SEVENTY-FIVE CENTS SERVING DETROIT'S JEWISH COMMUNITY OCTOBER 11, 1991 / 3 CHESHVAN 5752 Meeting Ponders Blacks And Jews NOAM M.M. NEUSNER Staff Writer "! t's no secret that friend- ship has eluded blacks and Jews. Once allies, these two groups have sparred over a number of issues in recent years, leaving many to doubt whether they have anything to discuss anymore. At Michigan State Univer- sity in East Lansing, a con- ference on black-Jewish re- lations this week sought to find the common ground on which the alliance once rested. The conference, held on Monday and Tuesday, was well-attended by both facul- ty and students, and could have been staged in larger meeting halls. "Things that have been said in this room should go beyond this room," said Professor Barry Gross, who organized the confer- ence with Professor Curtis Stokes. The two involved MSU administration and several departments in sponsoring the program, with the aim of "elevating the discussion" from conflict resolution to understanding deep-seated differences. Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan made a campus visit last year which set off a firestorm of con- troversy on the campus bet- ween black and Jewish stu- dent groups. And this past summer's deadly violence in the Brooklyn neighborhood of Crown Heights between blacks and Jews underscored what many have called the serious deterioration of rela- tions between the two former allies. Grappling with both these events, the speakers at the conference sought to in- tellectualize the issue, describing instead of debating relations between blacks and Jews. "It is possible to be extraordinarily sensitive and not understand suffer- ing," said Professor Laurence Thomas of Syracuse University. Pro- fessor Thomas' point seemed at once to define the mood Continued on Page 30 Hunger Forces Yad Ezra Move AMY J. MEHLER Staff Writer S Drawing a Bead on The world's most syndicated cartoonist is an Israeli living in America. ara's husband doesn't know she comes to Yad Ezra once a mon- th for food. She does it discreetly — on days she goes grocery shopp- ing — so her husband, who lost his stomach to cancer this summer, doesn't have to also lose his pride. Sara has been coming to Yad Ezra, the only kosher food pantry in southeastern Michigan, the last six mon- ths. She was greatly relieved to hear Yad Ezra is moving to larger space in Oak Park next month. Yad Ezra, Hebrew for helping hand, has outgrown its 700-square-foot basement office on 10 Mile Road in Southfield and is moving to a 4,200-square-foot building on Harding Road, south of 11 Mile Road, in November. "Every time I come here, there are lines out the door," said Sara, who lives in Oak Park. "I couldn't believe it when I first came. I'd never have believed it was possible so many Jews needed this kind of help. I just didn't think it happened to Jews." Last month, Yad Ezra vol- unteers gave away 1,600 pounds of food — jars of mayonnaise and oil; cans of sweet peas, strings beans, corn and sliced carrots; boxes of frozen Empire chicken, matzah meal and cereal; and bags of noodles, crackers and cookies — to 379 families (836 in- dividuals). "It's a zoo in here; we're on top of each other," said Jeannette Eizelman, Yad Ezra executive director. "Even when we opened, we Continued on Page 22