BOOKS THE JEWISH NEWS Fatal Attraction 27676 Franklin Rd. Southfield, MI 48034 Continued from Page 47 We've Just Moved FROM Acct. # NAME ADDRESS STATE CITY ZIP enclose old label TO: Fill out, clip and mail. Please allow 4 weeks. Effective Date WHAT IS P'TACH? Parents for Torah for All Children. "P'TACH," is a national non-profit organization which provides secular and Jewish education for children with learning ' disabilities who are enrolled in our schools. Before P'TACH existed, the doors of almost all day schools were indeed closed to children with all levels of learning disabilities, and the parents of these special children were often frustrated by a community that failed to recognize the need for providing special educational programs in our schools. Now, through P'TACH, the doors of our schools are "OPEN" to all our children. The Michigan branch, P'TACH of Michigan, Inc., was founded in May of 1979 by a group of parents, lay people and professionals in fields related to special education. Our main objective is to provide special education for learning disabled children with the goal of mainstreaming them into regular classrooms whenever possible. Today, P'TACH has grown to serve over twenty children in its two programs. Unfortunately, due to a lack of financial resources, children are currently on a waiting list to enter P'TACH's programs. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION P'TACH of Mich., Inc. 18150 Alta Vista Southfield, Michigan 48075 (313) 399-6281 All donations are tax deductible 128 FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1990 affair. Estelle Donna Evans was rushed to Lenox Hill Hospital, where she under- went a two-hour operation for internal injuries. At 6:40 A.M. on August 1, she died. It was Meir Kahane's thirty- fourth birthday. Deeply depressed, Kahane attended her funeral where he dropped to his knees and cried out: "Oh my darling, please forgive me:' In the years after her death, he would some- times place roses on her grave. Kahane told a few friends who knew about the affair that Estelle committed suicide after learning that she was dying from terminal cancer. According to a JDL source who was then close to Kahane, however, Estelle did not have cancer. But she was pregnant, possibly with Kahane's child. Kahane later set up a char- itable, tax-exempt foundation in the name of Estelle Donna Evans. By his own admission, the foundation raised more than $200,000. Fred and Edith Horowitz were the president and vice-president. Kahane claimed the money was given to Israel's poor, although he has no records and cannot document how the funds were spent. Kahane even advertised in Jewish publications that the founda- tion adopted orphans in Israel. "The schtick was he would give you a picture of an orphan kid and you'd adopt him," says former JDL of- ficial Irving Calderon. In re- ality, Kahane used the money to help finance the JDL, which he created in 1968. In 1971, New York Times reporter Michael Kaufman was assigned to do a story about Kahane, by then the controversial leader of the JDL, which was waging a campaign of violent harass- ment against Soviet officials and their families in New York. Kaufman noticed that JDL publications carried ads for the Estelle Donna Evans Foundation. When asked about the fund, Kahane ex- plained that she had worked as a secretary for one of his think tanks and had died tragically. He said her wealthy parents from Connec- ticut established the fund as a memorial. Teamed up with fellow Times reporter Richard Severo, Kaufman soon ex- posed Kahane's lie. Severo first located Evans's parents, who recognized Kahane's photo as Michael King, their daughter's fiance. Kaufman found Laura Warner at her apartment on the West Side of Manhattan. The ex-room- mate confirmed that the "Dear Jane" letter was writ- ten by Kahane. Then the reporters flew to the United States Air University at Maxwell Air Force Base in Montgomery, Alabama where Joseph Churba was teaching Middle Eastern studies. "It was a hot day and Churba started sweating," recalled Kaufman, who is now the assistant foreign editor of the Times. "The half-circle sweat stains under his armpits began to grow. He confirmed that Kahane had had a phys- ical relationship with Evans." Kaufman and Severo pre- sented Kahane with their evidence at a New York televi- sion studio, where the JDL leader had just finished tap- ing "The David Susskind Show." "The three of us went upstairs to a little office and I said to Kahane: "Ibll me about Donna,' " Kaufman re- called. "He reached over and put his hand on my knee and he said 'I loved her.' "Kahane completely unburdened him- self to the startled reporters. If the paper of record had published all it knew about Kahane ... then perhaps both he and the JDL would have been destroyed. He admitted that he had "stumbled" into Estelle in a Second Avenue bar where he often went to pick up women under a variety of pseudo- nyms. He confessed that with Estelle he had never known such passion, that they had lived together in an East Side apartment, that she was in the process of converting to Judaism, and that he knew that breaking off the affair had driven her to suicide. He also said that his relationship with his wife Libby was "un- satisfactory" and that he felt his sex life was confined by the strictures of Orthodoxy. "During the course of the conversation, Kahane ap- pealed to Mike as a Jew not to hurt another Jew by in- cluding details of the affair in the Times" Severo recalled. "We were so repulsed by what we had collected, and it was such volatile stuff that we drove to Arthur Gelb's house." Gelb was then the Times Metropolitan page editor. When Gelb heard what Meir Kahane his reporters had learned, he phoned Abe Rosenthal, the Times managing editor, who joined them. Kaufman had composed a lead for the story that described a distraught Kahane placing roses on his dead lover's grave. Gelb and Rosenthal told Kaufman to rewrite the lead, deleting references to the rabbi's adulterous relationship. They argued that emphasizing the affair "would generate anti- Semitism," said Severo. Kauf- man has a different recollec- tion. He said that the editors decided that leading with the graveside scene would violate the Times's standards of fairness. Several days later, while Kaufman was polishing his story, Kahane turned up at the Times. Kaufman recalled: "He told me a parable about the old rabbi and the young rabbi. The young rabbi says he wants to save all the Jews in the world. And as he grows older he says he wants to save all the Jews in Poland, and then when he grows much older he says he wants to save himself. And I said, you are that old Jew, and he said yes. Then he tried to make a deal. He promised he would disap- pear from public life if I didn't write what I knew about his dead lover. I said that's not my role. I'm not here to chastise you, but you have this Damocles sword hanging over your head. You're the one who put the ad in the JDL paper for the Estelle Donna Evans Foundation. He said, `Yes, I know, but my mother has cancer; my wife is inno- cent; I have four children.' And then ensued a lot of soul- searching on my part, and a lot of conversations with my editors." Although the Times would expose many sensational as- pects of Kahane's career in a January 24, 1971, front-page story, only an elliptical reference was made to Evans. The Times reports that Kahane considered her "an unusual person," and that he was so shaken after her sui-