LIFE IN ISRAEL New Style Kosher Wines for Your Holiday Signs Of Pesach Continued from preceding page IBAITENUale LAM RUSC_O BORENSTEIN'S Headquarters For All Your Passover Needs Greenfield Road North of 10 Mile, Oak Park Open All Day Sunday 967-3920 Zadika, a nursery school assistant from Castel just out- side Jerusalem, described how her elderly father col- lects pure water from the spring at the nearby village of Motza, kneads his own dough and bakes the family's matzot on a tin plate over an open fire in his garden. These Iraqi matzot are large, round and flat, but soft like pita. Zadika's father also collects his own bitter herbs for the seder from the Jerusalem hills, while her mother roasts and pounds sesame seeds and mixes them with "silan," a date honey, for the sweet charoset symbolizing the mortar used by the Jewish slaves in Egypt. Different communities have different traditions concern- ing which foods they may eat on Pesach. Whereas Zadika's family eats rice that her mother has carefully cleaned three times over, other communities shun it. Zadika's favorite seder dish is "kubeh" — torpedo-shaped fried shells made of ground rice stuffed with minced meat. During the rest of the year, she makes kubeh of burghul dough, which is for- bidden on Pesach. Shoshi, a Jerusalem housewife from a Moroccan family, eats no rice on Pesach, but does use pulses, whereas many Ashkenazis use neither rice nor pulse vegetables because of the European rab- binical injunction against us- ing any food that swells. Most of those Ashkenazis could not imagine a Pesach without kneidlach — balls made of finely ground matzah meal and eggs boiled in chicken soup. Yet there are many ultra- Orthodox families who use no matzah meal and are even careful not to let their matzot get wet, for fear of creating leaven from the water and particles of unbaked dough in the cracks of the matzah. Yeshayahu's wife makes her Pesach cakes for their seven Some ultra- Orthodox Jews prefer to bake their own matzot, trusting only themselves to ensure the flat loaves will be perfectly kosher for Pesach. children out of potato flour and uses no processed foods at all on the festival. And potatoes are the Pesach staple in Mea Shearim, the center of ultra-Orthodoxy in Jerusalem. Already a month before the holiday, scores of little boys with earlocks and black stockings are to be seen trundling barrows full of potatoes through the alleyways from the Bet Yisrael market back to their large families. Well over 90 percent of Israelis-, according to a Bar Il- an University survey some years ago, celebrate seder night, and with all the diverse customs and tradi- tions, it is surely the date of the most varied culinary in- terest in the whole of the Jewish calendar. ❑ Netanyahu Predicting Tremendous Exodus DIAMOND BAKERY WISHES ALL THEIR FRIENDS AND CUSTOMERS A MOST HAPPY and HEALTHY PASSOVER 6722 Orchard Lake Rd. West Bloomfield - 38 FRIDAY, APRIL 14, 1989 DAVID A. LEAVER Professional Video Services 626-2212j Jerusalem (JTA) — Hun- dreds of thousands of Soviet Jews are on the verge of being allowed to emigrate, accor- ding to Deputy Foreign Minister Binyamin Netanyahu. Speaking at the closing ses- sion of the Jewish National Fund's fourth national assembly, • Netanyahu said that Moscow is about to change its policy on emigration. The Jerusalem Post Friday confirmed that the source of Netanyahu's information is a secret intelligence report delivered to the Foreign Ministry. Netanyahu said the Soviet decision to release so many Jews is based on its desire to change it's image. "It's going to do so, not because of the love of Zion, and it's not going to let out Jews exclusively. "It's going to let out Soviet citizens basically under the assumption of, why should it carry the monkey on its back? Why should it be accused of being a prison?" The deputy foreign minister said that only two countries in the world will open its gates: "Germany, which will accept all Germans and repatriate them, and Israel. Now that's a fact of life." Netanyahu told the JNF audience that it must do all that it can to help absorb the expected influx of Jews. "We're going to have to change our priorities." he said. "Our effort so far has been to open the gates. Our