Insight I f Clyde Lott has his way, sev- eral hundred cows will fly to Israel this December. And the Mississippi preacher has some unlikely allies in his quest: Jews liv- ing in Israel and the West Bank. The cows, the first of what Lott hopes will be 50,000 sent to the Jewish state, are part of his plan to fulfill a biblical prophecy that a red - heifer be born in Israel to bring about the "Second Coming" of Jesus. The return of Jesus is part of a Christian apocalyptic vision of the end of time, which includes the slaughter of those who don't accept the Christian messiah as their savior. A cattle rancher and ordained minister with the National Pentecostal Assemblies of Jesus Christ, Lott believes, like most fundamentalist Christians, that three preconditions men- tioned in the Bible are necessary for the corn- ing of the Messiah: the state of Israel must be restored; Jerusalem must be in Jewish hands; and the Temple, last destroyed in 70 A.D., must be rebuilt. The modern state of Israel, of course, was established in 1948, and since 1967, the Jewish state has con- trolled all of Jerusalem. That leaves the rebuild- ing of the Temple, and since a red heifer was part of the sacrificial ritual in the Temple — mentioned several times in the Bible, including in the Book of Numbers, chapters19-22 — many believe the birth of a red heifer in Israel will signal the Temple's return. Many Jews believe that the same preconditions will bring about the coming of the Jewish Messiah. Lott's quest began 10 years ago, when he heard from a preacher that This could have disastrous political implications because rebuilding the Temple on Jerusalem's Temple Mount, which contains several Muslim holy sites, could antagonize the entire Arab world. At least two other American Christians are breeding similar cows in the United States in hopes of bringing them to Israel, according to Gershon Solomon, the leader of the Temple Mount Faithful, another group dedi- cated to rebuilding the Temple. But Lott's project, which he esti- mates could cost millions of dollars if the 50,000 Red Angus cows are indeed sent, is by far the most ambitious. The Temple Institute, which is no longer work- ing on the project and declined to say why, helped connect Lott with cattle ranchers both in Israel and the West Bank. Lott admits that there are differences between • ▪ his group and the Israelis they work with. He does- n't focus on the apoca- lypse, saying his goal is to create a "stable and friendly relationship between apostolic Christians and Israel in which the barriers that have separated the two for 2,000 years will be 3) torn clown. "The common denom- inator between us is cows," he acids. The theological differ- ences also don t bother Haim Dayan, president Rabbi Chaim Richman, left, of the Temple of Ambal, Israel's main Institute in Jerusalem stands with Rev. Clyde cattle organization, who Lott of Mississippi next to a red heifer. is working with Lott. The types of cows Lott is breeding can flourish in Israel, he says, and we Temple Institute, which is headed by can make a profit with them." If Rabbi Chaim Richman, didn't talk Lott and his friends think the cows about their religious differences, pre- "will make the Messiah come faster, ferring to focus on their common that's OK with us." desires to help Israel prosper and see a Lott has given up his family's live- red heifer born in the Jewish state. stock business to focus on the red The birth of a red heifer would heifer project full time. unquestionably be seen as a sign from It become a lifelong goal," he God to take further steps in rebuild- says. "I don't do anything else. I will ing the Temple," says Dr. Richard be consumed with this" until the Landes, the head of Boston church is taken to heaven "or I go to University's Center for Millennial my grave." P1 Studies. the apocalypse might be approaching. "A seed was planted in me, and once there, that seed didn't leave me alone," says Lott, 43. In 1989, Lott sought state help and, through the state's agriculture minister, eventually contacted the Temple Institute, a private organiza- tion in Jerusalem dedicated to rebuild- ing the Temple. The institute invited him to come to Israel, which started a relationship that has since brought Lott to Israel and the West Bank more than a dozen times. Lott and the members of the PETER EPHROSS . Jewish Telegraphic Agency Sacrifices *ssippz preacher devotes life hing red heifer in Israel 9/10 1999 t ' (( Remember When • From the pages of the Jewish News for this week 10, 20, 30, 40 and 50 years ago. so' Detroiter Leslie Miller signed on to spend 10 months in Morocco as a Jewish Service Corps volunteer for the American Joint Distribution Committee. El Al, Israel's government-owned airline, made plans to go public to raise cash for modernization. Congregation Mishkan Israel Nusach H'Ari-Lubavitcher Center acquired the Labor Zionist Institute building on Middlebelt between 12 and 13 Mile roads in Farmington Hills. Governor William Milliken was named an honorary fellow of Hebrew University in Jerusalem. Another victim of the soaring Israeli inflation is the famous Israeli hotel breakfast. The eat-as-much- as-you-can challenge for tourists is no more. 1969 A blind Greek Orthodox priest from Cyprus, who had been serving in the Old City of Jerusalem for four years, had his vision returned through an operation at Hadassah- Hebrew University Medical Center. Rabbi Israel I. Halpern became the first clergyman to open a meet- ing of the Wayne County Board of Supervisors with an invocation. 1959 A testimonial was planned to honor Mrs. Charles D. Solovich, new nation- al president of B'nai B'rith Women. Rita Koenig of Winthrop Street in Detroit won the first prize of a fitted sewing case in a sewing con- test for teenagers sponsored by Singer Sewing Center at Northland. 1949 Dan Frohman, singer and choir conductor, has been appointed choir director for Congregation Shaarey Zedek. Harry J. Kozlow became a candi- date for the Detroit Common Council. — Compiled by Sy Manello, editorial assistant