Opinion Editorials are posted and archived on JN Online: www.detroitjewishnews.com Dry Bones Worries At The Margin jr ews, generally comfortable and prosperous in America, ought to take seriously the findings — positive and negative — of a recent sur- vey that examined anti-Semitic attitudes in this country. Among the viewpoints found by the Institute for Jewish & Community Research, the most disturbing is a rise in anti-Semitic beliefs among Americans who are 35 or younger. They are substantially more likely than their parents to believe, for instance, that Jews are responsible for killing Jesus Christ or that Jews wield too much influence over the news media and Wall Street. This attitudinal shift has, without doubt, numerous causes; the survey recommends additional work to ferret them out. But it is hard not to think that they include the Israel-Arab con- flict and, more generally, the rise in Islamic revisionist thinking. Another driver may be Christian fundamentalist teaching. When Islamic revisionists play to enthusiastic audi- ences throughout the Middle East, and politicians can- not wait to proclaim that they have been born again as Christians or that they see nothing wrong with prayer in public schools, school administrators and teachers get a message that quickly shows up in campus atti- tudes and activities. Obviously lacking any firsthand experience of World War II, many younger Americans simply don't believe the Holocaust happened; others say they either aren't sure or don't know that six million Jews were murdered by the Nazis. Somehow the widely touted Holocaust education programs are not reaching significant num- bers of young people while revisionist and fundamen- talist messages are. Another factor affecting younger Americans has to be the campus embrace of the Palestinian cause. Far too many college students get a totally distorted view of Israel and the reasons for its continuing presence in the West Bank and Gaza Strip. Ill-informed professors and well-organized campus Palestinian groups pro- claim repeatedly the suffering of the masses of NORTH KOREA HAS PRovEN 71-16, UNTNINKA, it" -1.1 EDIT ORIAL Rabbi Gamze's Way he death of Rabbi Noah Gamze last week focuses our attention on his beloved Isaac Agree Downtown Synagogue and the con- gregation that he served for nearly 40 years. The Downtown Synagogue is unique in metropolitan Detroit. Its congregants come from all walks of life — Jews from neighboring office towers looking for a minyan or for yahrtzeit, Jews from neighboring streets looking for a place to get warm and a kind word, Jews who drive in from the suburbs, drawn by the shul's intimate setting and Jewish presence in the central city. To Rabbi Gamze, Jews were everywhere, whether they were Jewish or not. And many of his "Jews" eventually became Jewish through formal study and conversion because of his influence. Rabbi Gamze, a gentle man with a yen to help, was a one-man Jewish relief agency. He visited the T , r+146- WORL-1) Palestinians under a supposedly dictatorial C'001,1) FLutQGE Israeli military presence without ever (Nero NUCLEAR acknowledging that those woes can be traced directly to the collective folly and indifference of the Arab nations. The facts that all of Israel's wars have been defensive, that Arab rejection of the Jewish state began in 1948 and continued through the Camp David and Taba processes of two years ago or that \ Palestinian textbooks teach Arab children to hate Jews somehow get overlooked in • fa0, the collegiate sympathies for the alleged .7 .1; e underdogs. It is not clear that the campus infatuation with anti-Zionism always equates to anti-Semitism, but for a lot of Jews on campus- WONT 1.14, - STATE es these days, that is a distinction OF ISRAE 1.616.a u5 without a difference. OUT. The authors of the survey, Gary A. Tobin and Sid Groeneman, wisely suggest that the quality and quantity of education about Jews and Israel should be increased at every level of education, and that work- CO shops and conferences should be organized to help teachers and administrators under- stand Judaism better. Further, they suggest Jews must work more closely with African- American and Latino communities, where anti-Semitic beliefs are the most common, and inter-religious dialogue should be atheists, Muslims and Mormons. A quarter of those heightened, particularly by stressing the need for semi- sampled didn't express a single anti-Semitic belief, they narians to learn how to combat anti-Semitic credos. outnumbered those who said that Jews were a moral Having identified the problem of prejudice that threat to America or that a Jewish president might set exists among young Americans, however, the survey the interests of Israel ahead of the interests of the broadly reinforces a much more positive view of United States. America's overall tolerance for Jews, one that contrasts We don't have to be defensive but we should pay sharply with the sad history of bias that continues to attention to the worrisome misperceptions of too plague too many European countries. Just about half many young Americans and take some simple steps to of the more than 1,000 Americans interviewed said make sure that those attitudes never harden into a that Jews are just like themselves in basic beliefs and national pattern of malevolence. ❑ values, a much more positive rating than they gave to W '114 ou - r 136-t tQG INVOLVED! sick, took in the poor, handed a dollar to anyone in need and worked to keep afloat a financially difficult enterprise. Under his spiritual embrace, the High Holidays were the congregation's biggest fund-raiser. Anyone could attend services at the Downtown Synagogue's "annex" — the old Veterans' Administration Building on the riverfront and other large venues — for the princely sum of $25. Many, of course, attended free. Unaffiliated Jews are drawn by the eclectic vigor of this congregation, which crosses racial and social barriers more profoundly than many larger suburban counterparts. Jews from all religious upbringings have answered its call to come pray, however. Tradition still resonates, but with an ear to our changing times — there's now equal participation of women, for example. Younger people are especially drawn to the syna- gogue's sense of family; members are always there for each other's higher good. Detroit Jews need a Rabbi Gamze to remind us of our duty to help the less fortunate through tzedakah EDIT ORIAL -HL/ L. wowii ti and repair of the world, tikkun olam. We all too often forget that we have fellow Jews — and non- Jews — who are not made in our image, but in God's image. There are poor Jews in Detroit. There are poor Jews in the suburbs. There are people of many faiths, and of no faith, who need our help. When the Jewish Welfare Federation of Detroit changed its name to Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit, it properly projected the idea that it was for all Jews, not only the neediest. Federation's huge and far- reaching agenda includes acculturation, Jewish educa- tion, elder care, Israel, human rights, social action, interfaith relations — and Jews who are poor or oppressed throughout the diaspora. But its roots are firmly here and so are many of our problems. Rabbi Gamze would often refer to Gan Eden — the Garden of Eden — when meeting friends and strangers. No one worked harder at creating Gan Eden along Griswold in downtown Detroit. As indi- viduals and as organizations, we need to follow his example. ❑ 'rte 1/31 2003 33