UP FRONT San Francisco Charged With Encouraging Hate GARTH WOLKOFF Special to The Jewish News R ecent actions by San Francisco Mayor Art Agnos, Police Chief Willis Casey and the Board of Supervisors have fostered an environment that could lead to anti-Semitism, the Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith has charged. The designation of the city as a sanctuary for conscien- tious objectors gives greater freedom to express anti- Semitism within the peace movement, according to ADL's Pacific regional direc- tor Richard Hirschhaut. Further contributing to that climate, he said, has been the dismantling of the S.F. Police Department's In- telligence Unit, which was responsible for gathering in- formation on hate groups before those groups com- mitted a crime. Mr. Hirschhaut's corn- Garth Wolkoff is a staff writer for the Northern California Jewish Bulletin. The Jewish Telegraphic Agency con- tributed to this report. ments come on the heels of the release of ADL's annual report on hate crimes, which found almost half of Califor- nia's fire-related anti- Semitic incidents during 1990 occurring in the Bay Area. Nationally, the report said, the ADL recorded 1,685 acts of anti-Semitism, mark- ing the fourth straight an- nual increase. The issue of sanctuary, and the dismantling of an SFPD unit, are cause for concern. Labeling San Francisco a sanctuary and eliminating the Intelligence Unit "creates a climate that anything goes in San Fran- cisco," Mr. Hirschhaut said. "That climate can lead to se- rious harm. It's dangerous." Mr. Hirschhaut criticized Chief Casey for scrapping the police's Intelligence Unit immediately after the police chief's appointment late last year. The unit came under heavy fire for allegedly spy- ing on political organiza- tions. Although the new Hate Crimes Unit has duplicated many of the Intelligence Unit's tasks, the new unit cannot gather information on a hate group before a crime has been committed. "Before, -a feeling or intui- tion about a group or organ- ization could come from sea- soned law enforcement offi- cials because their gut can tell them something about (a hate group)," Mr. Hirschhaut said. "None of that can happen now." Mr. Hirschhaut also took the city to task over the es- tablishment of San Fran- cisco as a sanctuary for cons- cientious objectors, people who claim exemption from military service due to moral, ethical or religious opposition to war. The sanctuary paves the way for anti-Semitic and an- ti-Israel sentiments, he claimed, by giving tacit ap- proval to all protesters — in- cluding those who express such beliefs. In fact, many Jews active in the anti-war protests have complained they feel Artwork from Newsday by Ned Levine. Copyright° 1991, Newsday. Distributed by Los Angeles Times Syndicate. ostracized by a movement they see as anti- Zionist. Mr. Hirschhaut said the mayor's "soft condemna- tion" of the violence com- mitted by fringe groups within the anti-war move- ment further opened the doors for the expression of anti-Semitism. "Anti-Semitism is an in- sidious element of many societies. It has nothing to do with our position on the sanctuary," said Mr. Agnos. "The sanctuary resolution states that the city will not expend any resources to track down or prosecute anyone with moral, religious or ethical objections to the war," he said. "Israel didn't want this war anymore than anyone else. This resolution does not suggest or imply anything about Israel or the Jewish community." In its statement, CHAINI notes that since the Chinese occupation of Tibet more than 40 years ago: • More than 1 million Tibetans have perished as a direct result of the actions of the Chinese government. • More than 6,000 Bud- dhist monasteries have been destroyed. • Buddhist monks and nuns are persecuted and Tibetan culture is routinely repressed. • Millions of Chinese have been relocated to Tibet, making the Tibetan people a minority in their own land. • The Dalai Lama, spiri- tual leader and former head of state of Tibet, has since 1959 been forced to live in exile. issue of Spy magazine tells about the king's 175 cars, 40 boats and 30 motorcycles. Included in his collection: a gold Mercedes-Benz used by Adolf Hitler. The Jordan Information Bureau, based in Washing- ton, D.C., told Spy the car had belonged to "the Ger- man Army." ❑ ROUND UP JDC Program Aids Soviet Immigrants New York (JTA) — The American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee (JDC) has established "Women to Women," a pro- gram to help Soviet women immigrating to Israel adjust to their new environment. It is the first such program undertaken by the worldwide relief agency and the first of its kind in Israel. Judy Feirstein, a JDC ca- reer counselor coordinating the project, said all of the Soviet women participating are single mothers, many of whom face the problem of having to support on one salary an elderly parent as well as young children. Ms. Feirstein said the ob- jective of the program is to match these working women with Israeli women advanc- ed in similar occupations or careers who are willing to share their experience and knowledge. The program involves workshops that help the olim prepare for the realities of being a working mother in Israel. Ms. Feirstein described a typical participant named Sonia. A single mother who arrived two months ago in Jerusalem, she was seeking a job in an unfamiliar econ- omic system and needed child care for her 4-year-old son and an apartment big enough for them and her el- derly mother. Sonia had to accomplish this while still unfamiliar with the language and cul- ture of her new country. Haggadot Planned For Soviet Olim Bnei Akiva, the Religious Zionists of America, is spon- soring a program to give every new Soviet immigrant to Israel a Haggadah. Each Haggadah, which will be inscribed with the name of the sponsor, will contain the traditional Heb- rew text accompanied by a modern Russian translation. Also included will be guidelines to lead the new ohm, immigrants, through The cover of Bnei Akiva's Hagaddah for olim. what for many will be their first Seder. To sponsor a Haggadah, send $15 to Bnei Akiva Haggadah for Russian Olim, 25 W. 26th St., New York City, N.Y. 10010, or call (212) 889-5260. CHAIM Voices Support For Tibet CHAIM, Children of Holo- caust Survivors in Michigan, has issued its first political statement — a declaration in support of the people of Tibet. What The King Has In His Collection Just about everybody has something curious in his garage. But can anybody match King Hussein of Jor- dan? In "Snow White and the Sovereign Dwarf," a profile of Queen Noor, the February Men At Work In Hadassah Everybody knows Hadassah is a women's organization, right? So why is Hadassah talking about its member, designer Ralph Lauren? Mr. Lauren is one of some 25,000 Hadassah Associates, a program started in 1966 for male supporters of the organization. Other mem- bers of Hadassah Associates: actor Glenn Ford, drama critic Clive Barnes, Jerusalem Mayor Teddy Kollek and former New York Mayor Ed Koch, and Sen. Edward Kennedy. Compiled by Elizabeth Applebaum THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 11