THE JEWISH NEWS SERVING DETROIT'S JEWISH COMMUNITY SEVENTY-FIVE CENTS CLOSE-UP SEPTEMBER 13, 1991 / 5 TISHREI 5752 Levin Confident On Guarantees ELIZABETH APPLEBAUM Assistant Editor S en. Carl Levin of Michigan this week labeled "morally wrong" President George Bush's proposal to delay a Congressional vote on Israel's request for $10 billion in U.S. loan guar- antees, and said he is con- vinced the majority of the Senate supports his position. "Soviet Jews should not be used as pawns for a political purpose," Sen. Levin said. "And that's the feeling here (in the Senate)." Israel has requested that the U.S. government cosign a $10 billion loan to be granted by commercial banks, with funds being used to help provide job training and housing for Soviet and Ethiopian immi- grants. Late last week, President Bush recommended postpon- ing for 120 days any vote on the matter, saying in a letter to congressional leaders that approval of the loan guar- antees could be detrimental to a Middle East peace con- ference. "If Congress chooses to press forward now, we stand a very real chance of losing the participation of either our Arab or Israeli negotia- ting partners," he wrote. On Thursday, a group of Detroiters representing the Jewish Federation, the Jew- ish Community Council, the Michigan Board of Rabbis, Michigan AIPAC, the American Jewish Com- mittee, Hadassah and the Zionist Organization of America left for Washington to discuss the loan guar- antees with Michigan repre- sentatives. They slated meetings with Sens. Levin and Donald Riegle, as well as Reps. David Bonior, the House majority whip; Dennis Hertel; William Ford; John Dingell, chairman of the House Energy and Com- merce Committee; and William Broomfield, rank- ing minority member of the Hou s e Foreign Affairs Committee. Continued on Page 20 Abortion Action: Will Jews Join In? NOAM M.M. NEUSNER Staff Writer A AITERN.DAY Miracles Three Detroiters talk about remarkable events in their lives. Page 24 fter a summer picketing abortion clinics in Wichita, Operation Rescue is looking for a new venue. Some reports place Detroit at the top of the list, which means clinics in Southfield, Lathrup Village and elsewhere in the area could be host to anti-abortion demonstrators from around the country. But beyond the possibility of headlines of unrest and arrests lies an unsettling issue for the Jewish com- munity: how does it fit into the Operation Rescue philosophy? Many Jews are decidedly pro-abortion, and fear that Operation Rescue, a highly evangelical move- ment, will apply Christian morality to American poli- tics if given the chance. "The real question is not one of abortion," said Rabbi Daniel Polish of Temple Beth El. "Jews see this issue as one where government might be used to impose someone's value system on others. "They would like an America that sees things a certain way," Rabbi Polish added. "It's not the way Jews understand things." Jewish law on abortion varies, depending on who's interpreting it. Strict inter- pretation defines life as beginning 30 days after con- ception, but still others feel Jewish law places a premium on the mother's right to privacy and, therefore, allow abortion. But these interpretations are peripheral to the issue of Continued on Page 14