GOING THE EXTRA MILE No, we aren't as close as Woodward Avenue. So, everyday, we drive farther to prove going the extra distance to Wood Motors makes a big difference in customer service. First, getting to our location can be as easy as dialing 1 800 WOOD 229. - - - One of our Award-winning Mercedes-Benz Star Sales Representatives will work with you to determine how Wood Motors can go further to gain your satisfaction. And then, it is programs like, "Yes, Fax Me A Car" that give you the option of applying for and leasing a Mercedes-Benz within 24 hours by fax. Or maybe you would like our Star Sales Representative to bring you a Mercedes to preview and test drive at your home or office. Or make an appointment to service your Mercedes with the Wood Motors Pickup and Delivery Program. A sales and service consultant will conveniently pick up your car, leave you with a Mercedes loaner and then return your car after service in tip-top condition, including a hand car wash. And the Wood Motors Competitive Labor Rates Program insures that you receive competitive pricing on all maintenance and repairs. You will always feel confident that award-winning, trained Mercedes technicians use genuine Mercedes-Benz parts on your vehicle. When it comes to giving 100% and going the extra mile for your Mercedes, no one else in the Detroit area goes further. IT'S WORTH A CALL TO SEE. WOOD MOTORS Mercedes-Benz 13351 Gratiot Ave. (at 8 Mile) Detroit 1•800•WOOD•229 We Recall The Plight Of Being Strangers RABBI MICHAEL MOSKOWITZ SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS W hen living in Israel, I was blessed with the opportunity to watch thousands of Ethiopian Jews settle in our Holy Land. Seeing these new citizens in- volved in Israeli life, whether so- cializing on the streets of Jerusalem or serving in the mil- itary, made me proud as a Jew. I felt a part of the immigration process, the process that has built the population of Israel over the past 50 years, the process that has witnessed the absorption of Jews from Morocco, Yemen, Rus- sia, and so many other countries. These experiences made the recent information concerning the treatment of Ethiopian Jews in Israel even more disconcerting and disappointing. A few weeks ago, it become public that med- ical authorities had been secret- ly dumping blood donated by Ethiopian immigrants because of a supposed high rate of HIV in- fection among them. In response to the news, thousands of Ethiopian Jews gathered outside the Prime Minister's office to protest — and, unfortunately, the protest turned violent. While the riot was unexpected, it seemed to reflect a pent up sense of degra- dation and frustration on the part of the Ethiopian Jews. When we look at this week's Torah portion, we question under whose guidance such decisions were made concerning these new immigrants. Who created such humiliating policies? Twice with- in the parashah Mishpatim, we learn "you shall not oppress a stranger, for you know the feel- ings of the stranger, having your- selves been strangers in the land of Egypt" (23:9). So important is this command that it appears a total of 36 different times within the Torah. The medieval commentator Rashi suggested that as Jews, we know the experience of being the stranger. We experienced the dif- ficulties and felt the pain in Egypt. He taught us that when it comes to the Jews' treatment of a stranger, "you (especially) know how painful it is for him [the stranger] when you oppress him." For Jews today, the sense of being a stranger is not as distant as the Biblical Egyptian experi- ence, whether we find ourselves in America or Israel. Not long ago, many of our families found Rabbi Michael Moskowitz shares the rabbinical responsibilities at Temple Shir Shalom in West Bloomfield. themselves within this great American melting pot. Although the doors of the country might have appeared open, the initial re- ception was less than welcoming. Even today, with the amount of success we have achieved here, many still regard us as strangers in "their" country. For the majority of Israelis, their roots in Eretz Yisrael are less than 50 years deep. They were strangers in Israel, strangers from Eastern Europe and Arab countries, who didn't speak Hebrew but needed this homeland. Most recently, Natan Sharansky, the former Soviet re- fusenik, shared, "Israelis feel that those who arrive are a 'generation of the desert which will disappear while their children become `nor- mal" (The New York Times, Feb1996.) Shabbat Mishpatim: Exodus 21: 1-24: 18; 30: 11-16 II Kings 12: 1-17. So what has happened today? Do the authorities in Israel no longer understand this essential command to care for the stranger? Initially, Israel as a whole met the arrival of the Ethiopians with an outpouring of emotion and an abundance of funds. The government dedicat- ed large resources to housing and education for the 30,000 new im- migrants. While Israelis truly believed that racism was not an issue in relation to the Ethiopian Jews, the Orthodox rabbinical es- tablishment humiliated the im- migrants by questioning the authenticity of their Judaism. Now we learn that the blood they had willingly donated, to a home- land they call their own, was thrown out. We can understand why their frustration rose to such heights. Ethiopian Jews do not want to be strangers. They have been called falashas (strangers) long enough. They want to be Israelis. They want to be Jews. And they deserve the right to have the sec- ular and the religious establish- ments accept them as they are and for whom they are. The treatment of the stranger, the genuine warmth and kindness exemplified, demonstrates the ethics and morals at our core. For this reason Rabbi Samson