INSIGHT T he wave of Soviet Jew- ish immigrants cur- rently sweeping into Israel means different things to different people. To intellectuals, they are the living embodiment of the Zionist dream, a confirma- tion that the founding fathers were correct in their assessment of the need for a Jewish state. To harried government officials, charg- ed with the care and feeding of hundreds of thousands of newcomers, they pose a mas- sive, perhaps insoluble prob- lem. The business commun- ity sees them as customers, and the newspapers here are now full of ads in Russian for everything from dinette sets to banking services. And for Israeli politicians,_ desperately engaged in an effort to break the national stalemate, the Soviets are, first and foremost, voters. Under the current elec- toral system, roughly 18,000 votes are necessary to chose a Member of Knesset. At the present pace of immigration, as many as 200,000 Soviet Jews could well be added to the voter roles by the next election. That would give them sufficient power to elect eight to ten represent- atives in the 120-seat Knesset. Of course, the Soviet Jews will not vote in a bloc. But experts here believe that most of them will lean to the right, largely because of their instinctive distaste for socialism. This tendency is causing great concern among left-wing politicians, who are looking for ways to offset it. Several months ago, in a closed-door meeting of Labor Party activists, Sim- cha Dinitz, head of the Jew- ish Agency, described the danger, and recommended that his party use patronage to win over the newcomers. "Whoever takes care of them [the immigrants] will get them," he told his col- leagues. Battling For Hearts And Votes Of Soviet Jews Israeli politicians, aware of the political clout of the newcomers, are trying to make them happy. ZE'EV CHAFETS Israel Correspondent Dinitz is not the only poli- tician to understand the key importance of taking care of the newcomers. For months, skirmishes have been taking place between the various political parties over who will control the aid provided to the immigrants. The re- ception hall of Ben Gurion Airport, where the Soviets are first processed, is a key battleground. There, Soviet Jews are provided with two alternatives — direct ab- sorption, under the control of the Absorption Ministry; or placement in an absorption center, run by the Jewish Agency. At the moment, some 80 percent of the immigrants opt for the first method, and Absorption Minister Yit- zhak Peretz, an Orthodox politician close to the Likud, wants to keep it that way. Both Labor and Likud are looking hard for promising Soviet Jewish politicians. Rabbi Peretz has put the re- ception hall off limits to all but symbolic delegations from the country's youth movements, who greet the exhausted arrivals with flowers, and to his own Min- istry officials, many of whom are, not surprisingly, also political cronies. This policy has been de- nounced by Soviet activists, such as Natan Sharansky, who want the hall opened to volunteer workers. Recently, Sharansky threatened to take the issue to the Supreme Court. The Labor- controlled Jewish Agency is also furious about being de- nied access, and has retaliated by holding up funds earmarked for the Ab- sorption Ministry. The two major parties are also engaged in a battle for overall control of the absorp- tion process. Labor activist Uri Gordon, who heads the Jewish Agency's Immigra- tion Department, has public- ly called for a super-body, presumably led by him, that would oversee all immigrant settlement. That role is cur- rently held by Rabbi Peretz, who is resisting the effort. Labor, which until March controlled the Ministry of Finance, retaliated by at- tempting to cut the work force of Rabbi Peretz's Ab- sorption Ministry's staff by ten percent. Nor are all such battles between the parties. A few months ago, Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir made a similar suggestion, propos- ing that he himself head an inter-ministerial absorption committee. That proposal was defeated by Rabbi Peretz and Shamir's party rival David Levy, who refus- ed to surrender the au- thority of his Housing Min- istry over the key housing issue. Housing is important not only as a way of winning immigrant loyalty, but also as a source of patronage for more veteran Israelis. In an agreement between Levy and Peres, it was decided that the Ministry of Housing would maintain sole au- thority over the contractors hired to build tens of thousands of apartments. Such a deal guarantees enormous clout to the Min- ister of Housing, which ex- plains the apparent willing- ness of the Likud's Ariel Sharon to take up the post in the next government. The parties are also casting about for per- sonalities who can attract Soviet voters. In 1988, Ephraim Gur became the first Soviet immigrant elect- ed to the Knesset on the Labor ticket. Gur, who comes from Soviet Georgia, was supposed to prove a magnet to fellow olim (emigrants to Israel), but the strategy backfired. Not only did he fail to deliver voters, but he is now threatening to THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 37