EDITORIAL Painful Progress The Jewish Welfare Federation board of governors' endorsement of moving Federa- tion offices to the suburbs was a painful decision. Few of the governors argued on Tuesday that the move was unjustified. Federa- tion's location in downtown Detroit has become a liability. It is too far from the people and the agencies it represents and has become a deterrent to volunteerism, to an informed constituency being actively involved in meetings and decision-making. The Federation has recognized these issues in a de facto sense by scheduling morning and evening meetings at the United Hebrew Schools building and at area restaurants closer to the core of the Jewish population of Detroit. But these locations are hardly conducive to proper decision-making, bereft as they are of proper staff and resources. The major arguments against moving the Federation offices are cost and image. Is the cost of a new building, or moving into leased suburban quarters when demands for communal resources are so high, justified by the gains in access to the com- munity? We think so. There will be public relations fallout. To ease concerns in the black community, the Federation intends to keep its outreach arm — the Jewish Community Council — in Detroit offices. It's appropriate that the JCCouncil, the major contact with the non- Jewish community, remains in Detroit. We also think it appropriate for the Fed- eration leadership to continue discussion of location for the new offices. At a time when Federation has spent significant sums and made countless policy decisions to support the Jewish presence in Oak Park and Southfield, we find it surprising that a Farmington Hills location is being given preference. Oak Park or Southfield should be the central address for Federation . . .and the Detroit area's Jewish community. Practicing Jews History will look back on this period as the Mass Emigration from the Soviet Union. We have become accustomed to the daily miracles of Soviet Jewish families ar- riving here and our community efforts to help them find their way and begin new lives. But will the tens of thousands of Soviet Jews coming to the United States pass on a Jewish heritage to their children and grandchildren? That is the question behind the Ameri- can Jewish community's Jewish accultura- tion effort, described in this week's cover story. Experts acknowledge that it is an uphill battle. Many of the Soviet Jews who came in the early 1970s were lost to Judaism, assimilating into the mainstream Ameri- can secular culture. And the Soviet Jews coming to the United States now are far less "Jewish" than the previous immi- grants. Those arriving in 1990 have vir- tually no knowledge or attachment to Judaism —being Jewish in the USSR was a negative factor, another cause for hard- ship. The effort to bring a sense of Jewish his- tory, heritage and identity to the newcomers is admirable, and of vital im- portance. For many American Jews, Jewish identi- ty is based on a nostalgia for ritual and tradition that the arriving Soviet immi- grants do not have. For large numbers of American Jews, affiliation with the Jewish community means joining and supporting one or more volunteer organizations — a concept alien to the newcomers from the USSR. What kind of Jews, then, do we want these Soviet immigrants to be in the United States? Do we want them to be more religious than we are? Do we teach them that in America, being Jewish means writing a check for Jewish causes? These questions provide a litmus test for our own Jewish expression. Synagogues, religious institutions and interested individuals must take an active role, and not just rely on Federation. It is important that any and all outreach pro- grams that provide positive contact bet- ween American Jews and Soviet Jews be encouraged. In a pluralistic society, there is no one way to success. Also, outreach efforts must be ongoing. We must not assume that if a Soviet Jewish family shows no interest in synagogue or organ- izational involvement the first year or two, it is pointless to contact them again. We must continue to reach out to these families three, five and even ten years after a family has arrived. Dry Bones VIOLE-ter RAci S1S A ND A urt SEtalt - r6s IN -1.4 lAieST ARE 11-16q V6RY la26crk,i3„, CM,G6D S Ki N6ADS BECAUSE sqN 6 FRIDAY, AUGUST 31, 1990 NOT1-1 I IUG ON TOP OF -11461 R HEADS? Will-11:01 NoM KUWAIT UNDER THE raowitz CONDiTiONS I watirsYRA our or LEMON, • or OF SAUDI ARABIA, .n U.S. TVis GUY CO ► JTROIS HOW MUCH OF THE' WORLDS OiL ? Ipw ovrorrit - TERRigRiEs, -nic str ourcniE FERSIAN 00 0 0 00 00 4. I I &1 4vairgio LETTERS Incidents Show Anti-Semitism It is important to make note of three separate incidents that are sad reflections on the current state of anti-Israel and anti-Semitic sentiment as well as pure self-serving greed. The first concerns a group of Ann Arbor Jews who, together with a small group of Arabs, composed a letter, in the safety of their own homes, which was recently printed in the Detroit Free Press and The Jewish News. Their letter concluded that if Israel is to have peace, it must settle on terms dictated by the Arab world. Never in the history of the world have the losers of wars dictated the terms for peace to the victors. Why should Israel become the first? Let this group from Ann Arbor speak to the parents of the slain Israeli teens, or the families of the tortured or slain, or the suspected Arab collaborators. Unfortunately, it is equally important to consider the case of anti-Semitic stereotyp- ing displayed in the new Spike Lee movie Mo' Better Blues. The blatant stereotyp- ing cited by the Anti- Defamation League, and Mr. Lee's lack of apology in light of his self-proclaimed role as a black movie producer/direc- tor/actor to eliminate racial stereotyping is injury enough. However, when the distribu- tors of the film, Jewish movie studio executives L. Wasser- man and Sidney Sheinberg, defend Mr. Lee's right to stereotype Jews under the guise of artistic freedom, it truly rubs salt into an open and festering wound. Would these two executives also have distributed the pro- paganda films of Goebbels and Hitler with such flimsy reasoning if there was money to be made? Finally, yet another current event should not escape our scorn. This is the case of the Israeli landlords who doubled the rents of their Soviet tenants to take advantage of government subsidies to Soviet immigrants. These Israeli Jews are also sadly in- fected by the powerful and destructive disease called greed. If we are to survive as a peo- ple, and Israel is to live on as a nation, we must not let self- serving and blind-sighted in- cidents such as these go un- marked. Our voices must strongly reject this dangerous undercurrent by this small yet loud group of anti-Semites amongst us. Bert Kriechman Farmington Hills Maccabi Games Were Terrific My husband and I volunteered to work for the Maccabi Youth Games. We were designated to be greeters at the Ramada Inn. We were overwhelmed by the graciousness of the visitors. The families of the Maccabi. participants were polite and charming. It was a lot of fun being greeters. The next job as a volunteer was to serve lunches for three different days. The hours flew and the athletes and associates were patient and behaved as if they were one person, instead of hundreds of people (of all ages, countries and languages). I was over- whelmed with wonder at their gracious behavior. I commend these charming and wonderful young people. Continued on Page 11