NEWS lzmn, L-U 0 z ›- Cf) 0 f-L1 NEW YEAR GREETINGS . from the n-il Michigan Region United Synagogue of ..< ConservativeJudaism E n1 rT1 6735 Telegraph Road, Suite 310 Bloomfield Hills, MI 48301 (313) 642-4890 c; › U-1 H CETN 11= 71 13 Alan J. Tichnor International President Rabbi Jerome M. Epstein Exec. Vice-President/ Chief Exec. Officer For information regarding Conservative Congregations, please contact the United Synagogue office. Babies Don't Thrive in Smoke-filled Wombs MARTIN AND SUE WEISS AND FAMILY OF MODERN BAKERY When You're Pregnant, Don't Smoke! 13735 W. 9 Mile Road - Oak Park and 26060 Greenfield Lincoln Shopping Center 114 WISH ALL THEIR FRIENDS AND CUSTOMERS A HAPPY, HEALTHY NEW YEAR South Africa's Suzman Feted by B'nai B'rith Helen Suzman has been a leading Jewish liberal in the fight against apartheid in j South Africa. Washington Correspondent Adat Shalom - Farmington Hills Ahavas Israel - Grand Rapids Beth Abraham Hillel Moses - West Bloomfield Beth Achim - Southfield Beth El - Midland Beth Israel - Ann Arbor Beth Israel - Flint Beth Shalom - Oak Park B'nai Israel - Saginaw B'nai Moshe - West Bloomfield Congregation of Moses - Kalamazoo Kehillat Israel - Lansing Shaarey Zedek - East Lansing Shaarey Zedek - Southfield Shaarey Zedek-B'nai Israel - West Bloomfield Temple Benjamin - Mount Pleasant Temple Israel - Bay City Carol Tarica Administrator Michigan Region H JAMES D. BESSER Member Congregations Sharlene Ungar President Michigan Region I THIS SPACE CONTRIBUTED BY THE PUBLISHER A veteran opponent of South Africa's now- deteriorating system of apartheid was in Wash- ington recently to accept an award from an international Jewish organization. Along the way, Helen Suzman, a member of the South African parliament for 37 years, offered some glimpses of how the Jewish community has fared during the dramatic reign of Presi- dent F. W. de Klerk, who has largely dismantled the system of rigid racial dis- crimination that made South Africa a pariah in the world of nations. Ms. Suzman was honored during the 36th biennial convention of B'nai B'rith International for her long years of service to the cause of South African freedom. "I'm delighted and very honored to have this award," she said in an interview. "I am not known as a worker for Jewish causes. I have been devoting myself to the wider aspects of politics in South Africa, and more par- ticularly to fighting the race discrimination that the previous government en- forced so ruthlessly. So this award has special meaning for me and for the Jewish community in, South Africa." Ms. Suzman, the South African-born daughter of a Lithuanian Jew, entered Parliament in 1952, repre- senting an affluent district outside Johannesburg with a large Jewish population. In 1977, she helped create the Progressive Federal Party and served as its only parliamentary represent- ative. She retired from the legislative body in 1989, when the reforms of Presi- dent de Klerk began to reshape the political land- scape in South Africa. "Helen Suzman played an absolutely vital role in the early years of the anti- apartheid movement," said Diana Aviv, associate ex- ecutive vice-chair of the Na- tional Jewish Community Relations Advisory Council and a specialist on South Africa. "For years, she was Helen Suzman: Many Jews are nervous. out there on her own. She cast a stark figure in parliament — being a woman, being Jewish, being consistently liberal." In the early days of the an- ti-apartheid movement, Ms.') Suzman said, the South African Jewish community) was reluctant to speak otit,---1 against the racial separation <1 laws — a reticence that she publicly criticized at the time. At the same time, anti- Semitism was common as the white establishment "I've had a lot of angry letters over the years — all of them anti-Semitic, : n of course." Helen Suzman reacted to the growing threat to their rule. "I've had a lot of angry letters over the years — all of them anti-Semitic, of course," she said. "And I have had various phone calls') in the dark watches of the night, threatening to come and get me. Again, many - calls were very anti-Semitic. But I have a way of dealing with that. I have a whistle on the other phone, and blow it very hard. I think I generally knock the ear- drums out of the caller. seldom hear the same voice twice." Despite the violence that continues to wrack South Africa, she suggested that