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October 30, 1992 - Image 46

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1992-10-30

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

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■ A REAL







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HANGING POTTED BUSHES NEW JUMBO
Almost 200 Leaves Flowering
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Oregon Groups
Oppose Measure

Portland (JTA) — Nearly
two dozen Jewish congrega-
tions and community organ-
izations across Oregon have
joined together to oppose an
amendment to the state con-
stitution that would require
all governments to
discourage homosexuality.
Representatives of Jewish
groups condemned Measure
9, which is on the ballot on
Nov 3, asserting it would
create "a community
climate conducive to attacks
on minorities of all types."
The group pointed out that
the Holocaust "began with
laws exactly like Ballot
Measure 9. Those laws first
declared groups of people to
be sub-human, then
legalized and finally man-
dated discrimination against
them."
Measure 9 is "the start of
hatred and persecution that
must stop now," the group
said.
Measure 9 would amend
the state constitution to re-
quire that all governments
discourage homosexuality
and other listed behaviors,
and not facilitate or recog-
nize them.
The Oregon Citizens Alli-
ance, which sponsored the
initiative that led to its
placement on the ballot,
meanwhile, paid for a trip to
the state by Yehuda Levin,
an Orthodox rabbi from New
York. Rabbi Levin said he
came to Oregon last month
to "clean up the mess" made
by the local Jewish commun-
ity in opposing the amend-
ment.
Rabbi Levin, who follows
the traitional view that
homosexuality is an
abomination prohibited in
the Torah, told reporters: "I
came to Oregon to set the
record straight, because of
the near unanimity of the
Jewish community in active-
ly promoting the agenda of
the militant homosexual
network."
Rabbi Levin, who has long
actively opposed gay rights
legislation and supported
"family issues," said he was
representing the Rabbinical
Alliance of America, which
is composed of 200 to 400
rabbis.
Rabbi Levin, an associate
rabbi of Temple Beth Isaac
in Brooklyn, added that he
was authorized by the Union
of Orthodox Rabbis to
distribute letters from the
group's leadership clarifying
the traditional Jewish view
on homosexuality.

Rabbi Levin called the
joint public denunciation of
Measure 9 by the Oregon
Jewish groups "shameful,"
and said that likening the
measure to certain laws in
Nazi Germany was the act of
"ignorant people."
He compared opposition to
Measure 9 to arbitrarily
changing the commandment
prohibiting adultery on the
grounds that a large percen-
tage of married people have
extramarital experiences to-
day. He said that contem-
porary circumstances,
whatever they may be,
cannot justify the changes.
Man, he said
God's word.

Vienna Gets
New Synagogue

Vienna (JTA) — The presi-
dent of Austria raised a
glass in a toast of
"L'chayim" this week to
help inaugurate Vienna's
first new synagogue in •68
years.
The presence of Thomas
Klestil and other prominent
Austrians underlined a
clearly perceptible im-
provement in the at-
mosphere since Kurt
Waldheim stepped down as
president last year amid
continued focus on his Nazi
past.
The new Sephardic house
of worship, dedicated on
Hoshanah Rabbah, the
seventh day of the Sukkot
holiday, serves a community
of 5,000 Jewish immigrants
from the Asian republics of
the former Soviet Union.
They brought their own
prayer traditions to Vienna
over the past two decades,
when the city was the sole
transit point for Soviet Jews
en route to Israel.
Some chose to remain
behind to bolster a Jewish
population in Vienna that
now numbers under 12,000.
The new synagogue stands
in the prewar district
nicknamed Mazzesinsel
(island of matzot) in recogni-
tion of its then thriving Jew-
ish life. Vienna following
World War I had a Jewish
population of 220,000.
The president of the
Sephardic community,
Grigori Galibov, skid Jewish
immigrants from the former
Soviet Union stood a good
chance of integrating into
Austrian society without los-
ing their Jewish identity.

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