Sabbath of Remembrance, which derives its name from the Torah por- tion recalling the Amalekites, the tribe that sought to destroy the Israelites in the desert. The day also is the 15th an- niversary of the murder of four Jewish women from Damascus, who were killed in 1974 trying to escape into Lebanon. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 5