THIS ISSUE 60P SERVING DETROIT'S JEWISH COMMUNITY CLOSE-UP MAY 19, 1989 / 14 IYAR 5749 Religion Is Hidden On Bloomfield Ballot KIMBERLY LIFTON Staff Writer TORCH — a group aiming to in- clude religious traditions in Bloom- field Hills schools — appears to have disbanded, but it may remain a lingering presence in the June 12 school board elections. Five candidates, including school board President Suzanne von Ende and incumbent board member C. Thomas Wilson, are seeking two four- year terms on the seven-person Bloomfield Hills School Board. Challengers are political newcomers Harland Cohen, an attorney; Patricia Hardy, a housewife and former teacher; and David Klapp, a Ford Motor Co. tradesman and a builder. Klapp owns Classic Custom Homes Inc. In an unusual twist for school board elections, candidates have coin- ed "multicultural" a buzzword for the race. Von Ende and Wilson view multicultural programs as ways of helping children understand dif- ferences among their peers. Wilson said the December dilemma over holi- day celebrations is an indirect cam- paign issue. Moving to the political forefront in what otherwise would be a lackluster race is talk among the can- didates and throughout the communi- ty of religion, prayer and holiday celebration. These have been grouped together as multicultural concerns. "Because of the tremendously diverse population in the schools, we have to be aware of a need for respect of all cultures and religions?' von Ende said. "It is not the place of schools to teach religious beliefs?' Challengers are running plat- forms highlighting basic school issues, accusing the board of spending too much money to justify declining Michigan Educational Assessment Program test scores, calling for new Continued on Page 16 Speakers See Myths In Israel Relationship HOIDINZ THE HIGH GROUNC Seymour Reich, the highly visible president of B'nai B'rith and chairman of the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations, is the closest thing the Jewish community has to an offical spokesman. ALAN HITSKY Associate Editor Two of American Jewry's first liaisons in Israel threw a dash of reali- ty on the Israel-Diaspora relationship Monday night. Audience reaction was sym- pathetic to the myth-breaking assessments of Dr. David Clayman, director of the American Jewish Con- gress' Israel Office in Jerusalem, and Martin Kraar, founding director of the Council of Jewish Federation's Israel Office and currently executive vice president of the Jewish Welfare Federation of Metropolitan Detroit. Clayman sees three major friction points between American Jewry and Israel: criticism of Israeli decisions, the differences between the two com- munities and the Soviet Jewry issue. "Love without criticism is corrup- ting. We err if we think we can give uncritical love to Israel," Clayman said. But it raises the old question of whether to be critical in public or private. "In recent months and years there has been a critical factor in the rela- tionship. American Jews are more educated and less in the shadow of the Holocaust. They don't want to sign a blank check. But, on the other hand, when does critical love become cor- rosive?" Clayman said American Jewry will not decide Israel's fate "but that does not preclude partnership." One cannot give orders to a grown child or spouse, "but that does not stop you from giving your advice?' He said Israelis do not understand American Jews' religious pluralism. "In the words of Shlomo Avineri: 'The shul that Israelis don't go to is Or- thodox: " At the same time, American Jews do not understand the Israelis' on the Who is a Jew issue. Clayman said it is a political rather than a religious question in Israel. Kraar, who will become executive vice president of the national Coun- cil of Jewish Federations at the end of 1989, predicted the Who is a Jew issue will boil up again in 18 months. He said the religious right in Israel will be far more organized after the next Israeli elections and American Jews have not continued to fight the issue after it died down last year. The reality, he said, is the Israeli political process must be changed Continued on Page 18