The Land Le ft Behi LYNNE MEREDITH COHN STAFF WRITER Detroit's out African Jews remember an idyllic COWRY' aught IA 7 in turmoil am' C/3 LLJ C/3 U_I F- LU LU 68 ulian Wendrow was 4 when he realized that South Africa was not a place he could spend his life. He was riding his bicycle in the town square in George on the Cape. An African woman, nursing her infant, sat under a large tree near- by. "All of a sudden, I just hear this commotion, police ran, screaming at the woman in Afrikaans• jou fawken kaffer,' [you f—ing kaffer, slang for nig- ger]. They beat this woman a few times. She started crying, clutched the infant" to her. Stunned, Julian jumped on his bike and rode home. "My mother said, What's going on?' And I told her about the incident." His mother told him to be careful, ex- plaining that in South Africa, "you can't trust anyone. For me that was a turn- ing point." The sentiments of Mr. Wendrow, who came to Detroit in 1986, are typical of South African expatriates. Although they are from vastly different back- grounds, Detroit's South African Jews left their homeland mainly because they could not tolerate apartheid. "Politically, I think, we all felt un- comfortable with the system. As things developed, becoming more oppressive, I didn't think it was going to end up as the kind of society I wanted to live in or bring up my family in," said Dr. David Schwartz, chairman of the gynecolo- gy/obstetrics department at Sinai Hos- pital. Dr. Schwartz came with his wife Elda to the United States in 1977. "We were always politically con- cerned, being Jewish and seeing what was happening," says Carol Maisels, who with her husband Jeffrey immi- grated to Salem, Mass., in 1966. Twen- ty years later they came to Detroit, where Dr. Maisels chairs Beaumont Hospital's pediatrics department. Within Alan Goodman's family, there were "many divergent opinions" on apartheid. In fact, the president of the synagogue they attended was a strong supporter of the Nationalist Party and its apartheid policies. As a student at Rhodes University in Grahamstown on the eastern Cape, Mr. Goodman became involved in the stu- dent disobedience campaign, protest- ing "archaic" dorm rules and inhumane treatment of black staff members. Blacks were required to work long days and were given only tea and bread to eat. That was "the turning point for me," says Mr. Goodman, executive director of Jewish Family Service. "Man's in- humanity to man, I thought, would nev- er change." He moved to Israel in 1971; his fam- ily thought he was crazy. As a soldier in the Israeli army, Mr. Goodman sat in a foxhole on the Jor- danian border, fearing the approach of terrorists. "I remember feeling the bur- den [of South Africa] dissipating from me — guilt and stress," he says. South Africa is a land of riches — tt4,, , C minerals, climate and crops. It is a large < country, divided into provinces — Cape, Natal, Transvaal and the Orange Free State. Blacks and whites came to South Africa at roughly the same time — blacks from the north, beginning in the 17th century, and white Europeans from Holland in 1652. The British came in the 1800s. A Jewish presence in South Africa can be traced to the introduction of re- ligious tolerance under the Batavian Republic in 1803 and the subsequent British takeover. The first Jewish con- gregation was established in Cape Town in 1841. The ancestry of most South African Jews goes back to the shtetls of Lithua- ,_, nia. Hilary Isakow says, "Jews who -\ came to South Africa came from one part of Lithuania, where there were very brilliant rabbis. In Europe, they were considered to be the cream." Audrey Sobel says the Lithuanian rabbis "saw the way things were going [in Europe] and said if Jews didn't get their education," they would fall apart as a people. For that reason, the rabbis < advised their young scholars to leave. Eastern European Jews went as far as their money would take them. Some got only as far as South Africa, while others made it to the goldene medinah (Yiddish for golden land, America, which European Jews thought had streets paved with gold). "A lot of Jewish families in South ,' Africa know they have relatives in the States but don't know who they are or where," Mrs. Sobel says.