• 4 EDITOR'S NOTEBOOK 4 0 The Fight, The Hurt G rowing numbers of Israeli youths are leaving the Jewish state once their mandatory three years of military service are up. World Jewry had better wake up to this problem before it's too late. The stress and danger of battling terrorism at every turn has caught up with Israel's fighting forces, leaving more honorably discharged 21-year-olds emotionally spent. The result is inde- cision about their future and a weak bond with Israel. They know why Israel had to step up to defend against Palestinian terror over the past 34 months — terror that has killed at least 824 Israelis and foreigners. But they clam up when asked why the Jewish soul resonates in a tiny, desert land that covers less than 1 per- cent of the Arab-dominated Middle East. Many of these Israeli fighters head to Los Angeles to unwind, but decide to stay. They forsake their homeland for the allure of L.A. — and the shield from terrorism it provides. "It's one of the greatest, most perplexing and most hurtful phenomena of this genera- ROBERT A. tion," says Rabbi Baruch SKLAR Yehudah Gradon. Editor And he should know. The London-born rabbi, who studied in the yeshivah world of Lakewood, N.J., is founder and dean of MAOR, a Los Angeles outreach program largely for secular Israelis. Los Angeles is home to at least 250,000 Israelis, many young and vulnerable, the rabbi said. Rabbi Gradon shared his unsettling insights with 16 community members Monday at a lunch-and-learn session co- sponsored by the Yeshiva Beth Yehudah's Partners in Torah program and the Detroit Jewish News. Rabbi Gradon Numbers Don't Lie "You have Jewish children who serve in a Jewish army in a Jewish country, many in the higher units, exposed to danger for years and years — real danger, putting their lives on the line — and the minute they finish their service, they scramble out of the country and don't want to go back," Rabbi Gradon said. His soft-spoken demeanor contained a powerful message about soldiers, pilots, sailors and others in the Israel Defense Forces — as brave and as proud as any fighters. At least 245 of them have died in the terror. "So we must ask ourselves, 'We've created a Jewish home after 2,000 years so that Los Angeles should have a Jewish population of 250,000 Israelis?' That's a big export," the rabbi said. He said New York City has the same number of Israelis, or more. Other hot spots are Bangkok, Sidney and Rio de Janeiro. About 2,500 Israelis, in contrast, live in Detroit. Why do so many young people who put their lives in jeop- ardy for Israel have so much trouble making a lasting connec- tion with it? Israel is at risk partly because it hasn't made a commitment to helping fighters who are war weary go home and rejoin the workaday world. Where's the scholarship-assisted education? Or the subsidized housing? Or the low-interest loans? Where's any concrete sign that Israel wants them for more than fight- ing? t • Rabbi Gradon thinks the new exodus springs partly from a lack of knowledge among many fighters toward what Eretz Yisrael — the Land of Israel — represents for Jews. His theo- ry is intriguing. Israel hasn't done a good job teaching its fighters, or Jews in the diaspora, why Eretz Yisrael is so impor- tant. "We've got to make people care," Rabbi Gradon said. God's GO Rabbi Gradon, an L.A. resident since 1982 and the spiritual counselor of the Kollel Bais Avraham in Los Angeles, said the Torah teaches that God gave Eretz Yisrael to the Jews as their eternal home. It's the one place Jews don't have to worry about their identity or fear the effects of assimilation. Jews in the vast reaches of the diaspora have, at one time or another, been targeted, isolated and hated because of their beliefs. Today, Jew hating is popular in many parts of the world. Rabbi Gradon calls Eretz Yisrael "a domain that is unique." "Everyone has to live somewhere," he said. "Why is Israel for the Jews any different than Spain for the Spaniards or Japan for the Japanese?" "g- As he spoke, I began to understand why the Jewish connection to the Land of Israel g. is so fundamental to who we are as a peo- n* ple — a people that has survived 2,000 years of exile, oppression and angst. Eretz Yisrael is the place where God is closer. "It's a place where the spiritual fulfillment of a person is possible at a level far higher than anywhere else," Rabbi Gradon said. The picture he was painting was taking shape. How could it be that a generation of Israeli fighters has so many who are bereft of Torah's simplest lessons or the basic con- cepts of Judaism — and as a result can't explain their historic right to Eretz Yisrael? Alan Hitsky, associate editor of the Jewish News, said the rabbi moved him to contemplation. "He made me think about my own commitment to Israel, or lack of it, and how various groups in our Jewish community relate or don't relate to it. It certainly is a worry for the future — for Israel and for ourselves." In Israel, the new olim, the new immigrants, get govern- ment assistance before newly discharged soldiers with only $25 in their pockets — and that's a tactical error, Rabbi Gradon said. "The government should say to a young army person exact- ly what it says to a potential immigrant: 'We'll do something to help you feel connected.' Where's the appreciation? What will it cost, $30,000 per person? You know what it means to lose a person forever in terms of the investment and training?" He added, "Many of these young people feel very hurt and intimidated by the future. They aren't respected in the way they should be." Of equal concern for me is their' lack of tools to appreciate what it means to be Jewish. Rabbi Gradon's outreach found the lack of Jewish learning among the key factors that drove these "new" veterans from the very land they were willing to die for. I left Monday's lunch hour steeped in thought but pining for answers. ❑ S S • S • Oanci. • • S 0 of 0 S 0 poop16 • • S S S 0 diSabiliii S I I I • JARC'S 23rd Annual Fall Fundraiser A NEW MUSICAL` A8BA 0 * • S I I a . 0 Fisher Theater Sunday, Nov. 2 1:30 pm & 7:30 pm Tickets at www.jarc.org or (248) 538-6810 x418 • Ages 21 to 40 YO V115 I I A-010-t- w Mamma's WP Lounge 5-7 pm Fisher Building 0 I • 3 ,.VW? For 34 years, helping people with disabilities be fully included in community life. - 8/ 8 2003 P2 5