(

"I'm not deaf • • •
I just can't understand

Intermarriage

Continued from preceding page

some words"

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NEWS)

American Red Cross

Blood Services Southeastern Michigan Region

lem by spontaneously
celebrating both holidays."
A year later, approaching
the anniversary of his
father's death, Michael
Steadman begins to question
the meaning of his Jew-
ishness and the viability of
his marriage.
Learning that his wife is
pregnant with a second
child, he wonders about the
future religious upbringing
of his children.
Bayme declared that the
weekly episode concluded
with Steadman saying
Kaddish for his father,
"suggesting he continues to
struggle in two worlds — a
strong and healthy marriage
to a gentile and an internal
quest to link himself with
Judaism."
The viewing public, of
course, includes Jews who

react with trepidation to the
implications that a positive
portrayal of intermarriage
may have for Jewish con-
tinuity.
"Orthodox Jews and
graduates of Jewish day
schools score especially high
in terms of ideological oppo-
sition to intermarriage and
strong desire for en-
dogamous Jewish mar-
riage," Bayme wrote.
But such Jews "represent
at most a 10th of American
Jewry."
Bayme concluded that
"intermarriage proves that
America has worked in
terms of acceptance of Jews.
The question for leadership
now becomes whether Jews
can maintain their unique
identity in a friendly
America." ❑

Jewish Telegraphic Agency

Hate Stabbing Shocks
New Zealand Jews

Auckland, New Zealand
(JTA) — The Jewish com-
munity of New Zealand has
expressed shock following
what appears to have been
an anti-Semitic attack here
Monday on Jewish
schoolchildren.
A 52-year-old woman
wielding a 4-inch vegetable
knife attacked children at
Auckland's small Jewish
day school, stabbing four of
the youngsters, ages 6 and 8.
She called out what seemed
to be anti-Semitic remarks
before carrying out the at-
tack.
The children were
scheduled for surgery Mon-
day for their injuries, in-
cluding punctures to the
lungs and stomach and cuts
and lacerations.
A spokesman for the New
Zealand Jewish community
said the condition of all the
injured children was stable.
A teacher intervened and
was able to wrest the knife
from the attacker, but not
before the woman had
wounded the children.
The woman, who has a his-
tory of psychiatric illness,
entered the school area as
the children were arriving
for class. A police spokesman
said she called out "a Jewish
name," which was not that
of any of the pupils at the
school, before lunging at the
three 6-year-olds, including
twins, and one 8-year-old
child.
A leader of the Auckland
Jewish community said the
woman, who is unidentified,
was "shouting anti-Semitic
remarks," but, he said, "she

is a known psychiatric pa-
tient."
The woman faces an
Auckland court Tuesday on
four counts of attempted
murder.

Havel Decries
Tablet Honoring
War Criminal

Prague (JTA) — President
Vaclav Havel has sharply
condemned the unveiling of
a memorial tablet honoring
Nazi collaborator Josef Tiso,
a Slovakian war criminal
hanged after World War II.
Havel told a news con-
ference here recently he had
been unaware of the unveil-
ing, which took place on July
8 at a former Roman
Catholic teachers' college in
the Slovakian town of
Banovce.
Tiso, a Catholic priest, was
the first and only president
of the Slovakian republic, a
puppet state of about 4 mill-
ion set up by Nazi Germany
after it occupied and
dismembered
Czechoslovakia in 1939.
He converted the Catholic
clerical party into a Nazi-
type political movement
which institutionalized anti-
Semitism.
Havel's advisers were
roundly criticized in the
news media.
Czechoslovak television
commented that it was un-
conscionable to honor a war
criminal responsible for the
deportation and murder of
60,000 Jews.

