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Call 855-5444 for AN IMMEDIATE APPOINTMENT • Adults • Adolescents • Children PROGRESSIVE COUNSELING Where Your Progress Is Our #1 Priority 50 Detroit Kehillah FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1989 cess of the decline of Hebrew in. America. Teaching Hebrew in the Diaspora is a complicated venture. Here I can refer very briefly to the major components: • Those who do not themselves speak Hebrew, no matter how devoted they may be — will find it difficult to promote the status and the the of achievements language. • Most schools, even those affiliated directly by a net- work or denomination, lack genuine inspection — the authority, the standard, the time and the ability to inspect the teachers' work and to in- struct them. • The majority of Hebrew teachers in the United States are Israelis or ex-Israelis. This phenomenon is un- doubtedly one of the major causes for the closing down of all higher institutes for Hebrew teacher training within the last 15 years. The most critical problem confron- ting these teachers crops up from all surveys and direct encounters with them: the vast majority of these teachers have not had any training to teach Hebrew as an additional foreign language. Undoubtedly, this is perhaps an important reason for the lack of success and achievement in all four language skills, particularly — speaking and writing. I repeat the suggestion made at the outset that the administrators of the current effort make a thorough study of the experience by the New York kehillah from 1908-1918. We are not challenged as they were then. We are on firmer ground and could be considered indestruc- tible. But the events of 70 years ago may have many lessons for us. The New York kehillah ex- periment was excellently ex- plained in the article in Universal Jewish En- cyclopedia by Harry Sackler, who was among the most pro- minent Jewish journalists in the 1930s and 1940s. In his earnest study of the early kehillah, he quoted its objec- tives, which were: Jewish education and the maintenance of religious schools; Establishment of both permanent and temporary synagogues (the latter ob- viously aimed to supplant the "mushroom synagogue"); Arbitration, mediation and conciliation of internal Jewish affairs; Maintenance of an employment bureau; Collation of information and statistical matters per- taining to Jewish life; And, finally, cooperation with the various charitable, philanthropic, educational and religious organizations for the pro- motion of the common welfare. The Detroit study is on the road to important fact-finding which will surely lead to significant decisions. Much power to the administrators of the contemplated studies. ❑ Media Message Continued from Page 1 — is an abomination to human rights. It makes a mockery of the concept of human rights. We must never forget that if these modest first steps toward elections in the West Bank and in Gaza are carried forward, it will be the first time in Arab history that free elec- tions have been held in this part of the world. I am not in favor of the occupation as a human rights activist, but I have to tell you — there has never been a freer press in any part of the Arab world than the all too un-free press that today exists in the West Bank and in East Jerusalem. For the first time in Arab history there has been a relatively in- dependent press, too cen- sored by my standards, too censored by your stan- dards; and most impor- tantly — too censored by Israeli standards. Israel does not always comply with its own high standards of human rights in the West Bank. But if one compares the- Israeli treatment in the West Bank with any other interna- tional standard, — historical or contemporary — Israel shines by comparison. . . . Some of my students today firmly believe that Israel, along with South Africa, are the worst human rights violators in the world. They are reading that, they are hear- ing that, their teachers are teaching them that. And we are not answering. Because this is to a degree repetitive, it is additionally accusatory of the prejudiced treatment of Israel by the judges of developments in that troubled area. There are occasional Israeli blunders in the approach to the quest for peace. Yet, the media guilt is in the constant selection of in- cidents as means to level charges of immorality against Israel. The media role has hampered rather than helped in the peace process. Therefore the approaching judgments which will surely be indicated at the important sessions set for the coming Sunday should hopefully lead toward the desired fairness that must influence public opinion on a massive scale and the attitudes and actions of the Arab antagonists and Israel. Thep* are the reasonable in the ranks of both and now we need the fairminded and unprejudiced in the diplomatic ranks and in the media. There is much to hope for and a great deal to anticipate as fairminded and human approaches on the road to peace. ❑ Ira Hirschmann In History S ix decades filled with untold tragedies also have a record of leader- ship, courage and devotion to the serious challenges in the rescuing of victims of Nazism. Ira Hirschmann was among our chief activists in rescue efforts and later in the Zionist ranks as a redeemer of Israel. This remarkable man, who died two weeks ago at 88, had many notable careers. He was a leader in business enterprises, radio, politics, among his many careers. As an anti-Nazi activist, as one of the initiators of the boycott of Germany upon the advent of Adolf Hitler in 1933, and in his leadership in saving vic- tims of Hitler during World War II. He was called upon to play a role in it. Ineffective as it proved among the tragedies of failures in rescue tasks, Hirschmann introduced a number of direct contacts with forces that could aid in saving lives. He was especially effective in tasks that helped rescue Romanian Jews who would otherwise be sent to the Nazi death camps. His multiple commitments and accomplishments rate his life both as a chapter in American and Jewish history and in human relations. He carried on his work in behalf of the reborn state of Israel by aiding in resettling survivors from Nazism and in support of the Jewish Na- tional Fund, Israel Bonds and other causes. He authored several books, two on Keren Kayemet the Jewish National Fund. ❑ ,