PURELY COMMENTARY The Serious Problem Created For Aliyah PHILIP SLOMOVITZ Editor Emeritus M ajor in obligations toward fulfillment of the Zionist pledge to Israel is Aliyah — pioneering into the Jewish homeland as settlers. Aliyah has suffered immense- ly in recent times. Even the hope for a very large migration of Jews from Russia into Israel has faded. The latest figures are exemplary. The National Council on Soviet Jewry announces that Jewish emigrants from Russia numbered 4,240 in March. The new emigrants leaving the USSR with Israeli visas continue to prefer settlement in the United States. In March, 10.9 percent went to Israel. In Februray, 12.7 percent. In January, it was 7.3 percent. The diversions from the Israel com- mitments in the visa applications have created a crimp in the aliyah program. It is saddening for Israel and mocking of the Law of Return which remains the basic Zionist principle and the "Welcome to Eretz Israel" invitation to Jews everywhere. It is an altogether declining status in aliyah tasks that is most deplorable. There were years when the aliyah from the United States was by far superior to the present. This, too, has to be taken into account. In search for a change for renewed commitments to the aliyah needs in behalf and in support and defense of Israel there is surely the need for a renewal of Zionist dynamism. The experiences of the past cannot be erased from memory. In the most dif- ficult years of ugly anti-Semitism there were often heard the abuses leveled at Jewish victims with the cries of "Jew, go back to your Palestina." If patience is a difficulty in life, even the vilest anti- Semitism did not force Jews into self- emancipation in the Land of Israel. The Nazi brutalities resulted in a mass migration which was in itself compell- ing. Jews who were victims of the Holocaust had only one welcoming homeland — the Land of Israel. Is there a renewed lesson for aliyah in the facts of life? When American Jews demanded the right to exit from Russia for fellow Jews, the Russian antagonism was ex- pressed in challenges from the Kremlin anti-Semites: "Why don't you American Jews migrate to Israel, if it is that important?" Let's consider realisms as the basis for aliyah especially in the experience of the post-Nazi era when closed doors everywhere assured search for entrance into the Promised Land which had a welcome sign. That was the resort to redemption, to prophecy, to history and to Zionism. A temporary halt in persecutions continues the pledge of freedom in the basic ideal that provides help where it is vitally needed. Several other countries with restraints on freedoms for Jews point to the endless need for home. The American Jew can share in it as an instrument toward eliminating hatreds in the land whose ideal was and remains the end of homelessness. Can this aliyah ideal be restated and adhered to loyally and with digni- ty? Militant Zionism needs to be reborn and reactivated. When the Zionist Organization of America, through its Detroit District, induces several score youths to go to Israel on study missions, it is a meritorious scholarship aliyah. The Jewish communities of America mark a return by resuming tourism to Israel. When travellers begin to realize and admit that the intifada has in no way reduced security anywhere in the State of Israel except in the embattled areas now awaiting necessary negotia- tions for accepted peace, there will be a resumption of faith in the Isrel whose aliyah appeals are honorable. That is the urgent need for a revived militancy in Zionism. What about aliyah to Israel from the United States? The Wall Street Journal on April 17 published an arti- cle by Pinhas Landau under the title "Glowing Rhetoric vs. Grim Realities in Israel's Economy." It treated with mark- ed seriousness many of the faults caus- ing shocking problems for Israel. While this theme itself demands serious con- sideration, there was one concluding point in it that merits special attention devoted to pioneering from the United States. It is a kind of indictment and relates also to the Russian immigrants. The article concludes with this challenging revelation: The Russian Jews are fulfill- ing the Leninist dictum of voting with their feet, by pointing themselves firmly in the direc- The Russian Jews and the Israelis are voting with their feet. The Western Jews are voting with their backsides. The numbers making aliyah are statistically insignificant. tion of the U.S. rather than Israel. Recently, there has been talk that a great wave of Russian emigration is at hand, and that many of the emigrants will come to Israel. But this ignores the