0 STANDING page 7 He is a secular Jew and son of the famous orchestra leader and songwriter, Seymour Simons, who wrote "All of Me." Mr. Si- mons' grandfather, D.W. Si- mons, was a president of Congregation Shaarey Zedek and the first Jewish member of the Detroit City Council. The founder of Stone and Si- mons advertising agency in the mid-1950s, Mr. Simons is nev- ertheless the antithesis of a glib sloganeer. With each issue that he discusses, he unfolds a the- sis-long analysis of pertinent his- torical events and rebuttals to opposing viewpoints. His inquisitive spirit led him into, then out of advertising. In the early 1960s, looking for a broader understanding of the world, Mr. Simons went on an around-the-globe adventure. On a $1,200 ticket, he spent near- ly a year traveling to many Third World countries. From that "life-changing experience," he altered his lifestyle and pro- fession. Advertising no longer held his interest. Despite the financial security of a thriving ad busi- ness, Mr. Simons said he was searching for a broader purpose. He took a stand. "Very few people live as well as we do in the United States," he said. "Traveling, keeping my ears and eyes open, gave me a better understanding of the haves and have-nots." Working in commercial real estate and running an art gallery, he said, opened his schedule to devote more time to his human rights activities. Around that time, he came under the mentorship of the late Morris Gleicher, whose MG and Casey agency developed campaigns for social causes and progressive political candi- dates. From helping to coordinate the Selma civil rights march to protesting the Vietnam War to working for a democratic Haiti to his work for the Michigan Coalition for Human Rights — he serves as the group's secre- tary — Mr. Simons has found a way for his values and actions to be indistinguishable. "In Henry Kissinger's mem- oirs, he wrote that the U.S. citi- zens' objection to the [Vietnam] war was the most discussed top- ic of discussion at the White House," said Mr. Simons. "We realized that maybe we did have an impact." While many Americans re- mained apathetic about U.S. for- eign policy toward Haiti, Mr. Simons served as an official elec- tion observer during Haiti's 1995 elections. His review of U.S.-Haitian history since the Caribbean island's indepen- dence from France in the early 1800s offers a seldom-heard per- spective of how misguided American foreign policy encour- aged human rights abuses by Haitian dictators. Despite the gravity of many of the social issues that he sup- ports, Mr. Simons is hardly a one-dimensional policy wonk. On the contrary, he's been called romantic and idealistic. "Maybe I was born upside down. The older I get, the more idealistic I am," he said. For years, he's collaborated with Mort Zieve of Simons Michelson Zieve on writing mu- sicals. In the next two months, they expect to record their lat- est song. But perhaps his most signifi- cant recent production is be- coming a new father. He and his wife, Roseanne, have a new in- fant, Eli. Married three years to the date that they met at a Hi- roshima/Nagasaki commemo- rative event, the Simons' activist tradition will likely be extended to another generation. "For me," Mr. Simons said, "life is becoming more intense, and I'm always looking ahead." LI Rwanda Relief A Jewish response to the refugee crisis. s charitable organizations begin tugging at purse strings for holiday-time do- ations, Jews are being asked to help an immediate in- ternational cause. The American Jewish Joint Distribution Com- mittee (JDC) is seeking contribu- tions to provide a medical team and emergency medical supplies for the refugees of the Rwanda and Zaire conflicts. JDC is a New York-based organi- zation that pro- vides relief services, rescues at-risk Jews and works to revi- talize Jewish communities world- wide. Today, the JDC is sending a New Jersey doctor to Rwanda to help care for refugees who have returned from neighboring Zaire. The JDC also recently sent a med- ical team to Tanzania to work Ai with the influx of refugees there. Such medical assistance is a continuation of a 1994 program established by the Jewish Coali- tion for Rwanda Relief, a coalition of 39 international Jewish orga- nizations, including the JDC, . 44 which banded to- gether two years ago to aid Rwan- dan refugees. Marcia Presky of the JDC said the organization is us- ing leftover funds raised in 1994 and will continue to seek donations "for as long as there is a need." Neither the Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit nor the Jewish Community Council was aware of any local Jewish relief efforts. 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