takAkAV.W. ,'!A, • Champion Of Liberty The ACLU marks 40 years in Michigan with Jewish members and a new o zce. BARBARA LEWIS Special to the Jewish News it The ACLU has always attracted support from the Jewish community. The Michigan group's founders in 1961 included Carl Levin, now the state's senior U.S. senator, and Avern Cohn, now a U.S. District Court judge. Moss and sev- eral of her staff of eight are Jewish, as are about a quarter of the group's board members. "In my family, we had an extremely strong sense of responsibility to the com- munity. It was our cultural ethic," said Moss, 43, who grew up in Southfield and now lives in Ann Arbor. "So many of us are here because our parents and grandparents were immigrants who came from horri- ble situations where they were discriminated against, even tortured, because of who they were." Added Wendy Wagenheim, "The Jewish people have always cared a great deal about social justice. We understand what it means." Wagenheim is the ACLU of Michigan's communications director and a vice president of the Jewish Community Council of Metropolitan Detroit. Says ACLU member David Wolok, an attorney who lives in Huntington Woods, "For several reasons, I think Jews are particularly sensitive to individual and minority rights. We are a minority here, and we're grateful that we were welcomed to this country" adical immigrants plot violence against the United States. Government agents crack down, arresting thousands. The Washington Post opines, "There is no time to waste on hair-splitting over infringement of liberty." Reaction to the Sept. 11 terrorist attack on the World Trade Center? No, these were the "Palmer raids," coordi- nated by U.S. Attorney General Mitchell Palmer in 1920 as a response to perceived threats from communists and other groups. These and similar government actions against individuals, whose only crime was their political convictions, led to the found- ing of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) in 1920. In its first year, the ACLU fought Palmer's campaign of intimidation and harassment, supported the rights of trade unionists to meet and organize, and secured the release of hundreds of people arrested for anti-war views and activities. Wendy Wagenheim, standin g, and Kary Moss check The Bill of Rights has been part of the Nazis And Skokie the ACLU Web site. United States Constitution since 1791, but In 1978, the ACLU alienated many of its Jewish before the ACLU began, it was rarely used backers by supporting the rights of a Nazi group to rally in Skokie, a mostly to defend minority rights. Now celebrating its 40th anniversary, the Jewish suburb of Chicago. state affiliate has "been behind every major case involving the Bill of The city of Skokie had passed several ordinances restricting demonstrations in Rights or state human rights laws," said Michigan Executive Director order to stop the N'azis. The Nazis eventually won in the state supreme court Kary Moss. but voluntarily moved their rally to Chicago. Some cases involve litigation, and some of those set legal precedents. Ironically, when the Jewish War-Veterans applied for a permit to parade In Bergman v. Kelley, a federal judge found the FBI responsible for the through Skokie shortly afterwards, they were turned down because of the anti- Ku Klux Klan's attacks on Freedom Riders in 1961. In Doe v. Nazi ordinances, said Wagenheim, The case, she said, proved the ACLU's 0 University of Michigan, the ACLU overturned university rules punish- 0 point: restricting one group's rights restricts the rights of all. ing speech that "stigmatizes" various groups. In Lane v. City of Richard Lobenthal was one ACLU member who disagreed with the organiza- Warren, a woman won the right to host a Sunday morning worship tion's position. "I'm not a philosophical purist," said Lobenthal, retired director service in her home. In Quinn v. Dept. of Social Services, the ACLU's of the Anti-Defamation League in Michigan and an ACLU of Michigan board lawsuit changed a state practice barring the adoption of bi-racial and member. He served as the group's interim director before Moss was hired in black children by white families. 1998. "I have my own biases. I have my own passions against the Nazis. A case involving discrimination against women by a Wayne State "But I understood that the ACLU had to prevail, because if my prejudices University pension plan went to the U.S. Supreme Court and resulted could take over, then other people's prejudices could take over against me. If my in women all over the country having access to larger pensions, said position as a Jew had prevailed, the country would have been threatened. The Moss. greater good prevailed, and ultimately Jewish interests were served." In some cases, particularly those involving religion in public schools, Moss said most Jews who dropped their ACLU memberships to protest its the ACLU can broker change without going to court. Moss says it's a support of the Nazis have returned to the fold. matter of opening people's eyes to the fact that they're violating the Since assuming leadership of the ACLU in 1998, Moss has strengthened the Bill of Rights. 4 V organization's financial standing and its legislative and public education pro- The ACLU of Michigan also was instrumental in drafting the State 11/23 grams. Though they'll fight for any aspect of civil rights, ACLU of Michigan Constitution in 1963, Moss said. 2001 ?"'" 87