ti •k, • wakk ' \ a; Zzf Compensation For Survivors: A Critical Issue To Be Learned We write this editorial almost two months ahead of the event. Chances are we'll repeat it in the weeks ahead. On Sunday, May 18, from 1 to 3:30 p.m. at Congregation Shaarey Zedek, Michigan's Holo- caust survivors and their loved ones will have an opportunity to learn how to cut through the red tape to collect almost any form of compensation or restitution they feel due them from the Ger- man or Swiss governments. It's no secret that one of the most important news stories to be uncovered recently is the be- grudging admittance by the Swiss government of untold sums of money invested in their banks by Jews. Yet, when those Jews or their descen- dants went to collect their monies, many with specific bank account numbers, they were told — by the Swiss banks — that the accounts didn't exist. Then there is the continuing unraveling sto- ry of Jewish property, gold and art stolen by the T H E PROMISED LAND THE CONTINUING STORY OF JEWISH LIFE IN THE DIASPORA BECCA by Jordan B. Gorfinkel Jdaial LOUIS ZAYOS RUBS YAEL BETHBERNIE the the be thre the me Skeptc Ideairst Perplexed Rebel Trot: maid Bobby IhESPITE OUR MANY 15IffEgENCE5 .11/ OUR MOST SACRED JEWISH TRAD/r/ONS STILL UNITE US... Germans during the Holocaust and invested with welcome arms by the Swiss. Fran Victor, president and executive produc- er of Victor Harder Productions, is instrumental in the local Survivors of the Shoah Visual His- tory Foundation and with the help of several area sponsors, is putting this program together. If you are a survivor, please plan to be there. If you know of a survivor or are a family mem- ber, please come. If you know survivors who live outside of the conventional Jewish neighbor- hoods, in Northern Michigan or the UP, please get to them. There are many people who feel that the red tape and bureaucracy is too diffi- cult, too much to go through, that it isn't worth it. If you are entitled to more compensation, it is worth it. If you've lost money in Swiss banks, it is worth it. This is a real opportunity. We urge you to learn as much as you can. EMAIL >TPL@JEWISHCARTOON.COM< "4k4k, krialkQe.. .at4UN„ An Excellent Adventure THE D ETR OI T J E WIS H N EWS Likely to be overheard this week: "My rabbi's a real clown. Would you just look at those floppy shoes, green hair, red nose and blue freckles?" Maybe your rabbi won't be dressed as a jester Saturday night and Sunday, but we hope he or she dons some other unusual garb for Purim. This year, with an interminable flood of seri- ous news, Purim is a very welcome harbinger of spring. Don't worry, the immediate and long- range Jewish woes aren't going away: assimi- lation, lack of affiliation, anti-Semitism, frightening headlines from Israel and fear for Jews in the former Soviet Union are here to stay. Of course, the party poopers will still focus on Purim's dark side — murder, intermarriage, degradation of women and so on. (What a great plot for Fox-TV!) But for most of us, the com- munal Purim mantra overwhelms such tradi- tionalpilpul, or Jewish intellectual hairsplitting. That's because Purim offers a short, sweet com- mand: Have fun, baby, whether you want to or not! By the way, are you using that grogger or can I? 30 With that in mind, this week on pages 59-64 we offer our annual Purim spoof. Remember, it's a joke. We remember well a few years ago when a number of people called to find out when Woody Allen was talking to Angry Young Jewish Sin- gles, the new group we announced. If you still can't divorce yourself from Purim's serious side, focus on this: Many commentators note the relation between the word Purim and Yom Kippur, literally "a day like Purim." They add that the holidays, which speak of the ex- tremes of frivolous joy and intense introspec- tion, are at opposite ends of the Jewish calendar year. So for the rest of the year, Judaism is about finding the balance between the two. That is no small undertaking, but it is indeed the essence of the Jewish experience. We must greet that challenge with open arms as we embrace the fears and opportunities of the larger culture of which we are a part. But this weekend, we'll do so with a rubber nose. So have fun! 6355360 @MCIMAIL . COM . 11 Do You / What Think?" If you think you are owed restitution or compensation by either the Swiss or German government, we'd like to hear about it. To respond: "So, What Do You Think?" 27676 Franklin Road, Southfield, MI 48034 Indifference Is Unbecoming A few weeks have elapsed since Arthur Horwitz's outrageous col- umn regarding Jonathan Pollard; and to my great satisfaction, it isn't quite forgotten as evidenced by Kenneth Tnsson's excellent re- buttal ("Pollard, Priorities and American Fairness" March 14). Mr. Lasson invokes two of Ju- MI MICIDIVI JB11101 Rti COM.111011 Discrimination Is Faced I applaud Joe Kort ("Whatever Form It Takes, Intolerance Hurts" March 14) for the courage daism's very important mitzvot: to describe the discrimination he pidyon shvuyim (redemption of faced growing up as a gay male. captives) and "He who saved one We must learn from Joe's expe- person is as if he saved the en- rience to open our minds and tire world." hearts and to treat all people No, all those fellow Jews who with tolerance and respect. champion Jonathan Pollard's Our entire Jewish communi- cause do not do so because for ty is invited to discover, explore them he is "the poster boy for and discuss issues that homo- American Jews who feel like sexual individuals and their there is an anti-Semite lurking families confront on a daily ba- in every shadow." What an insult sis. MJAC will present "Kulanu that is! Rather, they see great in- — All of Us ... Being Gay Is Not justice which they try to correct Just About Sex," 7 p.m. Tuesday, because im ein ani ii mi li (if I am May 20, at the Maple-Drake not for myself, who is for me?). JCC. Help ensure that our cur- The last thing Jonathan Pol- lard should have to contend with are fellow Jews so indifferent to his plight. Rachel Kapen West Bloomfield rent generation of youth does not suffer the injustices that Joe Kort endured. Linda Lee President of MJAC