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September 26, 1997 - Image 103

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1997-09-26

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

THE SHOPS & SERVICES
OF
LINCOLN CENTER
WISH TO EXTEND A
HAPPY & JOYOUS
NEW YEAR
TO ALL OUR FRIENDS
& NEIGHBORS!

c Slowly, Slowly

Will the EggWalk'

'Although Ethiopian immigrants (of
whom there are over 60,000 currently
living in Israel) were generally wel-
comed with open arms by Israel, they
still
faced difficulties adjusting to a
N-
country and culture so dramatically
different from their own: an Urban
not a rural lifestyle, a modern democ-
ratic society rather than a traditional
/- religious one and a direct and aggres-
sive manner rather thana humble and
restrained one.
The Institute for Ethiopian Jewish
Culture, known as Bahelachin
(Aramaic for "our culture"), was offi-
\- cially opened in January 1996 in Tel
Aviv. Established by the Ministry of
Absorption and the Joint Distribution
Committee (JDC), it aims to help
bridge the cultural gap between veter-
an Israelis and new Ethiopian immi-
grants and to preserve the cultural
integrity of Israel's Ethiopian Jewish
\- community - the majority of whom
made aliya in Operation Moses (1984)
and Operation Solomon (1991) from
the Gondar and Trigray regions.
Fortunately, in Ethiopian culture
patience is still a virtue. "Slowly,
Slowly will the egg walk on its own
feet" — a traditional Ethiopian
proverb — can be applied to the
absorption process. This patience has
proved a blessing, for despite the years
that have elapsed, Ethiopian immi-
grants are still widely misunderstood
by the Israeli people.
Since the Center's establishment,
English-born social worker Danny
Budowski, along with several
Ethiopian immigrants, have given over
600 lectures about Ethiopian culture
and commonly held stigmas associated
with this unique group of olim.
One stigma is that the Ethiopians
came to Israel because of hunger.
Hunger didn't actually strike the area
of Gondar and Tigray, where most of
the Jews lived. The fact is, they came
for Zionist and religious reasons, a
longtime longing for their homeland
and Jerusalem. At least one major
attempt was made by Ethiopians to
come to Jerusalem in 1862. "As a mat-
ter of fact, the Jews made considerable
sacrifices and suffered great hardships
to come to Israel," says Budowski.
Approximately 4,000 Jews died in the
Sudan on the way, and just 7,000 sur-
vivors arrived in Israel in Operation
Moses. "

/-

Farmer Jack
Baskin & Robbins
T. Nails
Bread Basket
Checker Bar-B-Q
Coats Unlimited
Dillman Chiropractic Life
Dots
Dollar Castle
Glory Jewelers

K-Mart
King Um's Garden
Lincoln Barber Shop
Magic Touch Beauty Shop
Marianne Plus
Eye Right
Metropolitan Dry Cleaners
Nora's Design
Payless Shoes
Rite Aid

LINCOLN CENTER

Radio Shack
Secretary of State
Sherman's Foot Care
Strictly Kosher Meats
The Book Beat
Towne Theatre
Winkelman's
American Medical Apparel

10 1/z MILE & GREENFIELD

One, Two or Three Rows
of Diamonds Set In
Luxurious 18K
Yellow Gold

30400 Telegraph Rd. Suite 134, Bingham Farms • 642-5575

/-;

- WZPS

Send Someone
Special A Gift
52 Weeks a Year.

Send a gift
subscription to

JN
(248) 354-6620

September Savings 25% off

Hours: Mon.-Sat.
9:30a.m.- 5:30p.m.
Thurs. 9:30a.m.-8:30p.m.
181 S. Old Woodward Ave.
(1 Blk. South of Maple, Next
to the Birmingham Theater)

9/26

(248) 642-1690

Tic

1997

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