essential point: The Israeli economic structure cannot ab- sorb a large number of highly educated Russian Jews because it operates on the premise that the government should tell the people how to make a living. For some reason, which the Israeli establishment cannot fathom, that approach doesn't attract Russian Jews. Israelis are also voting with their feet, especially the young and well-educated ones. Graduates in disciplines from medicine to accountancy are discovering that the economy at home is not able to absorb them, but that there is a strong overseas demand for their skills and drive. Western Jews are voting with their backsides — by stay- ing put. The number of U.S. im- migrants to Israel per year re- mains statistically insignificant in terms of the size of the American Jewish community. Ironically, many people who made it in the Reagan boom years would like to move to Israel, but the hostile business environment thwarts them, while the lack of a mortgage market prevents all but the best- heeled younger people from buying a home. The way to solve these pro- blems is clear. Israeli Jews must be allowed to emulate their co- religionists throughout the Western world, and let their talent and drive generate wealth. There are too many ex- patriate Israelis who have suc- ceeded too well for there to be any doubt that it is the system, not the people, that is at fault. That is just as well, because the system can be changed. But that won't happen until Israelis get beyond the stage of talking big and start dealing with con- ditions as they really are. Such are the defining challenges to Jews everywhere on the score of the compulsive duty to encourage and suport aliyah. The duty to Israel is primary. And to Jews in many lands to settle in the Jewish homeland is a ma- jor responsibility. There is need for adherence to these ideals. They need emphasis rooted in full appreciation of the issues involved. A program reflecting world Jewry, with special emphasis on American Jews, is involved here. Its fulfillment is truly a revival of militant Zionism. ❑ An O'Brien Admonishes The Panicking Tourist I t took a realistically observant Christian to teach the panicked who interrupted tourism to Israel about the safety experienced on a visit to Israel. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS (US PS 275-520) is published every Friday with additional supplements the fourth week of March, the fourth week of August and the second week of November at 20300 Civic Center Drive, Southfield, Michigan. Second class postage paid at Southfield, Michigan and additional mailing offices. Postmaster: Send changes to: DETROIT JEWISH NEWS, 20300 Civic Center Drive, Suite 240, Southfield, Michigan 48076 $26 per year $33 per year out of state 60' single copy Vol. XCV No. 11 May 12, 1989 It fell to the lot of an O'Brien to rebuke a great newspaper for con- tributing to such fright. In it's April 30 issue, the Chicago Tribune published this letter, signed James G. O'Brien, Mundelein, Ill, headlined " 'Shalom' In Israel": A recent picture in the Tribune showed Israeli soldiers confronting Arabs. To one just returned from a month in Israel, the picture illustrated the lack of balance in news coverage of that country. The real story, the remarkable tranquility of Israel, goes unmentioned. In its cities, relaxed crowds throng sidewalk cafes until a late hour. Crime is unknown. In the countryside, the roadsides are bright with daisies and pop- pies. There is a pervasive sense of peace. The metal watchtowers of frontier kibbutzes are empty ex- cept for roosting birds. At an Israeli army post near the Syrian border, the only sentry was sleepily reading a magazine. The abence of tension was apparent even on the West Bank, at a settlement five kilometers inside the Green Line. A weekend there in an Or- thodox community, whose members abstain from use of cars, TV and radios, during the Sabbath, was spent in a quietude long vanished from America. May the Tribune enhance its history of excellent Mid-Eastern coverage with an up-to-date ac- count of the real, and rather laid-back, Israel, where "Shalom" is a way of life as well as a greeting. James G. Obrien Let this be a lesson for all, especial- ly Jews who must make Israel the com- pelling historic aim for pilgrimage. Anything contrary to it must be treated as shameful. ❑ International Hypocrisy Indicted A lluding to the latest 129 to 2 U.N. vote condemning Israel for violation of human rights, and describing it as "what is by now its biannual ritual," the New Republic editorially described it as continuing hypocrisy. The editorial drew upon ig- Continued on Page 38