INEFFECTUAL' LEADERSHIP ucN , Iiisitossokotk .4 SIIPPOI GROUP 1tA -,qEieAPAoV- Ak„-, o '-e a gaw t, Happy December So what do we do now? The holiday is over for Jews on Sunday night with the kindling of the eighth Chanukah can- dle. But for the rest of the world around us, the holiday is just beginning. Maybe for some of us, it's difficult not to feel left out. But don't feel that way. The weeks ahead provide us with an even greater responsibility to learn for ourselves and for our children that the beauty and the signif- icance ofJuclnism comes from the whole religion, not just from a holiday that has become com- mercial as a way to keep up with the Joneses, or in this case, the gentiles. Sure, it's appropriate to offer up our help at this time of year. Many community members even volunteer on Dec. 25 to allow their gentile friends to enjoy the holiday with their loved ones. With the candles flickering during Chanukah's final days, it's important to take that warmth to get us through the cold months ahead. If that "warmth" helped us volunteer for the first time, fine. But we ask you to consider a repeat act of tzedakah in mid-February, when it's a less pop- ular proposition. Want to keep lighting candles to keep you in the holiday mood? Judaism provides a weekly opportunity called Shabbat that extends past the month of December through the rest of the year. Finally, depression related to the holiday is a serious by-product for many individuals and fam- ilies. Many Jewish families cannot afford gifts of any sort, not to mention food on the table. Oth- er Jews feel left out by the holiday season. As simplistic as it may sound, we recommend that families who may have denied themselves help in the past, because of pride or needless embar- rassment, seek help from Jewish Family Ser- vice or Yad Ezra. Lonely during the holidays? There's no shortage of charitable groups who would love to give you company. Happy Chanukah for what's left of it. But Hap- py Rest of the Year as well. After all, there are more non-holidays than holidays. Let's togeth- er find reasons to grow and to give when it's not so popular, when we don't get a day off from work, when there's no office party going on. Our Jewish community, our people, need us to con- tinue giving tzedakah, volunteering time and educating our youth Jewishly now more than ever. Oh, Jesse, You Are Making More Noise Than Newt Just when some Jews thought Newt Gingrich's staunch call for prayer in school would be the top item on the agenda, we took our eyes off the fiery Georgia lawmaker and took a look at North Carolina. Sen. Jesse Helms (R-N.C.) has turned into the Grinch who stole civility. His two recent rabbit punches against President Clinton — he's not fit to be commander-in-chief and he "better have a bodyguard if he visits North Carolina" — are but the latest in his verbal fusillades against communists, liberals, gays, Martin Luther King Jr., bureaucrats and diplomats. The senator surely will make life interesting if he becomes chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, as he is slated to be af- ter the recent Republican earthquake at the polls shifted the fulcrum of the Senate. Although he has promised Israel Prime Min- ister Yitzhak Rabin that the Jewish state's aid = is not in jeopardy, he also once promised to up- 2- hold the laws of the U.S. Constitution. Threats against a U.S. president, if that's what he made, are illegal. In addition, his isolationist bent will 1– ,7,- certainly do no good for the concept of strong • U.S.-Israel relations. Even though the North Carolina senator u-1 seems endlessly creative and adamantly forth- ▪ right, we can imagine him offering these stellar suggestions when he does grasp his new gavel: * "Shimon Peres better bring a bodyguard with him the next time he comes to the United States. 4 The Middle East peace process ain't worth a bucket of warm spit." (Sen. Helms has tradi- tionally favored Likud governments, which re- ject land-for-peace arguments.) * "I feel about foreign aid the same way I do about welfare: There's going to be less of it com- ing down the pike. I say that because I'm a good Christian." * "If anyone in the world could have used a bodyguard, it's the Muslims in the former Yu- goslavia. They should have thought of that be- fore it was too late." * "If it were up to me, I would fire the body- guard who follows around that guy, Nelson Man- dela or whatever his name is. That's just excess government. He's not fit to be who he is." * "Every time I think about those foreigners sneaking into our country and taking jobs away from real Americans, I say to my wife, 'Honey, don't you think it's time we got ourselves a body- guard?' American-born of course." Don't risk Sen. Helms saying anything that remotely resembles the above as chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. Incoming majority leader Robert Dole (R- Kans.) has already told him that he needs to watch what he says publicly. However, recent statements by Sen. Helms — for which he has refused to apologize — already show us what he really thinks. For the health of the country (and for the Republican Party), the GOP should not install the senator in such a sensitive position. J ( \\ tk\y Letters Remember Efforts Of Dr. Winer In describing the contemporary revival of Yiddish in Israel, Shel- ley Kleiman ("Yiddish Studies are Revived," Nov. 25) failed to note that the impetus for teach- ing Yiddish in Israeli elementary and secondary schools came through the efforts of Dr. Ger- shon Winer. He inspired the late Ben Himel of Toronto to con- tribute a considerable sum of money to remunerate Yiddish teachers in Israel, thereby re- lieving the government of this fi- nancial obligation. Mr. Kleiman also omitted mentioning that the late Morris Friedman and his widow, Sarah, of Southfield were the generous donors for the establishment of a Yiddish teachers training pro- gram at Bar-Ilan University dur- ing the time that Dr. Winer was the occupant of the Yiddish chair at that institution. In discussing the resurgence of Yiddish in Israel, I believe that these facts are pertinent. Rabbi Milton Arm Chairman International Committee of the Ben Himel Foundation, Advancement Of Yiddish Studies Darchei Does Receive Assistance Supporters of the day school Darchei Torah make a strong case for increased support of Jewish education. Even though they may disagree with the way community funds have been al- located, Darchei Torah shares with Federation a belief in the importance of day-school edu- cation. I would add, however, that certain information has been lacking in recent letters to the editor. Darchei Torah does, in fact, receive assistance from Federation in the form of a very reasonable fee on the premises it rents from the Agency for Jew- ish Education. That facility, owned by Federation's partner, United Jewish Foundation, is provided to Darchei Torah at a rental fee far below market. The fee includes janitorial services and utilities. Use of the AJE building also allows Darchei Torah to save on parking fees and gives the children free use of the playground. Like other residents of the Oak Park/Southfield area, Darchei Torah families avail themselves of many Federation services, such as the home buy- ers loan program of the Neigh- borhood Project, and Allied Jewish Campaign-funded ben- eficiaries, like the Jewish Com- munity Center's Jimmy Prentis Morris Building and the Yeshi- va Gedolah High School for boys. We would not like to see any of these services cut because of a lack of Campaign support. All of us will have to work together to achieve the kind of future we want for our children. Richard Knigel, M.D. Chairman, Education Division Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit Greater Dangers Than Intermarriage For quite some time I have wanted to commend the Jewish News for its increasingly inter- esting editorial content. Nonetheless, I feel compelled to call your attention to an attitude that I find distressing. The re- cent headline "Seminar to Com- bat Jewish Intermarriage" (Nov. 18) implies that intermarriage ranks with violence, anti-Semi- tism, world poverty, etc. as an enemy of the Jewish people. Yes, intermarriage is a fact; it is cer- tainly worthwhile to have a sem- inar that addresses it, discusses it, or even debates it. But please consider that many of your read- ers are converts or non-Jews. Surely you can show some sen- sitivity to their feelings when composing headlines or report- ing news. I, for one, cringe when I read rather frequently that in- termarriage will doom the Jew- ish people. I think there are greater dangers, specifically when we practice intolerance among ourselves. Edith Broida Farmington Hills