COMMENT IYNAITS ► AEL Aledwota Catie,6 TRANQUIUTY, BEAUTY AND DIGNITY ENHANCED BY PERPETUAL CARE 42400 12 MILE ROAD NOVI, MICHIGAN 48050 TWELVE OAKS MALL ACROSS FROM THE An Undivided Jerusalem: For Now And Forever SHELDON ENGELMAYER Special to The Jewish News W hat is a city? It is where people live, and work, and love, and hate, seek amusement and even escape.- In the end, however, a city boils down to its lifeless parts — bricks, stones, cement, tar, steel, glass. It is where the poor can be found sometimes living on the streets; where crime can be found, often in the home or in a park. A city also is not necessari- ly unique. The elements that make one more attractive than another are transient and easily transferred. Paris may be the city of lights, but the lights burn bright on Broadway, too. For Jews, at least, there is one city that is the exception. It is not well-lit. Its most basic parts, the sewers and streets, are in need of repairs that are long overdue; its benefactors tend to overlook the ground beneath their feet in favor of gifts more suited to wearing plaques. Many of its homes are cold and dreary and damp in the winter; in the summer, they become ovens. And, although the streets are safe at any hour, an unattended package or a car parked aimlessly can make one's heart stop with well-grounded suspicion. It is a city of golden dreams, nevertheless, where the very stones go against nature and have a life of their own. It was not nostalgia that made Jews weep for Jerusalem by the rivers of Babylon. The city and the people were inex- tricably fused, and although they had been ripped asunder, neither ever abandoned the other. Now the time is fast ap- proaching when Jews must confront a question to which many may never have given thought: Which Jerusalem? There are two Jerusalems, after all. There is the western part of the city that belongs to the modern world and, perhaps, to our hearts, but not to our souls. And there is the eastern part, the Jerusalem of our prayers, the city of David and Solomon and Ezra and the Temple, the city for which Jews for 2,000 years vowed to forgo their right arms rather than forget. That is the Jerusalem whose return to the Jewish people is forever fixed on our minds. We may not recall the exact moment that we heard, but we will never forget how the news touched us — and where. It was 9:50 a.m. Israel time, Wednesday, the 28th day of Iyar, 5727 — June 7, 1967 — when Mordechai "Motta" Gur gave the order to advance. Within seconds, his brigade of young reservists drove through Lions Gate. They turned left up the Temple Mount and down again to the dingiest collection of stones piled one atop the other in the shape of a wall. And then they cried. A half-hour later, to the south, Eliezer Amitai's Jerusalem Brigade stormed through Dung Gate and into the Old City. They, too, stop- ped at the Wall and cried. The shofar blown by Rabbi Shlomo Goren somehow reached our ears and into the deepest part of our souls. This little piece of timeworn real estate, with its seemingly endless collection of alley-like streets and haggling shopkeepers, had been what it was all about for two millennia. And we cried, too. "We," the Jews of Israel and of the Diaspora, religious and secular, finally had come home. Now that is threatened. To the world at large (and even, it seems, to the U.S. govern- ment), Jerusalem again should be divided and the eastern portion of the united city "returned" to Arab control. Friday, June 2, is the 28th of Iyar, Yom Yerushalayim, Jerusalem Day. There is no better way to celebrate that day than by sending a message to Washington and elsewhere: However each of us feels about "land for peace," there is one com- promise we cannot make. Pray for the peace, for Jerusalem. Pray for the soul of a people. And then write to President Bush, Secretary of State James Baker and U.N. Secretary-General Javier Perez de Cuellar. Tell them the rivers of Babylon will not again be filled with our tears. f: Per Space Exclusively Serving Our Jewish Community and Featuring The Gardens of WHILE THE CEMETERY DEVELOPS, PRICES WILL CONTINUE TO RISE! 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The Catholic Church is not above criticism in the Ibuvier case, Jean Kahn, newly elected president of CRIF, told JTA, "we should not condemn the Catholic Church in its totality, for some priests, bishops and archbishops had a very courageous attitude during World War II," he said. But Nazi-hunter Simon Wiesenthal told a news con- ference in Rome last Thurs- day that it came as no sur- prise to him. SAY IT WITH TREES 18877 W. Ten Mile Road Suite 104 Southfield, Michigan 48075 Phone: (313) 557-6644 Monday thru Thursday 9 A.M. to 5 P.M. Friday 9 to 2 hrs. before Sabbath I Sheltering Touvier Angers French Jews A, JEWISH NATIONAL FUND GIVE BLOOD Sheldon Engelmayer is ex- ecutive editor of the New York Jewish Week. N EWS Paris (JTA) — The defense by some French Catholics regarding the sheltering of the country's most wanted Nazi collaborator by a dissi- dent branch of the church has aggravated already strained relations with the Jewish community. Paul Touvier, 74, who head- ed the French militia that worked for the Gestapo in Lyon during World War II, was arrested in Nice on May 24 and charged with crimes against humanity. Reports said Touvier will plead not guilty. Touvier had been given sanctuary at the Priory of St. Francis, which belongs to the excommunicated Roman Catholic Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre, a fundamentalist diehard opposed to the Catholic-Jewish rapproche- ment mandated by Vatican Council II. French Jews are shocked by the attitude of some Catholics, who justify the haven given Ibuvier by citing $39 5 00 American Red Cross * *attS• 2:te . - tEkk8 "4 Our c9 sea:, greatest C) Natural -21— 7 # Resource CeN‘- When So Sorry is not enough... Send a tray Nibbles & Nuts 737.8088 A Thoughtful Expression... With a Cookie or Candy Tray forko TRES SWEET Candy & Nut Trays A Gift of Caring. FREE LOCAL DELIVERY (313) 626 - 3435 737-2450 WE DELIVER! SUZI & RANDY THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 119