JNOpinion Editorials are posted and archived on JN Online: www.detroitjewishnews.com Pictures Of Inspiration ighteen months ago, Robert Slatkin was moved by the uncertain fate of the photos of 260 young Michigan Jews who gave their lives overseas defending the free- doms we enjoy in America. He took it upon him- self to find the photos a permanent home. More than anyone else in a position of influ- ence, Slatkin, a United Jewish Foundation of Metropolitan Detroit (UJF) past president, real- ized the photos belonged to all of Detroit Jewry. He realized that even though these. cherished pho- tos hung in the Memorial Room of the Jewish War Veterans' Michigan headquarters in Southfield, the JWV and its Ladies Auxiliary were merely their custodians. In 2001, the now-aging veterans who fulfilled the destiny of our overseas war dead didn't want their. fallen comrades forgotten. Encouraged by their Ladies Auxiliary, they sought a prominent, new home for the pho- tos they had stood sentry over since 1945. The 260 clean-cut servicemen, attired in dash- ing uniforms and dressy suits, could have been the poster boys of their generation, one that defeated fascism and communism and built American pros- perity. How fitting it was that their photos became part of the enlightening exhibit "We Were There," dedi- cated this Memorial Day along a well-traveled corridor of the Jewish Community Center in West Bloomfield. The exhibit traces Jewish military heroism, from the Civil War to the Vietnam War. It reinforces the human toll required to repel bigotry at home and tyranny abroad. It stands to deepen the Jewish identity and pride of the teenagers drawn to it while going to the gym, pool or inline rink. Professional archivists Heidi Christein and • James Conway spent a year painstakingly planning the exhibit. Slatkin, spurred by the zeal of JWV Michigan Commander Robert Feldman, secured $100,000 from the UJF, the Jewish Federation's finance arm, to pay for it. The exhibit is artifact rich, but the keystone is a computer kiosk with every page of the JWV- Michigan memory book; the result is immediate access to hun- dreds of pic- tures of local Jews who died in battle from the beginning of World War II. More than 500,000 Jews served America in World War II and Korea. Fifty years, ago, the JWV was headquartered in the JCC on Davison in Detroit. It took some politicking, but the WV is back at the JCC, still Detroit Jewry's central address. The coming together of the UJF, Federation, JCC and Jewish Historical Society of Michigan to embrace our war vets — seeking only to give back a precious part of our history — is, simply put, a mitzvah. Laudably, Federation is just $6,000 short of raising enough money to repay the UJF for the $100,000. As our philanthropic overseer, -it also is obligated to create an endowment fund to perpet- ually service the JWV exhibit. 0 Separate Issues clearer than in the debate over reproductive rights. No matter where we may stand as individuals on the questions of women's choice, fetal protection or the myriad of related ethical issues such as therapeutic cloning and the use of embryonic tissue, we must protect the principle that policy may not be decided by a singular, dominant faith. Religion may inform public decisions but it may not dictate them. We should also be speaking out in the national debate over appropriate levels of govern- ment spending and over the taxes that support that spending. Some Jewish organizations are concerned about coming cutbacks in social service appropriations -- reduc- tions that will be increasingly needed as tax cuts diminish the national government's discretionary funds. Jews in this country have long been commit- ted to generous support of health, education and welfare as well as to promoting equality of opportu- nity; we need to decide whether to defend or shift that historic position. We should be speaking up about the infringement of civil rights that has accompanied necessary efforts to prevent domestic terrorism. We ought to be par- ticularly sensitive to the treatment of immigrants, a specific target of the Justice Department's efforts. It is not unpatriotic to point out that a blunderbuss enforcement of the immigration laws does little to decrease the danger of attack. Having paid close attention to how Israel has been forced to deal with terrorists, we may be in a position to make effective argument for carefully targeted investigations — and for a continued open- ness to immigrants from the former Soviet Union whose plans are being stalled while the Immigration Service sorts out its handling of those from Arab and Muslim countries. No one wants to bite the hand that feeds us, and this administration and Congress have been strongly supportive of Israel in its confrontation with the Palestinians and the Arab states. We may fear that opposing some domestic policies could lead to a retaliatory weakening of that support. But we need to realize that the policies that aid Israel are chosen because they serve a national inter- est and will not be abandoned out of political pique. That fact should make us and our agencies even bolder in our willingness to fight for domestic policies that contribute to a more just, equitable and ethical society. El E EDITO DIAL merican Jews and the organizations that work for them are properly focused on the unfolding process aimed at bringing peace between Israel and the Palestinians. If we were not concerned for Israel, what kind of Jews would we be? Yet, the future of the Jewish state is not the only issue that should be on our minds as we think about our place in this country's political life. For starters, we should be deeply con- cerned about the increasingly direct ties between organized religion and government, both at the national and state levels. Freedom of religion, vitally important to a minority faith such as Judaism, was a founding principle of the country. But recent years have seen an ever-increasing religiosity in political life. President George W. Bush, a born-again Christian, pushes constantly for greater use of tax funds by religious organizations, a trend that is mir- rored at the state level, notably in support of reli- gion-based schools. Nowhere is the influence of organized religion A EDIT ORIAL SN 6/13 2003 21