This Wee News Digest Donors Help Israeli Relief Lining Up Some Jewish activists take sides in the Detroit mayoral election. JENNIFER LOVY Special to the Jewish News T 0 10/12 2001 28 he vast majority of the Detroit Jewish community now live in the suburbs, but Jews continue to maintain emotional and financial ties to the city. These bonds are particu- larly prevalent in the hotly contested mayoral campaign. With the Nov. 6 election less than a month away, it's no surprise that Jews are throwing their support behind the two candidates, Gil Hill and Kwame Kilpatrick. Hill, the city council president, and Kilpatrick, a state representative, were the top vote getters in the September primary. The field was left wide open when Mayor Dennis Archer did not seek a third term. Joshua Opperer, an attorney in Detroit, first heard the name Kwame Kilpatrick five years ago. "Watch him — he'll go places," a friend told him. Opperer has since joined the candi- date's finance committee. Kilpatrick has been to Israel; the Jewish Community Council of Metropolitan Detroit took Kilpatrick and other lawmakers in 1999. Since then, Kilpatrick has reached out to the Jewish community for support and advice, according to Opperer. David Farbman, a Detroit real estate developer, lists a number of reasons why he thinks members of the Jewish community are supporting Kilpatrick. Although Hill would be a good mayor, Farbman says, "Kwame is a great negotiator, he is intelligent and he has tremendous bridge-build- ing skills. "He is a doer and not a talker, and he has a fantastic ability to get along with everyone. He also realizes that there are a lot of macro issues to address in the city, which will encourage business growth and development. I think Kwame is the key to making Detroit work." The day that Archer announced he would not seek re-election, Kilpatrick told Opperer that he was seriously considering running for the city's top job. Early on, when Kilpatrick was not doing well in the polls, Opperer suggested that Kilpatrick consider waiting four years before making a bid for the office. Opperer was impressed by the state representative's response: "He told me, 'It's not worth waiting. I have kids who will be start- ing school and I don't want the wrong per- son in office. — Opperer is support- ing Kilpatrick because he believes he will help the entire state, not just Detroit resi- dents and businesses. Kilpatrick says he is running because the city is in dire need of moving forward. "A Gil Hill lot has been done in the last eight years, but there is a lot more to do. We need to maximize city resources, form coali- tions and deal with racial polarization." candidate is elected, Hill will be a frequent guest in the Jewish commu- nity. "I've talked with him in the past about the [Jewish] community and about Jewish issues. If we ask for his presence, I think we will definitely see him," said Ackerman. Says Kilpatrick about the suburbs, "The mayor has to reach across county and municipal lines. We need a transporta- tion system that works, we need national trade shows to come to the area and we need open and honest dialogue about racial polariza- tion." On the subject of education, Kilpatrick says the top reason res- idents move out of Detroit is because of the quality of educa- tion. He advocates cre- ating and enhancing after-school programs to develop cognitive skills. He believes the key to fixing the school system is pursuing Campaign Trail state and federal Hill maintains he has resources. "the best plan and Hill is also con- background" to help cerned about the quali- the city. His top prior- ty of education being ities will be improving provided by the Kwame Kilpatrick the quality of life for Detroit Public Schools. residents of Detroit, One of his proposals cleaning up city parks and streets, involves establishing a "Reserve and providing city services to resi- Officer Training Corps" program for dents on a regular basis. high school students to start pursing Both candidates agree that metro careers in police, fire and emergency Detroit plays a crucial role in the medical work. success of the city and both acknowl- Ackerman is confident that Hill edge that a revitalized Detroit is ben- has the right plans and ideas for the eficial for everyone in southeast city, and describes him as a hard- Michigan. working, effective leader. Hill says he plans to be an obvious "He will be responsive to the local presence in the suburbs as well as the community and we need someone city. "I want to be the mayor you see who is going to get things done," everywhere," he says. says Ackerman. Troy attorney Alan Ackerman has "He has the desire and the ability known Hill for 30 years through his to improve the city and he's paid his legal work and predicts that if his dues for a long time." ❑ New York/JTA — Major Jewish donors who gathered in New York last week raised more than $66 million to provide psychological and grief coun- seling for Israeli families affected by the ongoing violence in Israel. The funds, which will also go for added security within Israel, were raised under the aegis of the United Jewish Communities' IsraelNOW Solidarity Campaign. "The terrorist attacks in the United States brought home the physical and psychological damage that have afflict- ed our brothers and sisters in Israel since the very first days of its exis- tence," said veteran philanthropist Max Fisher of Franklin. Israelis Counted Among N.Y. Dead New York/JTA — Three Israelis are known to have perished in the Sept. 11 attacks on the United States. Two were aboard the planes used in the attacks and one was recovered amid the rubble of the World Trade Center. A fourth is missing in New York and presumed dead, according to the Israeli Consulate in New York. The consulate revised downward its previ- ous estimates after Israelis traveling abroad called home to notify relatives of their whereabouts. East Germans Stole From Dead Berlin/JTA — The secret police of the former East Germany exhumed the bodies of 600 Jewish victims of the Nazis and removed their gold teeth, according to The Associated Press, which cited papers newly discovered in Berlin. The gold, dug up in the 1970s, was probably melted down by the East German government. Kibbutz Man Dies In Suicide Attack Jerusalem/JTA — A 43-year-old Israeli man from Kibbutz Shluchot in the Jordan Valley was killed Sunday morn- ing by a Palestinian suicide bomber near the entrance to the farming settlement. The bomber apparently detonated