Lessons Learned? Continued from preceding page ELDORADO 30 MONTH LEASE WITH r Month 30 Month Lease NO MONEY DOWN! ki and others believe there are probably twice as many Jews in the area than are officially reg- istered. Not wanting to pay the tax is one reason for disaffilia- tion, he says. There are also those whose Jewish identity is minimal. The Munich Jewish commu- nity was founded after the war by Polish and German survivors. Of the 250,000 displaced people who were in Bavaria after the war, only 10,000 stayed. Mr. Rakowski's family remained be- , cause his father had tuberculo- sis and could not obtain a U.S. visa. "Very few stayed because they wanted," he says. "I was born in 1947, raised as a Jew living in Germany, sit- ting on their suitcases." Four decades of democracy 2 to choose from Stk. #2199 White diamond Stk. #2337 Cotillion white w/sport interior `GMAC LUXURY SMARTLEASE 30 Months. First pymt. plus $525 ref. sec. dep. plus $350 acquisition fee and plate or transfer due on delivery. 4% state tax additional. 15' per mile over limitation. To get total pymts., multiply pymt. by 30 months. . Roger Rinke Cadillac New acldibon °=5) xit R OGER RINKE CDILLAC If , . r, -,- , •- ti..: , V, \ --- D kt gi `4 4,-111., 14 4 1) ....., . . . . ■ . ••• . ... Dem: A in) TO EXCELLENa Alignment Wheel Balancing Brakes - Shocks Suspension Exhaust Foreign & Domestic Cars tune Up & Maintenance Joe Stamelts Dynamic Car Care Center OPEN MON.-SAT. Chil Rakowski, executive director of the Jewish community in Munich. MASTER DEALER I - 696 AT VAN DYKE 7 5 8 - 1 8 0 0 32661 Northwestern Hwy. Farmington Hills 851-3883 BRING IN YOUR COUPONS & WARRANTIES WE'LL WORK WITH YOU!!! 7 FRONT OR —1 7 REAR BRAKES C • All Brake Work Guaranteed • Turn Drums and Rotors • Semi metallic pads extra • Check Hydraulics $3995 • Test Drive L Car 28 (starting at) FRIDAY, MAY 29, 1992 r EXHAUST SYSTEM ^4.ITI) • .11.1 ■ WIIT .110•01.4. C1.• V.101 .1. ACV $5.00 with this ad L Small & Compact Mid Size Full Size $ 7995 $8995 $ 9995 Single Exhaust, Resonators and Y Pipes Extra , L_ cated by the Israeli government, which claimed the Russian Jews • were not really refugees, as they had Israel to go to. The head of the Jewish com- munity in Berlin, Heinz Galin- ski, asked the German government to let the Jews stay. A Holocaust survivor, Mr. Galin- • ski said no German should dare to send away Russian Jews by official measures. During the debate, Mr. Rakowski and the Jewish com- munity continued to integrate the newcomers. For Mr. Rakowski, the son of displaced persons, receiving the Russians f. was a remarkable event. "For me it was unbelievable that I should be in a position to cl welcome Jewish refugees from 'D another country, consideri- Jews were escaping GermL during the war." But in the end, so as not to hurt relations with Israel, the lc) German government changed policy and would not allow more Russian Jews to stay on refug9e status. Since reunification, Rakowski says, things between the Jewish community and tilt government have indeed changed. When the Jew: protested Chancellor Kohl's vii it with Austrian President Kur.. Waldheim, Mr. Kohl's response was unprecedented. (He told the 1, Jews "I'll decide who I meet," and lambasted them for their op- position to reunification.) Mr. Rakowski says such comments would not have hap- pened two years ago. "It was the first time the German Chancel- lor should present such a view in public," he says. There is, he says, a tendency to the right, especially in the for- mer GDR, where xenophobia is high. Values have changed, he believes. "Before, it was important to show this was a democracy. Now it's not of interest to the Bonn government. Its the first time the chancellor would lash out against the Jewish community because he feels he has the peo- ple behind him. And he gets more sympathy because they don't want to be reminded of the past." Finally, Mr. Rakowski points out, world politics has a serious . effect on German politics. "Two weeks before [the meeting with Waldheim], Mr. Kohl was in Washington, when Mr. Bush and Mr. Baker were bashing IP , rael. One week later Mr. Ko! - bashes the Jews. You can wati the diminishing influence of GE , )f man and American Jews." .z:=' MOST AMERICAN CARS and economic growth helped normalize life for the Jews who remained. Twenty years ago young people might have head- ed for Israel or the States to com- plete their education; today they just as likely travel in Europe or stay in Germany. In fact, partly due to its strong economy, Germany re- cently has been a lure for Russ- ian Jews. Vitali Greenwald, 51, came to Munich from Russia about a year ago. A urologist, Dr. Green- wald has only been allowed to work part time at a hospital un- til he can prove he meets West- ern standards. He is a regular at the Jewish Community Center in Munich, participating in events and learning more about Jewish tra- dition. Five hundred Russians came to Germany last year, explains Mr. Rokowski. Most came as tourists, then applied for politi- cal asylum. In the case of the Jewish immigrants, however, Fran Rothbard is managing editor of matters were further compli- the Atlanta Jewish Times. ,h