•-* Securing Funds OUR NEW HOURS Monday-Thursday 4pm- 1 Opm Friday 4pm-11 pm Saturday 4pm- 11 pm Sunday 4pn-t-9prn Leaders differ on whether to seek government aid to keep synagogues and other Jewish sites safe. MATTHEW E. BERGER Jewish Telegraphic Agency I New York t soon could be a conundrum for American Jews: Should , communities allow govern- ment money into synagogues in order to keep terrorists out? Behind the scenes at this year's Jewish Council for Public Affairs plenum, officials debated how to rec- oncile separation between church and state with the growing need for money to ease soaring post-Sept. 11 security costs. Especially contentious is whether money should go to synagogues and day schools. "We are working diligently to try and reach a consensus," said Charles Konigsberg, vice president for public policy at the United Jewish Communities, umbrella group for North American federations. UJC likely will look to the annual Homeland Security appropriations in Congress in the coming weeks for security assistance for non-profit organizations. , U.S. Sen. Joseph Lieberman, D- Conn., ranking minority member of the Senate Governmental Affairs Committee, may be a key ally on this issue, insiders say. The project could partner Jewish groups with hospitals, museums, the American Red Cross, and, possibly, mosques. According to several sources, Jewish organizations are in almost complete agreement that seeking loan guarantees from the federal gov- ernment for security costs would not violate their perception of church- state separation, because no direct federal aid would go to the organiza- tions. However, some are specifically pushing for grants instead of or in addition to the guarantees. Some more liberal Jewish groups either are pushing for the Jewish community to focus on the loan guarantees or to set up a two-tier system proposing aid to federation buildings and other community serv- ice centers, along with loan guaran- tees to religious institutions. Others counter that such a system would make synagogues and relij gious buildings second-class institu- tions. The Bush administration has heavily touted faith-based initiatives and other venues to allow religious groups to seek federal dollars. While the Orthodox community has embraced such proposals enthu- siastically, most Jewish groups have opposed them or been uncertain. Jewish leaders opposing faith- based initiatives worry that this exception could set a precedent. Speaking at a JCPA forum, Rabbi David Saperstein, executive director of the Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism, said the issue of federal aid for security was "on the cusp" of dicey issues of church-state separation. "You can look at this as direct government funding of houses of worship and parochial schools, some- thing the Supreme Court has never upheld and which raises serious con- stitutional issues for separationists," he said. "On the other hand, it raises the issue of extraordinary circum- stances in which the government is paying for things which would not have been required to be done by houses of worship if not for extraor- dinary circumstances." Even those who do not support seeking federal aid say they under- stand the rationale for the exemption from long-standing Jewish public policy and are likely not to contest openly the majority's decision. stta u 4i s it a a ; Fermi ngtowfigadgi. 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