OPINION Pleading No Contest PHIL JACOBS Managing Editor F ILL OUT AN AP- PLICATION BLANK AND WIN A FREE TRIP!! Yeah, sure, probably a free trip that would end up costing us a bundle. But there it was, a card- board sign with the accom- panying pocket of applica- tion forms on a shoe store display case. There was my 7-year-old, doing what any child, certain of winning, and unfamiliar with gim- micks, was doing — filling out as many of the applica- tions as she could while her little sister tried on shoes. Didn't she know that these things never work? Didn't she know that the applica- tions probably get thrown out? Didn't she know that her father never wins anything? We won. Or shall I say, we "won." About a month after the application was filled out, a pleasant-sounding lady called us, all excited to announce that we had won a trip to a famous beach resort. All that we had to do to claim our prize was to come to her office and sit through an hour-long promotion on what else the company awarding us this momentous prize offers. All of us who have ever signed our name to anything have received letters telling us that "we have already won" a trip or a prize. A friend once won a CB radio for taking a trip to see log cabin property in West Virginia. Of course, the CB radio was only a receiver. You couldn't 10-4 anyone on it. But, the adventure was what it was all about. Feeling that it's every per- son's obligation to go through this shtick at least once in their lives and get it all over with, my wife and I decided to sit through the presentation. After all, there was more to be "won" here. An additional no-obligation prize drawing could send us to the bank cashing in on hundreds of dollars of prize money. And then there were the trips. Who could forget the trips we might win to Lake Tahoe, Vegas, Hawaii? What excitement. What a country. To think I was go- ing to spend this hour on a Friday playing jump rope with my daughter or helping my wife prepare for Shabbat. Give me a pina colada and Tahiti. The adventure continued in the office of the travel firm. There, we were sur- rounded by four-color posters of sunsets, blue waters, ex- otic looking fish and plenty of tanned, well-rested bodies. Other "winners" filed into the office, sat down, filled out an information sheet that asked for income and credit card choices. They too were dreaming of the places they would go. We were all so high on expectations that we could feel the cool spray of the ocean leaving beads of fantasy on our faces. With skepticism as our umbrellas, we awaited our turn. "Jacobs!" a voice from a doorway called out. There was the key master to A pleasant-sounding lady announced that we won the trip to the famous beach resort. unlock our dreams. We've come so far, I thought. What great thing awaits us now? Quickly my imagination went into a different sphere. I heard voices inside my head saying famous lines such as "There's a sucker born every minute," and "There's no free lunch." I even quickly pictured my mother telling me not to volunteer for anything right before my first trip to over- night camp when I was 12. But "Tom" had it all worked out for us diff- erently. There was no need for us to worry. Because he was going to show us how over the years we've wasted tens of thousands of dollars on our vacations. And how would we feel about visiting the same places we love, in- cluding Israel, for a fraction .of the price? By now, the dreams of vacation seemed to fade a bit. We had been there over an hour already. We were shown a film with more beautiful bodies swimming, sailing and sipping cocktails. Then came the map with pushpins in- dicating all of the club's vacation spots. And then came the price for all of this wonderment, $8,000. The financing was there if you could only put a fraction down. They had just taken us through an hour and a half of presentation, and they wanted a decision right there. Literature to take home and read? "We don't do that here," I was told by a smiling "Tom." Was it the $8,000 that was keeping us from making a decision, we were asked? I told my wife that I'm sure almost everyone makes an $8,000 decision in a split minute. We must be diff- erent. And just like in car showroom fashion, "Tom" disappeared for several mo- ments, returning with his sales manager. It seemed that the sales manager had come up with a way for us to join the club for only $2,000. All we had to do was join that very day. I said no. The sales man- ager, without looking at me straight in the eye said, "Good luck in the drawing." The bitterness of his tone almost assuredly meant that we had little or no shot of winning anything more. Goodbye luck, goodbye op- portunity. Hello, exit. We were directed into another room, where our salesman would pull a chance for an- other prize from a canister. First, he knocked over the canister and the chance cards fell all over the floor. I helped him put them back. And then he pulled a chance card out. We didn't win anything else. But we did win the lodging at the resort. We only have to drive 15 hours to get there or pay our own flight and food. But they'll put us up . . . provided we give them ample notice. We decided not to take ad- vantage of our unique oppor- tunity. I guess we're choos- ing to lose out on the only contest we've ever "won." But in terms of this par- ticular contest, winning wasn't worth the price. ❑ Even The Optimists Are Worried GARY ROSENBLATT Editor Even Charles Silberman is worried about the future of American Jew- ish life. Mr. Silberman, you may recall, published a major book in 1985 on Jews in America (A Certain People: American Jews and Their Lives Today), whose conclusions were op- timistic enough to set off a major debate within the community. Challenging the widely held beliefs that intermar- riage and lack of religious observance were leading us down the path of assimila- tion, the author of such major books as Crisis In Black And White and Crisis In The Classroom spent several years studying the American Jewish commun- ity. What he found was that anti-Semitism is decreasing, fears of assimilation were exaggerated and that a Jew- ish renewal — an increased study and practice of Judaism — was bringing vi- tality to religious life. Mr. Silberman wrote that American Jewry was "not headed for a fall" and was "not seriously threatened by the new openness of Ameri- can society." When his observations were criticized for being too optimistic, he responded that Jews are "congenitally unable to accept good news." That's why I was curious to hear his response to several recent studies, in- cluding the major survey released in June by the "If I was writing my book today, I'd have to be much more cautious." Charles Silberman Council of Jewish Federa- tions, which found that assimilation appears to be on the increase. The CJF report noted that, since 1985, more than half of Jews who married, married a gentile. And conversions to Judaism among non-Jewish spouses have decreased over the last two decades from about 33 percent to about five percent. Mr. Silberman maintains that there was "a statistical basis for my optimism" at the time that he wrote his book, but acknowledges that "something has happened in the last few years" to justify the alarm among those who worry about Jewish survival in the United States. He feels that Jewish renewal "may have played itself out" and that "some of the old taboos are falling." Specifically, he mentioned a personal observation that Jews who a few years ago may have married a gentile in a civil ceremony are now being married in a church service. It was one thing, he said, for a Jew to marry a non- Jew, but for a Jew to identify as a Christian or raise one's children as Christian, "these were unthinkable," he said. "Clearly, they are becoming more thinkable. "There seems to be a stag- gering increase of Jews who are no longer identifying as Jews," Mr. Silberman observed. "Ultimately, my optimism was based on the assumption that most Jews refused to stop being Jewish," he said. Continued on Page 10 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 7