KINDRED SPIRITS AS A NEW YEAR APP ROACH ES, WE CAN FIND COMFORT IN THE ENDURING GOODNESS OF ISRAEL. AN D AME RICA KENNETH LASSON SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS LEFT TO RIGHT Israel's world leadership in rehabilitative medicine is symbolized by its participation in Paralympics. Quiet miracles such as the secret movement of Ethiopian Jews to Israel continue. The national Jewish community responds to the fire bombing and arson attacks on black churches. A burnt-orange evening sun silhou- ettes the golden domes and pastel minarets above ancient Jerusalem — just as it rises, a hazier disk a half-world away, behind the dusty morning cow pastures and silver- tipped silos outside Billings, Mont. There is one thing more under the sun that binds the horizons of these two faraway places many cul- tures apart. As another new year approaches, the old and distant hills of Judea and Montana are filled with a kindred spirit of human fellowship. In a world of cynicism, terror and strife, where can we find hope, kindness, and brotherhood? Israelis demonstrate their soaring humanity dai- ly, from the miraculous absorption of almost a mil- lion refugees from Russia, to the secret rescue of thousands of their brethren from Afghanistan and Bosnia and Ethiopia and Syria, to the poignant redemption of the remains of a handful of Jewish soldiers in exchange for hundreds of jailed Arab ter- rorists. So too do acts of profound goodwill happen in America. Winning freedom for Soviet Jews was largely an achievement of persistent pressure by the U.S. government, but smaller deeds by indi- viduals also can have far-reaching effects. Witness what happened in Billings. Several years ago, its handful of Jewish residents were terrorized by a small band of hate-mongering skinheads, one of whom hurled a brick through the window of a home displaying a Chanukah meno- rah. The citizens of Billings spontaneously voiced outrage — 10,000 of them declaring solidarity with their few Jewish neighbors by placing pictures of menorahs in their own windows. Kenneth Lesson is a law professor at the University of Baltimore. "An attack against any one of us," they said in the town newspaper and on billboards, "is an attack against us all." There is nothing new about this sentiment, of course. America was founded on Jewish values — If I am only for myself, asked Hillel, what am I? — which is perhaps the primary reason we have flourished here as we have nowhere else. It is not grandiose to believe that the undying spirit of the Chosen People has indeed been a light unto this nation: What is right with America is much the same as what is right with Israel. And always has been. "May the children of the stock of Abraham who dwell in this land," wrote President George Wash- ington to the Jews of Newport, R.I., in 1790, "enjoy the goodwill of the other inhabitants, while every one shall sit in safety under his own vine and fig tree, and there shall be none to make him afraid." Over 100 years later, thousands of Eastern Eu- ropean refugees were welcomed at Ellis Island with- out fanfare or discrimination — unceremoniously served kosher food by non-Jewish nurses. Because of what the good people of Billings had done, pointed out President Clinton in 1995, Jew- ish communities around the nation could feel more a part of the American soul. In a world of apathy, conflict, and greed, where can we find hope, honor and compassion? Five major wars in Israel's brief history have left the tiny Jewish homeland with many young dis- abled veterans. The people's response: creation of Sport Centers for the Disabled, which have pio- neered research into rehabilitative therapy, helped produce Paralympic athletes far out of proportion to Israel's 5.3 million population, and now work as well with children from the age of 3. America's Jewish values are reflected in the Peace Corps, ongoing shipments (both governmental and private) of food and medical supplies to Third World countries, charitable contributions that demonstrate we are easily the most generous people in the world. That spirit is what prevailed in the depressed old mill town of Methuen, Mass., where a factory fire last winter left 2,400 workers fearing a jobless fu- ture. But their boss, a devout 70-year-old named Aaron Feuerstein, immediately announced to his tearful employees that instead of calling it quits he would rebuild his company, and that not one of them would lose a day's pay. "Making a profit," Mr. Feuer- stein said in Yiddish, "does not excuse you from be- ing a mentsh." And this year on Tisha B'Av, which commemo- rates destruction of the Temple in Jerusalem, the American Jewish Congress established a fund to help rebuild the fire-bombed black churches in the South. In a world of materialism, turmoil, and cant, where can one find truth, justice, and charity? Many may feel that we live in a vale of tears, but it is just as reasonable and realistic to conclude that Jewish values are enduring, that random acts of kindness are the norm, and that in the end, evil nev- er prevails. Wrote Anne Frank during the depths of the Holocaust: "I still believe that at the heart of everyone, people are really good." Beauty is truth, truth beauty, said John Keats; that is all ye know on earth, and all ye need to know. At one time or another everyone experiences tran- scendent moments of inspiration, splendor, and grace. Those who can turn such moments into last- ing seasons — who see beauty and truth in much that surrounds them, who have the faith to recog- nize divine wisdom in all they experience, and who abide with hope in every new year — are truly blessed. D