1 9 4 2 Celebrating 50 years of growth with the Detroit Jewish Community 1 9 9 2 THE JEWISH NEWS SEVENTY-FIVE CENTS MAY 1, 1992 / 28 NISAN 5752 JPAC Takes On Issues Of State KIMBERLY LIFTON Staff Writer A What's it like to live in Detroit's largest enclave of Soviet Jews? Page 22 group of activists this month is launching a fund-raising drive to gain Jewish political power in Michigan. A program scheduled for May 20 will inform the community about a new bi- partisan political action committee called JPAC, an acronym for Jewish Agency Political Action Committee. "We are giving money to assure that the Jewish community gets its fair share," said JPAC treasurer Robert Naftaly. "The PAC is designed to bring issues of Jewish community concern to state legislators." To date, JPAC, which registered with the state last May, has raised about $4,000 for contributions to state-level political cam- paigns, according to records from the State Bureau of Elections. The PAC goal is to give between $5,000 and $15,000 annually for distribution to Republicans and Democrats running for state offices, or- ganizers said. Although the Federation is not connected to JPAC (no monies from the Allied Jew- ish Campaign will go to the PAC), the idea stems from the lobbying activities mounted by Federation and its agencies. The PAC formed at the urging of Jewish Federation lobbyist Dennis Muchmore, who discussed the idea with some local activists, in- cluding Mr. Naftaly, who divides most of his volunteer efforts between the Dem- ocratic Party and the Jewish community. Bloomfield Hills attorney Nathan Upfal, who also serves on various Jewish community boards, is the committee's designated record keeper. He and Mr. Naftaly are authorized to sign checks. The Jewish community last year hired Mr. Muchmore, a Lansing-based Federation is not connected to JPAC, but the idea stems from its lobbying. lobbyist, to help par- ticipating agencies secure state funding. JPAC, organ- izers said, provides addi- tional clout. For many years, the Jew- ish community's political at- tention has gone toward the federal government, which provides funding for Israel. In fact, Detroit's Jewish Democrats run another PAC, the Motor City Polit- ical Action Committee. MOPAC supports pro-Israel Democratic U.S. House and Senate candidates through- out the country. (MOPAC con- tributes to campaigns based on other factors, including a Continued on Page 20 Gay-Lesbian Conference To Be Here In June ELIZABETH APPLEBAUM Assistant Editor L esbian and gay Jews from throughout the Midwest are expected at this summer's Regional Conference of Gay and Les- bian Jews, the first such convention to be held in Michigan. "Integrate and Celebrate," a three-day conference beginning June 5 in _Rochester, is being planned Ind hosted by Simcha, the ocal gay/lesbian Jewish group. The World Congress of Gay and Lesbian Jews is serving as cosponsor. "The purpose of the con- ference is to create a support network and build friend- ships," said Dan, a member of Simcha and conference co- ordinator. "But for me, I think the most profound thing is that it gives a feeling of commun- ity and of belonging, of in- tense belonging," he said. "All of us as human beings want to belong, but growing up I never felt that. (As a Jewish gay or lesbian), you're not really part of that youth organization or syn- agogue youth group; you just know you're different. "At the conference, you're not different. And it's a good feeling to say, 'I'm with peo- ple like me.' " The event will include workshops on the different branches of Judaism and their approach to homosex- uality, psychological con- cerns such as identity and shame, and health issues. Workshops also will ad- dress family matters, in- cluding gay and lesbian parents, and discussing sex- ual identity with one's fami- ly. Jewish members of P- FLAG, Parents and Friends of Lesbians and Gays, will speak at some of the workshops. Other guests will include Evelyn Torton Beck, author of Nice Jewish Girls: A Les- bian Anthology and a pro- fessor of Jewish and wo- men's studies at the Univer- sity ,c) f Maryland-College Park; singer Eliot Pilshaw; East Lansing resident Lev Raphael, author of Dancing on Tisha B'Av; and Richard Lobenthal of the Michigan Region Anti-Defamation League. Simcha also has planned Friday night services and a Havdalah service for the weekend. The World Congress of Gay and Lesbian Jews, with chapters in 25 states and Canada, England, France, Israel and the Netherlands, hosts major conferences every other year. In between such meetings, regional con- ferences are held. Dan said Continued on Page 20