UP FRONT Fund-raising Bodies To Speed Up Immigrant-Absorption Effort CHARLES HOFFMAN Special to The Jewish News L eaders of the major fund-raising organiza- tions of world Jewry have agreed to accelerate their special campaigns to help Israel meet the costs of absorbing the rapidly rising tide of immigrants from the Soviet Union. Diaspora leaders who gathered in Jerusalem last week for the Jewish Agency Assembly laid the ground- work for a $1 billion cam- paign over three years for the absorption of close to half-a-million Soviet Jews in Israel. Their decision came in re- sponse to urgent appeals for more cash from the Jewish Agency, which works in partnership with the Israeli government to transport the immigrants and absorb them in Israeli society. Last fall, the Jewish Agen- cy asked Diaspora fund- raising bodies to raise $600 million over three years for immigrant absorption. The United Jewish Appeal agreed to raise $420 million in the United States and Keren Hayesod agreed to raise $180 million from other countries, in what became known as Operation Exodus. The campaign, which was begun early this year, set out to raise the full amount in just one year, but donors would have three years to pay out their pledged con- tributions. Last week, leaders of UJA and Keren Hayesod agreed to urge their donors to pay off their Operation Exodus pledges over two years, thereby making $300 mill- ion a year available to the Jewish Agency, rather than $200 million. The plan is then to begin a new special drive once the current one is complete. "We are now in the midst of what we call Operation Exodus I. People will yet be called on for increased giv- ing in Exodus II," said Phil Granovsky, a United Israel Appeal leader from Canada who chairs Keren Hayesod. "When we get home," he said, "we have to set the mood for the next stage of the campaign. It is urgent to prepare people for this." Granovsky, who chairs the World Income Committee of the Jewish Agency, spoke at the closing session of the agency Board of Governors meeting here. He said the Jewish Agency would need $1 billion over the next three years. Veteran Jewish Agency leader Max Fisher of Detroit said that more money could be raised in the Diaspora. But he said the government must prove that its absorp- tion plans are being implemented with the ut- most speed. If this does not happen, he cautioned, pressure will mount on the U.S. Congress to increase entry quotas for Soviet Jews beyond the 40,000 annual level, which he said would be a "disaster." Agency and government leaders last week agreed on a $2.3 billion plan for the aliyah an,d absorption of 150,000 Soviet Jews in Israel this year. It is estimated that similar numbers of Soviet Jews will be coming to Israel each year over the next three years. The agency pays transpor- tation and shipping costs for the immigrants, part of an absorption grant they receive during their first year in Israel, and certain social services for the newcomers. Israeli taxpayers will be expected to pay most of the Soviet Jews in their Israel apartment. costs of long-term absorp- tion, which means primarily job creation and housing. The Israeli government must also build new schools and expand the infrastruc- ture — water, sewage, roads and communications — to cope with the added popula- tion. The chairman of the Jew- ish Agency Board of Gover- nors, Mendel Kaplan, said Friday that because of the upsurge in immigration, the agency had doubled its budget this year from $360 million to $740 million, "with most of it going for aliyah and absorption." He lauded Diaspora leaders for contributing ge- nerously to help the Jewish Agency meet the ensuing cash shortfall. Noting that UIA-Canada had agreed to borrow $30 million to help fill the gap, Kaplan said, "Both in- dividuals and communities are borrowing funds to pay campaign pledges. They are extending themselves in peacetime, which is unheard of." Agency leaders admitted, however, that even if cash Continued on Page 12 tourists reached 181,000 — up 35 percent from April 1989's figure of 134,000. In the first four months of 1990, a total of 528,000 visitors came to Israel, an increase of 18 percent from the same period last year. Tourists from the United States and Canada, number- ing 62,500 in 1990, ac- counted for 23.4 percent of total visitors to Israel. The participation of the Hungarian government marks a departure from the policies of former govern- ments in Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union. Under the former communist regimes, the uniqueness of Jewish suffering during World War II was played down. The marble and bronze memorial shows a large tree in the shape of an inverted menorah. The end of each of its eight branches is marked with a slash — representing a wound — in the stone, from which smaller branches grow. The site of the memorial marks the entrance to the former Jewish ghetto, which the Nazis created when they occupied Budapest, and the grave of 6,000 Budapest Jews, killed by the Germans and their collaborators of the Hungarian Arrow-Cross militia. Compiled by Elizabeth Applebaum ROUND UP Wrestling Champ Loves His Fans Lookout world, it's Ben Gurion — Joshua Ben Gurion. At 6'10" and 300 pounds, Ben Gurion holds the world Joshua Ben Gurion: Wrestling champ. championship title of the American Wrestling Associ- ation. He appeared recently at Joe Louis Arena, where an enthusiastic member of the audience asked Ben Gurion to kiss her baby. Ben Gurion, who has homes in Los Angeles and New York, hopes to advance other wrestling federations. The Israeli-born wrestler adopted the name "Ben Gurion" in honor of Israel's first prime minister, whose strength and support for the Jewish people he admires. Ben Gurion said he loves receiving letters from his fans, and will answer all re- quests for a photograph, which shows the wrestler in front of a flag of Israel. For a photo, send two 25- cent stamps to cover the cost of postage to Joshua Ben Gurion, P.O. Box 364, East Islip, N.Y. 11730. NCJW Featured In Museum Exhibit New York — A new ex- hibit at the Smithsonian's National Museum of Ameri- can History in Washington, D.C., will highlight the Na- tional Council of Jewish Women's role in ac- complishing social reform in America. The exhibit, "From Parlor to Politics: Women and Reform in America, 1890- 1925," opened June 28. One of the main features of the exhibit will be informa- tion about NCJW's founder, Hannah Greenebaum Solomon, who established the organization in 1893 after a men's committee refused to allow her group of women to participate in a program planned for the Parliament of Religions at a world's fair in Chicago. Tourism To Israel Is On The Rise New York (JTA) — Tourism to Israel, especially from the United States and Canada, has risen substan- tially in 1990 and reached a peak in April, the Israeli Ministry of Tourism re- ported. Worldwide numbers of Hungary Dedicates Holocaust Memorial New York — With the par- ticipation of the president and prime minister of Hungary, a monument to the memory of the Jewish victims of the Holocaust will be dedicated July 8 on the grounds of the Great Syn- agogue in Budapest. Hungarian governmental officials will be joined by Jewish leaders, headed by World Jewish Congress President Edgar Bronfman, from around the world for the dedication. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 5