Letters to the Editor are updated daily and archived on JN Online: www.detroitjewishnews.com IN FOCUS The Road To Continuity of such trips. According to one recent study, group of major Jewish donors, with 78 percent of those young people who said the backing of the Israeli govern- they had strong religious affiliation also report- ment, is getting ready to promise ed having made a visit to Israel. Anecdotal evi- every Jewish young person that he dence, including the testimony of many of the, or she can have one free trip to Israel. 200 or so Detroit-area youths who went on It's a nice, simple idea, and one that will the Jewish Federation-subsidized Teen Mission appeal to a lot of young people who might to Israel last summer, also records a beneficial otherwise not have an opportunity to visit the effect. country that is so inextricably a part of their But cause and effect may be harder to heritage. It may also appeal to parents as a way prove. To some extent, those who take the to assure their child's discovery of the meaning trips are already keenly aware of their Jewish of being Jewish. identity, so the trip serves to reinforce beliefs But it would be a bad mistake to treat the rather than to create them. offer as some magic lance that impales_the We support the trips — but only as an • dragon of assimilation. adjunct to a much more sustained and A trip can open a door to belief. It can thoughtful effort by parents, clergy and teach- underscore the lessons of a culture. But it is ers to introduce young people to their Jewish neither a theology nor a commitment. heritage. The program, Birthright Israel, was the The Jewish Federation of Metropolitan brainchild of two exceptionally successful busi- Detroit, for example, is on the right track in nessmen — Charles R. Bronfman, co-chair- stepping up funding for day and congregation- man of Seagram's, the Montreal-based liquor al schools, as well as adult education, via the and entertainment company, and Michael H. new Jewish Life Fund. Steinhardt, a Wall Street money manager. Each If Operation Birthright and existing pro- is providing $5 million toward a $300-million, grams like the teen missions represent an infu- five-year program that they say will pay for any sion of new resources, bravo. But if trips are Jew in the world between 15 and 26 years old used as a glamorous and easy substitute for to travel to Israel for 10 days. The Israeli gov- more basic and more costly efforts, they will ernment is to put up some additional amount, hurt the very goal they are being created to but the bulk, apparently, is to come from other serve. organizations. These include the UJA Federa- Kids can polish their sense of Jewish identi- tions of North America before whose General ty in a coach seat on El Al, but they need first Assembly in Jerusalem the program was to learn it in their homes and in their class- announced earlier this week. rooms. ❑ Some statistical evidence supports the value A We're One People, Aren't We? IV hat is Israel ultimately? It's the Jewish homeland. It's not supposed to be a country of partitions separating Jews according to their level of observance. Israel is a rich tapestry of military might, geographic beauty, historical treasure, farming ingenuity, economic wealth, cultural artistry and spiritual diversity. It also has its share of problems, including crime, joblessness, politi- cal skirmishes and-threats from neighbors. Israel was born in the shadows of the Shoah so dispersed Jews could return "home" and re- build their lives. But what are we as a people doing to each other there? We're at constant war spiritually with one another. Consequently, we're tearing at the fab- ric so necessary to carry the fragile, 50-year-old experiment of a modern Jewish homeland into the next millennium. "We need all aspects of Israel together — one without the other is incomplete," says Barry Spielman, executive director of the Bar- Ilan University Global Board of Trustees, who discussed "Israel at 51: The Worst _of- Times or the Best of Times?" Tuesday at the. Max M.. Fisher Jewish Federation Building in Bloom- field Township. And he's right. Like the Israel-based university he represents is trying to do with its new Center for Jewish Identity, Israeli and Diaspora Jews must join. hands and hearts to assure our continuity from generation to generation — and assure survival not only of Israel's statehood but also its soul. It's truly sad that during this jubilee year marking 50 years of statehood, amid so much to be proud of, "the mood in Israel," as Spiel- man relates, "is such that not many are cele- brating." Jews everywhere must work together to top- ple Israel's social barriers and in their wake erect sturdy bridges of understanding and acceptance. ❑ Time To Remember Oakland University German Department Chairman Eugene Strobel and Holocaust Memorial Center Executive Vice Presi- dent Rabbi Charles Rosenzveig chat at "Readings for the 60th Anniversary of Kristallnacht" Nov. 10 at the Kahn Jewish Community Center in West Bloomfield. The evening com- memorated Nov. 9-10, 1938, "The Night of the Broken Glass," when the Nazis launched their violent campaign against the Jews of Germany. Program sponsors were the German- American Heritage Foundation International and the West Bloomfield-based Holocaust Memorial Center. W9'6'3 would want the same in Israel. I believe I can celebrate Shab- bat by lighting candles at my convenience. If someone else While catching up with some believes in a different schedule, reading, I found you pub- it's just as silly for me to expect lished a story and several let- them to adjust to my beliefs as ters regarding an event that for me to be required to adjust took place at an international to theirs. Just as we chose a conference for Secular • private area in a hotel dining Humanistic Jews I attended hall, others can celebrate as in Tel Aviv last month. they please at home or in some The story described the con- private manner. frontation with the religious While I don't live and vote police at the Dan Panorama in Israel, and obviously must Hotel, due to the lighting of accept their laws, I find it candles after sunset at our ironic that Israel is probably Shabbat celebration. The letters on a very short list of coun- responded to whether secular tries where I might not be Jews should or should not be free to celebrate my Jewish required to adjust their behav- identity my own way. ior to conform to Orthodox I recognize that one of the. Jewish beliefs. underlying problems for this I would like to believe that issue is that people, including American Jews, who have been most Jews, have difficulty in the forefront in the United defining Jewish and Judaism. States and other countries, Varied Beliefs Demand Respect 11/2C 1998 Detroit Jewish News 29