WSU Hosts Bicultural Forum On Genocides RUTH LITTMANN STAFF WRITER W hen Professor Margaret Bed- rosian lectured about the Armen- ian genocide in her litera- ture courses at University of California-Davis, she occasionally encountered Jewish students who com- pared this early 20th-cen- tury tragedy to the Holocaust. At an April 21 forum on genocide, in part sponsored by the B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation, Mrs. Bed- rosian addressed 100 Jews, Armenians and others who gathered to learn more about the atrocities that befell their people. "I see a lot of parallels between the Holocaust and Armenian genocide, though I think that one has to dif- ferentiate between them," said Alice Eckardt, a Holocaust scholar who also addressed the WSU crowd. According to the speak- ers, national identity and land ownership were volatile issues between Turks and the Armenian minority. In 1915, the Turkish government de- ported thousands of Armenians to Syria, killing between 600,000 and 1.5 million in the process. Scholars estimate that nearly 2 million Armenians were massacred between 1895 and 1922. In Europe, Hitler's moti- vations against the Jews were ideological, not con- quest for land, said Ms. Eckardt. Six million Jews perished at the hands of the Nazis. "Hitler actually said, `Who remembers the Armenians today? We can do the same thing,'..." she said. A Protestant, Ms. Eckardt wrote Long Night's Journey Into Day: Life and Faith After the Holocaust. She and Ms. Bedrosian, who has written on the Armenian genocide, agreed that the world must study and remember both atrocities. Norma Goldman, an adjunct professor in WSU's College of Lifelong Learning, said the forum highlighted experiences the Jewish and Armenian communities share. "Armenians were mer- . chants. They were success- ful, progressive, well-edu- cated. They were the intel- ligentsia," she said. "I think those same descrip- tive terms could be applied to the Jews of Germany. "The Armenian commu- nity was viewed in Turkey with the same fears and jealousy that may have motivated the Nazis (to persecute Jews). The forum gives us a chance to learn what caused the attempts at both genocides and to help prevent them from ever happening again." Mother's Day Brunch Set The Men's Club of Congrega- tion B'nai Moshe will present a Mothers Day Brunch 11 a.m. May 9 at the synagogue. For reservations by May 4 call the synagogue office, 788-0600. Jewish Count Up In Jerusalem Jerusalem (JTA) — Jerusalem's Jewish popula- tion has reached 400,000 out of 560,000 residents, or 72 percent of the city, according to new statistics released by the Jerusalem Institute for Israel Studies. Since the start of the new wave of aliyah, Jerusalem has absorbed some 35,000 new immigrants. Some 75 percent of the new immi- grants said they were satisfied with their absorp- tion in the capital. Despite these encouraging figures, the new statistics point out that 5,600 more people left the city than came to it last year. Newcomers to the city are represented most strongly by haredi, or fervently Or- thodox Jewish, families. And since their birthrate is higher than the average, the rise in the haredi population continued last year as well. Waters wear the stones. Bible: Job, 14:19 Mon-Thur-Fri 10-9 ♦ Tue-Wed-Sat 10-6 Sunday 12-5 ♦ 855-1600 DEAR SANDI, "YOU WERE RIGHT! BARB AND I LOVE OUR NEW BEDROOM. ALL THAT'S NEEDED NOW IS ROOM SERVICE." " THANKS STEVE ONE LUMP OR TWO, faati IF YOU NEED NEW IDEAS FOR YOUR HOME CALL SANDRA LORENCE, ALLIED MEMBER ASID OR HER ASSOCIATE JENNIFER BINDES-WERNER AT 313-851-8998 fte&e 0/ziaa DESIGNING FOR THE WHOLE FAMILY. Advertising in The Jewish News Gets Results Place Your Ad Today. Call 354-6060