The Xids Can Celebrate ,s1111 Year 4?ng, When You Give a •TN Gift Subscription this Chanukah! Order a Detroit Jewish News subscription today Lea Celleigratte Calf :ewtollt Our Jewish Holidays! by Alfred J. Kolatch and illustrations by Alex Bloch absolutely FREE! (a $1 5.00 value) From Purim to Pesach, Simchat Torah to Shabbat, your children can learn why Jews celebrate... and all of the ways we like to celebrate, in this wonderful book written especially for them! And it's yours free when you order a JN Gift Subscription! THE IDEAL CHANUKAH GIFT ! The Jewish News is the one present your friends and relatives can open 52 times a year... and there's always a surprise inside, including exclusive features, local, national, and international news, and in-depth stories by JN's award-winning reporters. r 1 ❑ Please Bill Me. ❑ Payment Enclosed. Charge my: ❑ VISA 0 MasterCard Address City State Phone Age Zip Card # Exp. Date Signature (required) My Name Gift Card Message My Address City State Zip Phone L EXPIRES 1/1/98 DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 30 "If Israel wanted to deal with Jewish unity, I'd take care of these Rabbi Eric Yoffie, issues." — Union of American Hebrew Congregations ❑ YES! Please send a gift of 52 issues of The Jewish News plus my free copy of Let's Celebrate Our Jewish Holidays* for only $46 ($63 out-of-state): Name 1 1 /2 1 1997 A warning came from Rabbi Jerome Epstein, vice president of the Conservative movement's United Synagogue for Conservative Judaism. This is all happening, he said, when our people are disengaging from Israel in North America. For many, that was their Jewish commitment. We have to stop fighting." There are those who would say that such issues must be delayed to focus on the stumbling Middle East peace negotiations. Rabbi Eric Yoffie of the Reform Movement's Union of American Hebrew Congregations is not one of them. "For 50 years, these issues have always been moved down the agenda to take care of other crises," he said. "Israel has always been a unifying fac- tor of world Jewry ... If Israel wanted to deal with Jewish unity, I'd take care of these issues." " Haack sq and receive Let's Celebrate News DGFTG .J Please send all payments with this coupon to: The Jewish News • P.O. Box 2267 Southfield, MI 48037-2267 Or call (248) 354-6620 Or fax us at (248) 354-1210 Allow 2-3 weeks for delivery. *Book may be picked up al JN offices following payment Reflecting the makeup of delegates, few Orthodox voices were heard. Rabbi Jacob Rubinstein, president of the Rabbinical Council of America, an Orthodox group, urged restraint and respect. "We can't say we are not divided," he said. "We are divided, and the divi- sion's fragmented our family and turned brother and sister against one another." The good news is that Ms. Bagen's sentiment of cautious optimism was reflected in other informal conversa- tions. "I believe that the pluralism issue is essentially an Israel-Diaspora issue, based upon different perceptions of Judaism and its role in society," Jeffrey Klein, head of the Federation of Palm Beach County, Fla., noted in a session on Israel-Diaspora relations. In his much-anticipated address, Mr. Netanyahu saved the largest chunk of his 20-page speech for the amorphous Jewish unity concept. He took pains to ensure that the work of non-Orthodox rabbis outside of Israel . does not come into question by his government. Prior to the talk, an unattributed flier being distributed urged, "The whole world is watching. Respect for the prime minister does not require more than applause at the beginning and end of his remarks." While interrupted by applause sev-' eral times on predictable crowd pleasers such as an undivided Mr. Netanyahu received a J final standing ovation that seemed perfunctory. In his address the next day, Labor party leader Ehud Barak wasted no time in implying that he was the late Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin's legiti- mate heir. "His life is gone but his light has not been extinguished, and I believe the people of Israel are determined that Yitzhak Rabin should not have died in vain," he said to warm applause. Mr. Barak promised to veto the pending Conversion Bill, but asked for the Conservative and Reform movements in Israel to allow more time for the issue to work its way out Mr. Netanyahu, who spent only a few hours at the G.A., left behind Finance Minister Yaacov Neeman to meet with delegates. Mr. Neeman chairs the prime minister's committee charged with seeking a compromise on the matter. "Let me say very clearly the question before you is not, 'Who is a Jew?' " he said in a news conference. "I want to stress very clearly that a Jew is a Jew no matter the way he practices, and if he doesn't practice any of the command- ments, he is a Jew ... This is the corner- stone to the solution of any problem." Mr. Neeman and everyone else at the G.A. seemed acutely aware that time may be running out on this divi- sive issue. Steve Selig, president of the, Atlanta Jewish Federation, was one of the many delegates who wondered if the pluralism issue could be pegged with a Jan. 31 deadline. "I don't think three months is enough time," he said. "I'd give [the Israeli government] a whole year." Ms. Bagen said the task now is to figure out how to further educate T: those who weren't at the G.A. about religious pluralism. "We have an obligation," she said, (to present it in a light that's not more divisive and to be a factor in bringing people together, not in tearing them apart." , ❑