There are those who believe that trying to acculturate the new immigrants to re- ligion too quickly can be detrimental. Gennady Shmukler is a member of the Class of 1979, those immigrants who came to the United States a decade ago. He believes too much religion too soon may not be a positive experience for the new immigrants. He points to the tradi- tional difficulty new refugees have with everything from obtaining drivers' licenses to rides to look for jobs. "If they try to cram too much religion down the immigrants' throats too fast, you'll lose them to Judaism for 10 years," he says. And Zvi Gitelman of the University of Michigan cautions not to push too fast for things like memberships in fraternal organizations. He says the religiosity of new immigrants cannot be judged that way. "Their idea of religion is different from ours," Mr. Gitelman says. "By upbring- ing, they are not joiners, so it's enough to get them to join a shul." In Chicago, one of the six large cities responsible for the resettlement of 80 per- cent of Soviet Jews coming to the United States, a Forbidden Book Club was estab- lished by the federation to enable the newcomers to read their own great works of literature freely for the first time. 1 4,1* into Jewish communities sacros s States face significant problems of re- settlement, but there are steps Zoinmun- ities can take to improve that process, according to the published results of a seminar held at Brandeis University in Waltham, Mass. The findings of the 1989 seminar, pub- lished in a monograph, Through the Looking Glass, < are to be distributed nationally in August to Jewish federa- tions throughout North America and to major national Jewish organizations by the Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society (HIAS), one of the co-sponsors of the seminar. A number of points with immediate on the resettlement process e b earing fowni „ t,h e seminar: , • Cultural dfiferences — most espe- cially language prevent each popula- tion frorq understanding the other and often ca''''( -:anger and disappointment. Soviet Jews do not see themselves as a community and becoming one may not be the goal for many immigrants. Few critics of the conventional ac- culturation process are as outspoken as Rabbi Yehiel Poupko of Chicago, the se- cond largest Soviet-Jewish community. Rabbi Poupko believes the first wave of immigrants and many in the current wave have operated under what he calls the Dependency Model of Acculturation. He defines this as promoting attitudes like "helplessness (psychological dependency), victimhood (physical dependency), ignorance (knowledge defi- ciency), disorientation (social deficiency) and poverty (economic deficiency)." Rabbi Poupko advocates what he calls the Responsibility Model of Accultura- tion, which he feels promotes "resourcefulness, and survival skills. In the Responsibility Model, the new arrival is viewed as having many assets which can be cultivated to the benefit of his/her resettlement and adjustment," Rabbi Poupko says. To this end, he charges immigrants a fee to participate in his programs. That way, he says, he doesn't increase dependency and gives the message to both the immigrants and their benefactors that the immigrants are receiving a privi- lege. Rabbi Poupko further believes that many welcoming activities for the immi- grants are, in the long run, a waste of time. social/eb as priorities to folic • Current defy stereotypes: sian Jewish i rh similar influx 1900s. Sov much more SODS' m for the ,a114# Ihed, where pe 4nizations involved it and debate current and fixture Ongoing dialogue is critical. Jews must, play a pivotal role in discus- sions regarding their resettlement and integration. Li • to be THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 43