EDITOR'S NOTEBOOK A Teacher, A Thinker t was a nice evening in Jerusalem, so Rabbi Berel Wein and his wife, Jackie, a former Detroiter, decided to walk home after visiting some friends on March 9. , Parents to four and grandparents to 29, they were within 90 yards of where they live when they heard the boom, then the wail of sirens. A suicide bomber had struck once more, this time at the Moment Café. The toll, like that of so many other savage attacks in this latest Palestinian uprising, reverberated through the Jewish world. Inside the crowded garden cafe in the Rehavia neighborhood of Israel's capital city, the attacker detonated the explo- sives strapped to his body, killing himself and 11 young adults. More than 40 were wounded. At least 520 Israelis have died in the 20-month intifada, largely at the hands ROBERT A. of suicide bombers and gun-toting snipers aligned with Palestinian leader SKLAR Yasser Arafat. Editor "They will not break us," Rabbi Wein told a parlor meeting of 50 guests Sunday at the Bloomfield Township home of U.S. District Judge Avern Cohn and his wife, Lois. "The Jewish people are made of iron. Otherwise, we would not be here. We have promises that the Lord made to us." The meeting was a fund-raiser for Rabbi Wein's 6-year-old Destiny Foundation, which offers multimedia products to build Jewish identity and transmit our heritage. But it was as much a consciousness-raiser. 1 for the Jewish people, not only of those fortunate enough to live in Zion. It is a test of the Jews in Paris, Strasburg, Berlin, Durban, London and Detroit." He added: "We are a special people who are held to special standards, who cannot afford the errors of either judgment or morality that others can, and always seem to, make and get away with. The Lord expects much from us and, therefore, we have to respond in kind." I then settled back on the sofa, eager to soak in all the knowledge I could from this lawyer-turned-rabbi, whom I had first heard on his audiotape series, "Travels Through Jewish Heritage." Standing Strong This week is the anniversary of the Six-Day War in 1967. "Then, we were on the verge of a second Holocaust, God forbid," Rabbi Wein said. "Egypt's Gamal Abdel-Nasser said, 'We're going to drive the Jews into the sea.' Jordan's King Hussein, before he turned over a new leaf, told the Arabs they should pick out the apartments they wanted in Tel Aviv. And the United Nations immediately withdrew its forces. "But Israel, somehow with a great pre-emptive-strike, proved its mettle spiritually and morally, as well as mili- tarily and physically. Thirty-five years later, it's the same story." Torah unites the Jews of modern Israel, whatever their country of origin or reli- gious upbringing, Rabbi Wein said. "It's the inheritance of the Jewish people. It's your Torah as much as mine. It has no label on it. He called the embattled state "a place where a Jew can be a Jew. "It's vibrant and productive," he said. "We have a gross national product that's bigger than all the Arab states combined if you factor out the oil. There is so much Common Bond goodness in the community, even in the In his invigorating 25-minute talk, Rabbi worst of circumstances." Rabbi Wein Wein — teacher, historian, scholar and Rabbi Eli Mayerfeld of Yeshiva Beth columnist — stressed the role of Divine inter- Yehudah in Southfield studied under Rabbi vention. He spoke passionately about Israel, a tiny dem- Wein at Yeshiva Shaarei Torah in Suffern, N.Y. He ocratic nation of 5.5 million Jews in the Arab-dominat- called his mentor a "hope-filled realist" who teaches ed Middle East. "that the hand of God guides history, so we don't have "We have to stand up for Torah — for what's Jewish, to be afraid of the future." for what's moral, for what's ethical and for what's right," Rabbi Reuven Spolter of Young Israel of Oak Park, he said before signing copies of his latest book, Faith er who took part in a recent unity mission, confirmed Fate, The Story of the Jews in the Twentieth Century. Rabbi Wein's "sense of strength and positiveness about "We have to smile and not frown, we have to be what is going on in Israel. inclusive and not exclusive, and we have to feel we are "You see what kind of miracle the country is," he said. brothers and sisters, as we are. We're in this together. "We have to thank God every day there is a state of And the Lord of Israel is in it with us. All of Jewish his- Israel." tory shows His guiding hand upon us. The fact that I echo Southfield's Janet Snider: "We tend to think there's the State of Israel is only because of God." that whatever is happening now is happening for the Throughout history, Rabbi Wein said, Jews have been first time and that we're the only generation to have measured by their relationship with Israel, their home- dealt with it. That view is so limited. Rabbi Wein puts land. Joshua led the Jews into the Land of Israel, but it things in perspective so we know that we'll survive took 350 years before they had a central government. because we've survived for thousands of years." "Everybody did their own thing. There were civil We'll continue to survive because, somehow, we wars between tribes, the people just couldn't get their always find the will and a way to beat evil. act together," said the Chicago native, who made aliyah As Rabbi Wein put it: "We'll be strong, we'll strength- about 10 years ago. en each other and we'll see it through. We'll be able to If you look at Israel today through a prism of the past, build a Jewish nation and a Jewish state that the world "we're not so bad off," he said. "We've been there will recognize and appreciate, that we all will be proud before." of and that will be the true inheritance for the genera- Israel's core test is to survive, he said — "the same test tions that follow us." ❑ Vote Now JN SourceBook READERS' CHOICE AWARDS for Jewish Detroit Here's your chance to tell us what you like best about our community. Use official ballot on page 106 -or- vote online: JN Ballots due June 20 www.detroitjewishnewsnews.com 6/7 2002 5