We Need To Change Thinking On Borman Hall We learn with the community that Borman Hall could be in its last five months of operation. Those that have been following this story over the years can.recite the reasons by heart. Location on Sev- en Mile Road, lack of private-pay beds, and op- erating expenses that made budget allocations almost meaningless. What is the lesson to be learned from Borman Hall? It's more than yes, the community needs to keep its home for the aged out here in the suburbs with us. It's even more than the millions of dol- lars gone for what now amounts to a move or a closure. We wonder why the signals from Borman Hall were not seen five years, 10 years ago. How could something that was running along at supposedly an even keel fall apart like this? Were there se- vere problems that the community was unaware of? Of course, there were too many who were quick to point a finger at various paid staffers. There were too many who were eager to have their name listed on board letterhead, but then do little in the way of service. Then they threw their arms in the air and wondered why? There were too many ad- ministrators, too many "experts." All of this cost this Jewish community dearly. Now the bottom line is that families could be faced with the relocation of a loved one. Five months is not a great deal of time. For someone in their 80s, moving can be life-threatening. It will cost more than $2 million to close Borman Hall. Other constituent agencies should be warned by this situation. With Jewish federation cam- paigns all over the country struggling to remain level, agency boards need to be made up of qual- ified, skilled people who understand the business and operational side of the agency they govern. Boards of honor, boards of inaction, boards of fa- vor are boards of irresponsibility and, as we've seen here in Detroit, irresponsibility is expensive. It's not enough that budgets are balanced. It's not enough to accept that "everything is great in our agencies." Someone needs to step forward to challenge agency heads and their staffs. Who will that be? Who can tell us that the financial drown- ing of Borman Hall won't show up in other agen- cies? Board members need to be on a first-name basis with executive staffers. In the case of Bor- man Hall, they need to know residents and their families. There were many names and faces "on watch" during the coming apart of Borman Hall. If any fingers should be pointed, they should be pointed inward. That's the lesson here. We're a community counting on one another. The future elderly need sound action. Lost in all of this were the reasons why we have a home for the aged. We need to get back to the people, rebuild their trust and show them that there is a plan here, that there are goals. But most importantly, we must show that some- one is willing to step forward to say, "I'm ac- countable. Your trust, your needs drive me." Then we need to get to work. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS A Sad Act In Germany Attacks All Of Us 4 How many times have we Jews been told that if we would just let go of the Holocaust, acts of hate would go away, would disappear. We're our own worst enemies, we've been told. We bring this on ourselves, they say. If we needed any reminder that our memories should act as our guides, the United States Olympic luge team found out the hard and cruel way. Luge is a sport where men and women slide individually on sleds down an icy course. This coun- try's luge team was in the town of Oberhof, in the former East Germany, last week for a training run. Our luge team has white members, black mem- bers and a Jewish athlete as well. When the team visited a local disco, a gang of skinheads started race-baiting Robert Pipkins, a black U.S. luger, making monkey sounds and chanting, "nigger, nigger, out, out, out." Mr. Pipkins and Jewish teammate Gordy Sheer confronted one of the chanters wearing a swasti- ka on his T-shirt. The lugers were told by onlook- ers to run as fast as they could from the disco. A swarm of 15 skinheads chased the lugers until one of the teammates, Duncan Kennedy, fearing for the life of Mr. Pipkins, turned and confronted the mob. He paid for it with kicks and punches to the head and abdomen. It took town police an hour to respond. Mr. Sheer was so frightened, he barri- caded himself in his hotel room with furniture. Town officials publicly apologized for the ac- tions. They also asked the U.S. team not to boy- cott the Oberhof World Cup meet in January. Oberhof is 150 miles from Berlin. Like the defiance that Jesse Owens showed by winning in the so-called "Hitler Olympics" of 1936, the U.S. luge team needs to return to this town, and it needs to go about its business of winning. Germany, which has worked hard to make amends over the years for the Holocaust, has to do a better job of protecting not just athletes, but every one of its citizens and visitors. Oberhof might be a relatively short drive from Berlin. But so is Buchenwald. The years are short since the Holocaust. But as the American luge team found out, our memories need to be long. So must the memories of the people of the former East Germany. Letters Invite Farrakhan To A Synagogue Getting That Name Straight With respect to the Rev. Louis Farrakhan (Oct. 22), I, for one, would welcome the opportunity to speak with him, in fact, to maintain a continuing relationship with him. His past and continuing derogatory statements about Jews are well known. Noth- ing he could say now would come as a surprise to anyone. I, as well as Harry Haberman and many others, worked at the Woodward Avenue em- porium during the Great De- pression and nostalgically take historic exception to the reference of Frank and Seder as Frank and Cedar (Oct. 22). Your staff writer Lesley Pearl, notwithstanding the fine article, is obviously ei- ther a baby-boomer or not na- tive to Detroit, or both. Bernard B. Brown Franklin Moving Back To Old Neighborhoods Louis Farrakhan It is for the world to judge the merit, or lack of merit, of his utterances. Even were he to apologize, as some insist he must do be- fore continuing relations with him, many would probably doubt the sincerity of such apology. In my view, very few people give credence to his views anyhow. If it were up to me, I would invite him to address an au- dience at one of our larger synagogues. Give him half the tickets to distribute and let the synagogue distribute half. And let him say what he wants. I, for one, would refrain from uttering disapproval of views in which I do not con- cur. Meet those views with stony silence. I think we might be pleas- antly surprised at the mod- eration of his address. Gabriel Glantz Ft. Lauderdale I'm responding to Anita Bo- gorad's letter (Oct. 15) about Jews and minorities. Her re- sponse to a problem of living in a mixed neighborhood is very naive. I've been fighting for mi- nority equal rights since the early 1940s. In our early ef- forts to integrate and work together we had some suc- cesses, until the minority groups decided to work out their own solutions by them- selves, and they turned away from us. They resolved very little by themselves, and had few resources to work with. The reasons for abandon- ing a mixed area include be- ing harassed and having every house on our block bur- glarized. When the iron grills go up on everyone's windows, I think it's time to leave while you're still alive! Anita Bogorad probably agrees with some writers who have stated that we have to try again by moving back into old neighborhoods and inte- grate once more. How silly! I'm forced to live in an area for safety and peace of mind, which I really cannot afford, but have no other choice be- cause of the criminal element now controlling virtually every area of Detroit! To even consider relocating again to such devastation; poverty, crime-infested, filthy surroundings is totally unac- NEIGHBORHOODS page 18