ARIMMIONIMIWPmk EDITORIAL `Reality Check' Needed in Community Paul D. Borman, outgoing president of the Jewish Community Council of Detroit, told an audience of several hundred at Tuesday evening's annual meeting that the Jewish community "must face tough questions" about its future. We agree with Mr. Borman and we con- gratulate him for his three years as presi- dent of the JCCouncil. We also offer our support to newly installed president Jeannie Weiner. Mr. Borman, taking on President Bush's style of describing himself as "the presi- dent for education," called himself the "president for Israel" because under his reign the group sponsored three separate trips to Israel. He also said the Jewish Community Council has made strides in areas of black and Jewish relations and black and Arab relations. While we commend the JCCouncil's show of solidarity with Israel, we also suggest Ms. Weiner's job should be "president for the reality check." Contrary to what the JCCouncil might think, relations between Jews and blacks in this city are at an all- time low, reflecting the national deteriora- tion. And before we start patting ourselves on the back about our improving relations with Chaldeans, we encourage the JC- Council to not stop at an occasional cross- cultural dinner. We encourage the JC- Council to follow-up with long-term pro- grams involving Jews and Chaldeans. Let's also not forget that Chaldeans — Christians from Iraq and Syria — do not consider themselves Arab. The reality here is that the •Jewish community, and the Jewish Community Council, has few rela- tionships with the Detroit area's Arab community. With the largest Arab community out- side of the Middle East in our backyard, we need some sort of relations. This is an Arab community that was strong enough to boo a touring Israeli basketball team off the floor at the University of Michigan- Dearborn. This is an Arab community that does a good job of finding its way, and stating its views, in the secular media. Meanwhile, Jewish emigres keep coming to Detroit needing language skills, jobs and further acculturation. Yad Ezra's food lines grow longer and more of the Jewish middle class is falling through the smaller socio-economic safety nets. And despite not wanting to accept the truth, many Jews are looking to move from Southfield. Why? Because the educational system supposedly isn't as good as it once was. Why? Because blacks are moving in. We are running from the same blacks with whom Mr. Borman says we are improving relations. The mission now is not to run to Israel and show solidarity. The mission now is to take a close look at what is happening, what is really happening, at home. A real- ity check is truly needed. Israel's "Friumph In Operation Solomon Last weekend, Israel did what it does best: Rescue Jews in peril. Within 21 hours, 34 Israeli planes flew more than 14,000 Jews from Ethiopia. This was almost the entire Jewish community of that war-torn country. "Operation Solomon," as the flawlessly executed airlift has been dubbed by Israel, is an undiluted triumph for the Jewish state at a time when it sorely needs one. In the last decade, the nation's image has been tarnished by the war in Lebanon, by its stance toward settlements on the West Bank, by its handling of the intifada, and by often-frigid or bumbling relations with its chief ally, the United States. The Ethio- pian rescue has brought Israel to another of its finest hours, an hour which again af- firms one of the central tenets of its foun- ding 43 years ago: That somewhere on the planet there would be a haven for a people who have been persecuted and hounded and vilified in too many places and for too many generations, that this refuge would be open to all Jews, regardless of their country of origin or their politics or (as in the case of the black Ethiopian Jews) their 6 FRIDAY, MAY 31, 1991 color. Indeed, as Israel's Deputy Foreign Min- ister Benjamin Netanyahu said after last weekend's rescue, Israel is the only coun- try that has ever brought blacks to freedom. Israel's reversal of African blacks' more frequent journey into slavery again validates that nation's highest ethics, its compassion for Jews everywhere, and its very raison d'etre. Soon enough will come the problems of absorption; for a moment, though, let us bask in the pride of this effort. The rescue would not have been possible, though, without the leadership of Presi- dent Bush, who intervened directly with E- thiopia's acting president and made the airlift possible. It was an example of coop- eration between two allies, Israel and the United States, whose countries are founded on the principles of democracy. Too often, of late, those allies have been squabbling over Mideast peace efforts. Perhaps this stunning rescue will remind Washington and Jerusalem of their shared values and help bridge the gap that has widened bet- ween them. LETTERS The Indictment Of The Poles I have read Phil Jacobs' ar- ticle which was so full of in- sight and truth about Lech Walesa and Poland. The let- ters to the editor which followed have criticized Mr. Jacobs unjustly. I wonder whether or not those who wrote the unfavor- able letters ever lived in Poland before, during, or after the war and the Holocaust. Well, I did! I was born in Poland where my family had lived for many generations. And I must tell you that the Poles were instrumental in pouring misery on me and most of my fellow Polish Jews. When the war started, I was only 11 years old. By that age I already had become used to the ingrained hate and discrimination that goes far beyond the anti-Semitism that American Jews recognize. Suddenly, I was thrust into the ghettos, the labor slavery and the concentration camps, completely separated from parents and family. It was six years of hell and horror on this earth. But, after all this, after the liberation, I finally was going home. lb what? Only a handful of Jews had managed to make it back to my home town, Zwolen. My mother and almost all of my many relatives had been carted off to a common fate; but, at least I had hoped to meet again with my father and 6-year-old brother who had been hiding out in a nearby village. But I found out that they had been pointed out and handed over to the Germans by the Poles, probably for some vodka or a bit of sugar. These Poles knew my family and knew me. They had been our neighbors. Do you think that they welcomed me back? A few forlorn Jews gathered in an old, still-standing house. I was with them for a few weeks, long enough for two of us to be killed, and to find out that Jews were being hunted down and murdered during pogroms taking place all over Poland. I left not a moment too soon. I found out later that the day after I fled, Poles had surrounded the house looking for me and had shot up the house at random, scattering the few who had not as yet run off. These neighborly Poles thought that I had returned to claim some property belonging to my uncle. Had I remained behind one more day, I would not be here to write this letter. No matter the belated apologies carried by Walesa from the Poles; it is in no one's power to forgive them. That would be descrating the memories of millions of Polish Jews. Sally Horwitz New Haven, Conn. Roundtable Is Continuing The May 10 issue of The Detroit Jewish News included an article by David Margolis entitled "Orthodox Thinkers Stopped Before Starting." The article is misleading in many ways. I am quoted in bold let- ters that the roundtable "no longer exits." In fact, the roundtable does exist, as the article goes on to state. To enhance its status, it has become part of the Rab- binical Council of America, and is now known as the RCA Roundtable. This decision was Continued on Page 12 N