Letters to the Editor are updated daily and archived on J N Online: vv-vvw.detroitjewishnews.corn Helping Israel Grow possibly raise the $30 million it annually does for the JNF. But other donors are the backbone of the non-political agency and its $239-million-a- year operating budget. The JNF is secure in its support among older adults. So its thrust unmistakably must be in growing its alliance with young people. Its resourceful National Future Leadership program is a great start. And let's remember the kids who buy $10 certificates to plant saplings in Israel in memo- ry of relatives or in honor of friends. What better measure is there than the millions of kids who have struck up an indelible bond with Israel and, in so doing, have discovered a living return on loving the land? Jolted four years ago when mishandled funds forced a national leadership change, the JNF is busy regaining public trust and support under the inspired presidency of business- man/philanthropist Ronald Lauder. As we welcome Tu B'Shevat, the Jewish New Year of Trees, at sundown Sunday, Jan. 31, Jews everywhere, but young American Jews especially, should take stock of the JNF and its resolve to improve the Israeli way of life. For its part, the JNF must strive to solidify its future by convincing young American Jews to become a stakeholder in our ancient home- land, not just in Wall Street. 1 1 How U.S. Jews Can Help A merican Jews have an enormous stake in the Israeli national elec- tion May 17. The election pro- vides an important opportunity to build a national consensus on the vital issue of how Judaism and democracy will coexist. Without that national clarity, critical ques- tions, such as who is to be recognized as a Jew, will be addressed piecemeal, depending on which party is in power, and never truly resolved. As the largest part of the Diaspora, we American Jews have a responsibility to help define what the Jewish state is to be next. Granted, Israel is not our physical home, we do not have to experience the fears and uncer- tainties that shape life in Jerusalem or Tel Aviv or the settlements of the West Bank, and we have no right to vote in Israeli elections. But we have been unwavering supporters for the last half-century. We lobby Washington to rec- ognize the vital interests of Israel, we send community dollars there at the rate of $350 million a year — on top of the $4 billion in governmental economic and military aid — and we encourage our children to experience the country firsthand so that they will stay connected to our joint faith. From our vantage point, reading and talk- ing about the election, we see the parties splin- tering and a narrow, nasty jousting for partisan advantage that can easily undermine Israel's centrality for Diaspora Jews, We have had more than enough experience in this country with destructive party-line bickering, and it is worrisome to see Israeli leaders hiring Ameri- can political advisers who market candidates by focus group rather than principle. We don't have to funnel money into one party or another or threaten to withhold it, as Reform leaders have done. What we do have to provide is clear statements from every stream of American Judaism about how we hope Israel will grow as a nation. We shouldn't be afraid to let Likud, Labor and the newly forming centrist parry know that we don't want to see Israel drift into a narrow funda- mentalism that would invite comparison with the Muslim-led states. We would particularly like to see American Orthodoxy support in Israel the kind of de facto pluralism that gives it such vitality in this country. If Israel is to be the cultural, spiritual home- land that everyone envisioned earlier this cen- tury, then we must keep adding our voices to her debate. Pho to by Bill Hansen F or 98 years, the Jewish National Fund has been a beacon of hope for the Land of Israel. The shared and perpetual trust of the Jewish people works to make the arid countryside habitable as well as promote the role environmentalism plays within Jewish teachings. Now, like many well-intentioned Jewish ser- vice agencies, the JNF must anchor itself for the next century. To do that, it has to cement its developing appeal among younger Jews. The JNF provides an immense opportunity for young people to get involved. With the Israel Lands Authority, the JNF co-administers 92 percent of the state's public land as well as natural resources like reservoirs, parks and fish ponds and infrastructure like roads, sewers and desalination plants. Alone, it's Israel's largest employer of new immigrants. Since its founding in 1901, the JNF has planted 205 million trees, developed 300,000 acres of woodlands, created 440 major parks and picnic areas, and reclaimed 875,000 acres of difficult terrain — from the rocky expanses of the Galilee to the desert stretches of the Negev. Major donors keep the JNF going — 20 percent of the donors give 80 percent of the gifts. Without them, the United States couldn't IN FOCUS a4,1,t'esef,x , Friendly Encounter The American Arab and Jewish Friends hosted a party Sunday at Whirly Ball in West Bloomfield for Duane Kell Essay Schol- arship Contest partners. Among the partner teams taking part were Ant Neda Ahmed, 17, right, of Dearborn Fordson High School, and Abbie Lavin, 17, a Milford High School student affiliated with Temple Israel. The essay contest theme is: "The Ties That Bind." Winners will be announced this spring. The Friends group is a program of the National Conference for Community and Justice's Detroit chapter. LETTERS Institute Is Unique As someone new to the area, I appreciated the article ("Inde- pendent Courses" Jan. 22) on the current state of affairs of interfaith activity in the Detroit area. The article pointed out that due to several reasons, particularly a lack of coopera- tion between groups working in the area of interfaith and a general lack of programming designed for lay people, there seems to be a general decrease of interest in the interfaith movement. The article then stated "the most notable exception being the South- field-based Ecumenical Insti- tute for Jewish-Christian Studies." Thank you for recognizing that we are unique. We are unique in that all institute programs have always been designed for, and attended by, both Jewish and Christian lay people. We are also unique in that we choose to specialize in Jewish-Christian relations, the subject of a related article Jan 22. This is a conscious deci- sion in response to statements that have been, and continue to be issued by Christian churches that are involved in interfaith relations. The Roman Catholic church and most mainline Protestant church denomina- tions have issued statements calling for more and deeper dialogue between Christians and Jews. The same churches also call for more and deeper dialogue between Christians and Muslims, but they issue two separate statements call- ing for two separate dialogues; they do not confuse the issues. The churches recognize that there are distinct issues to be addressed in each dialogue. The Ecumenical Institute 1/29 1999 Detroit Jewish News 31