OPERATION still running, to take them to Israel. For the next 21 hours, the 34 aircraft, packed more tightly with humanity than their designers had dared imagine, made a succession of round trips, landing at Ben-Gurion Airport every 15 minutes. (Because the opera- tion took place over the Sabbath, rabbinic approval had been required.) At one point in the opera- tion, a total of 28 planes were in the air at the same time. One Boeing 747, its seats removed and its cabin floor covered with mat- tresses, carried 1,087 Ethio- pian Jews, more than twice its normal maximum load and the largest number of people ever to travel in a single passenger airliner. Some two-thirds of the immigrants were estimated to be children, and their number was swollen by no fewer than 10 infants who were born during the opera- tion itself, including one set of twins. Once in Israel, the new immigrants were processed and then taken to absorption centers, hostels and, in one case, to a hotel in Jerusalem for the start of yet another long and arduous journey. For most, it was not only a journey from Ethiopia to Israel, from peril to safety, from exile to home, but also a journey from the 17th cen- tury to the 20th century; a replay of that remarkable event six years ago which captured the imagination of the world when 7,000 Ethi- opian Jews had their first encounter with the modern world. This week, another 14,000 embarked on a journey that will eventually take them, like previous waves of im- migrants, into the main- stream of Israeli society. "This is a great operation that has brought out the en- tire Jewish community from Ethiopia to Israel," Mr. Shamir declared triumphant- ly atBen-Gurion Airport. Meanwhile, other, more sober-minded Israeli officials estimated that in addition to the $35 million payoff to the Ethiopian authorities, "Operation Solomon" would cost a further $127 million: $7 million for the flights and the remainder — at a modest $8,500 a head — for the ab- sorption of the immigrants. For the time being, no one is counting the cost, but com- ing on top of the bill for ab- sorbing the hundreds of thousands of new Soviet immigrants, Israel will sooner or later face a tough day of reckoning. ❑ SOLOMON Israel's Long History Of Rescuing Jews Operation Solomon is the 16th rescue mission the Israeli government has attempted since the state was founded in 1948. This latest mission, which packed 14,087 E- thiopian Jews into El Al jetliners and military cargo planes from Addis Ababa, reportedly cost Israel $35 million. The first official government airlift of E- thiopian Jews began from the Sudan in 1985 when Operation Moses transported 7,000 Ethio- pian Jews to Israel. To obtain freedom for Jews, Israel had been sup- porting Ethiopian Presi- dent Mengistu Haile Mariam. The president, who resigned and fled the country last week, had us- ed the Jews as hostages, letting them out a few at a time in exchange for Israeli aid. Other rescue missions devoted to the evacuation of Jews included: • 1948: Operation Magic Carpet brought 45,000 Yemenite Jews to Israel. • 1948: About 7,000 Kurdish Jews were brought to Israel from Iranian Kurdistan. • 1948: Operation Ezrah and Operation Nehemiah: more than 110,000 Iraqi Jews were brought to Israel on ap- proximately 2,000 flights from Bagdad. • 1948: Operation Goshen: Israel brought 10,000 Jews from Egypt. About 4,000 Karaites, Jews who adhere almost fanatically to the letter of the written law, were also brought out of Egypt at that time. • 1949 to present: Some 300,000 Romanian Jews have emigrated to Israel. • 1949: Some 4,000 Jews were brought from Moslem Afghanistan to Israel via Iraq. • 1949: About 25,000 Persian Jews were brought to Israel between 1949 and 1950. • 1949: About 32,000 Jews were brought to Israel by boat. • 1951: Most of the 2,500 Jews living in the Indian port city of Cochin were brought to Israel. Another 12,000 Indian Jews called Bene Israel came to Israel also during the 1950s. • 1953: About 35,000 Turkish Jews were brought to Israel by boat. • 1959: Operation Yachin: Approximately 250,000 Jews were brought out of the Maghreb by the Mossad, Israel's secret security agency from Morocco, Tunisia and Algeria. • 1979: On the eve of the Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini's rise to power in Iran, some 2,000 Jews escape the country and are brought to Israel. • 1989: Operation Ex- odus: Israel has brought out 250,000 Soviet Jews since mid-1989. • 1991: About 300 Jews, nearly all of the known Jewish community of Albania, were flown to Israel in a hurried opera- tion. ❑ _ Amy J. Mehler In Addis Ababa, Israelis help Ethiopian Jews move from a bus to an Israeli military plane for the flight to Tel Aviv. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 25