UP FRONT 'Roger And Me' Film-Maker Admits He's Pro Palestinian STEVE HARTZ Special to The Jewish News M Michael Moore (with camera) in a promotional photo for Roger and Me. 'Drug Problem Is Here' SZ Symposium Told SUSAN GRANT Staff Writer N athan Firestone's voice still shakes with pain, anger and frustration when he re- members yelling at his son during a stay at a Min- neapolis drug rehabilitation center. He told him not to come home until he suc- cessfully completed the pro- gram. His son was 17 in 1985, Dr. Firestone told a crowd of about 200 who attended a symposium on drugs and alcohol abuse Jan. 28 spon- sored by the Men's Club of Congregation Shaarey Zedek. After years of denial, yell- ing, and numerous trips to the police station, Dr. Firestone, a pediatrician, and his wife realized their youngest son was addicted to "a force so powerful that it Continued on Page 18 ichael Moore, who achieved instant no- toriety for his satiric anti-General Motors film, Roger and Me, this week de- nied rumblings that he is both anti-Semitic and anti- Israel. Moore admitted, however, that he is pro-Palestinian and said the idea of making a Palestinian film in the future is "one of many ideas I have." Has any of the more than $3 million already earned from Roger and Me gone to support the Palestinians? "Not yet," Moore said at a press conference held Mon- day in Flint, prior to his tap- ing of the "Phil Donahue Show." He also explained why he left a slur about Jewish wo- men in the documentary. "The reason I included the joke told by (former game show host) Bob Eubanks in the film is because I think racism exists in our society," Moore said. "And ignoring it or covering it up doesn't make the racism go away. I think it's important to show that the attitude exists in this country." Moore's friend, Jack Stanzler, is a Jewish resi- dent of Flint who supports Moore's statement. "The whole film talks about racism. And as a Jew I welcome it." Stanzler, a former board member of the Anti-Defamation League in the 1960s, said, "I've never met anybody who is less an- ti-anything than Mike Moore. He believes that everybody in this world should have a shot at peace and freedom. He's pro- Palestinian, but he's also pro-human." Stanzler said Moore's Roger and Me is not about GM chairman Roger Smith; it's about an unfair system. Stanzler's daughter, Wen- dy, edited the film. She is one of a handful of Jews who helped Moore make the movie. There was heckling throughout Moore's press conference at a United Automobile Workers local union headquarters. He was heckled about owning a Honda and for criticizing GM. One heckler, Bob Visser, who has lived in the Flint community for the past 52 years and worked at the local Buick plant, was outraged about the .joke. "That's a rotten, filthy, racist joke," Visser said. "And if he wasn't anti- Semitic, he wouldn't have left the joke in. I don't buy his explanation." Last November, the Detroit Free Press revealed that Moore had requested a clause in his distribution contract that Roger and Me not be shown in Israel and South Africa. Moore signed with Warner Brothers, but his request was denied. Moore said after Monday's press conference that he wants the film shown everywhere — including Israel, where he believes racism exists. "Yes, there is racial in- justice in Israel, discrimina- tion against Arabs and Palestinians." But he doesn't just single . out Israel. "There's racial in- justice in the United States; there's racial injustice across the street. And I and others will fight it as long as we live." ❑ operators interested in form- ing a local chapter to join Chaverim International, the umbrella organization of 14 Jewish amateur radio groups worldwide. For information, contact Allen Olender, 7173 S. Peb- blecreek Rd, West Bloom- field 48322. teacher works in Dagreb, and Hebrew classes are taught in Ljubljana, Novi Sad and Subotica. The interest in Hebrew is running so high that the philosophy department at the University of Belgrade is preparing to establish a lec- tureship in Hebrew, Rabbi Danon said. ROUND UP Wagner Grandson Visits Israel Bonn (JTA) — The grand- son of Richard Wagner, whose music is closely assoc- iated with the Nazi era, re- cently returned from a lec- ture tour in Israel, where he said he understands why the composer's music is usually boycotted there. "For me, the anti- Semitism in my family is something horrible," said Wagner, 42, who delivered four lectures late last month at Tel Aviv University. Butterfly Flies At Catholic School Hicksville, N.Y. — Students at the Holy Trinity Diocesan High School in Hicksville, N.Y., didn't spend last November rehearsing for another pro- duction of the Christmas story; instead, they were performing I Never Saw An- other Butterfly, a play based on a collection of works by children in the Nazi death camp Terezin. Cast members met with Rabbi Bernard Stefansky of the Lake Success, N.Y., Jew- ish Center, himself a sur- vivor of Terezin, and read numerous books about the Holocaust to prepare for the drama, which was seen by more than 3,000 students, parents and survivors. "The students were com- mitted to being faithful to the memory of those at Terezin, for which I am grateful," Rabbi Stefansky said. Students told The Long Island Catholic they were moved by the play. "We can walk away from our roles," one cast member said. "They couldn't." 'Dating Service' Matches Anchors Researchers at the Carbon 14 Laboratory at the Weiz- mann Institute of Science in Israel have uncovered the first datable evidence of an- cient boat traffic on the Dead Sea. They determined that three massive stone anchors recently found near Ein Gedi Ancient anchor found at the Dead Sea. sank to the bottom of the lake between 460 and 260 BCE. The anchors average 2 ft. x 1 ft. 8 inches and weigh 240 to 300 pounds. Two of them were raised with their ropes, which were preserved by the high salt content of the water. Seeking All Jewish Hams Set your dials . . . calling all kosher hams . . . here's some news for you. A West Bloomfield resi- dent is seeking ham radio Hebrew The Yugoslavian Way Belgrade, Yugoslavia (JTA) — Hebrew schools are flourishing in Yugoslavia, where the majority of the pupils and at least one teacher are non-Jews, accor- ding to the only rabbi in this Balkan nation of fewer than 5,000 Jews. The Belgrade Hebrew School started with 10 students, said Rabbi Cadik Danon, who is working on a comprehensive Heb- rew/Serbo-Croation dic- tionary that will be the first of its kind since World War II. - Today, more than 60 men and women study at the school. A full-time Hebrew Israeli Quake Is Predicted Jerusalem (JTA) — A leading seismologist predicts a devastating earthquake in Israel some time in the next 50 years that will register a seven on the Richter Scale and will strike mainly in northern Galilee and the Jordan Valley. Dr. Avi Shapiro of the Seismological Department at the Haifa Institute for Oil and Geological Research said the tremor could be forecast up to three months in advance. Compiled by Elizabeth Applebaum THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 5