LETTERS We prefer letters that relate to articles in the Jewish News. We reserve the right to edit or reject letters. Brevity is encouraged. Letter writers generally are limited to one letter per 4-6 week period, space permitting. Letters must contain the name, address and title of the writer, and a daytime telephone number. Original copies must be hand signed. Mail to the Jewish News at 29200 Northwestern Hwy, Suite 110, Southfield, MI 48034; fax to (248) 304-8885; or e-mail to: rsklar@thejewishnews.com We prefer letters to be e-mailed. More original letters are posted at www.cletrohjevvishnews.com Set Good Example Well, you've managed to get much attention. Local news stations and news- papers find it very newsworthy that the Jewish News publication is to announce unions of same-sex couples. By making this an accepted trend, don't you think that this will be the beginning of a "slip- pery slope" that will encourage more such Torah-forbidding unions? This is the time of year to review and correct our ways. I hope that the JN-will reconsider publication of unworthy news that can only cast a bad light on the Jewish nation. We, the Jewish peo- ple, must set a good example and be the . (good) guiding light for all the nations. A. S. Mandelbaum Oak Park Inclusivity Welcomed I applaud the recent decision of the Jewish News to allow publication of same-sex lifecycle announcements. The Jewish community must not only be tolerant, but also accepting and inclusive of all its members. Gay, les- bian, bisexual and transgendered Jews make up a significant and important part of our community. We serve as educators, cantors, rabbis, lay members, temple presidents, teachers and congre- gants. We are your neighbors, children, parents, relatives and friends. We, too, carry the burdens of our people's past, the struggles of the present and the dreams of the future. The Torah teaches that all people are created btzelem elohim, in the image of God. The decision of the Jewish News is one that reflects that teaching. Adam Rosenwasser The Ann Arbor writer is a first-year rabbinical student at Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion in Jerusalem Hear Our Enemies I read with interest your Editor's Note- book concerning, among other things, by what authority the Jewish people have a right to the Land of Israel ("Be In The Know," Sept. 10, page 5). You cite two rationales: It was given to them by God (Deuteronomy 34:4), and the United Nations approved the creation of Israel in 1946. Both of these explana- tions will fail to answer Israel's critics. Certainly, the Muslim world gives no credence to a biblical account that they fail to accept as the word of God. Their interpretation of the Koran would like- wise do little to convince Jews to leave 9/17 2004 6 the Land of Israel. Second, it seems a bit bemusing to base Israel's legitimacy on one U.N. res- olution while rejecting so many others that Israel finds unacceptable. The establishment and continued existence of the State of Israel rather fol- lows the historical pattern of peoples over the millennia to create or re-create their historic homelands. Poles have struggled, sometimes with success, sometimes unsuccessfully to have an independent Poland. Muslims in India were successful in establishing an inde- pendent Pakistan. Today, from Chechnya to Sri Lanka, the world is full of struggles by ethnic groups to assert their independence. Unfortunately, the success of the vic- tors all too often involves the suffering of others. Yet, it is no more sensible to ask that the United States return our entire country to the Indians than it is to try to undo the reality of Israel in the world today. What is important is that even in the face of terrorism, it is critical to see our enemies as human beings who deserve to be heard and to have their legitimate grievances addressed. Henry Pinkney Farmington Hills Filling The Void I was surprised when I read in your Editor's Notebook that Jews for Jesus had raised a whopping $22 million for its Behold Your God recruitment efforts on college campuses and elsewhere ("Jesus Not Our Messiah," Aug. 27, page 5). I've attended seven different universities and it seems that the most significant effort to reach out to students who want to get into something that calls itself Jewish must be that of the aforementioned group. The only exception I've seen is the Oak Park-based Machon ETorah pro- gram called Jewish Awareness AMerica (JAAM.net). I attended the Maimonides program through JAAM, and, I have to admit, I sure learned a lot more than I ever did as a kid in Hebrew school. As with many of my friends, JAAM helped me to develop a deeper level of Jewish knowledge and commit- ment. I'm now writing you this letter from a yeshivah in Israel. I think the problem that Jewish reli- gious organizations face is twofold. First, outreach (kiruv) has usually been con- ducted by groups that are perceived as not being mainstream or that otherwise broke off from mainstream Judaism at one time or another. Of course, Jews for Jesus would be among the most extreme examples of this. The point is that traditional and mainstream Jewish outreach is largely absent from college campuses. Indeed, despite having lived in many college towns, I have never seen any significant effort to recruit Jews for any of the Hillels' Reform, Conservative or Orthodox minyanim. One thing is certain. If mainstream and traditionally oriented Jews do not provide the financial resources necessary to make opportunities available for cam- pus Jews who want to do Jewish things, then groups like Jews for Jesus are clear- ly well placed to do it for them. Jonathan Shill Jerusalem Saving Human Souls I was very pleased you printed in the Jewish News and published on JN Online the four articles on the Jews for Jesus-Behold Your God campaign (`Aiming For Detroit," Aug. 27, page 16). My wife and I are gentile Christians and have been attending Congregation Shema Yisrael in Bloomfield Township since 1998. We have had a heart for the Jewish people and Israel since our child- hood. My wife's father was a prisoner of war in Germany in World War II; he raised her also to have a heart for Israel, as he did. Loren Jacobs (he is truly a rabbi in every sense of the word) has stressed repeatedly that Jewish people who embraCe Jesus also are to embrace their Jewish heritage. We do not want mes- sianic Jews o _ r their descendants to assimilate. I would like to see Jews for Judaism correct their misleading statements. For instance, Jews for Jesus do not ambush people. They all wear some kind of easi- ly identifiable logo on the outside of their clothing. Their literature is clear about who is distributing it and what the organization believes. . They purpose- ly do not hold any significant conversa- tion with minors. Rabbi Elliot Pachter of the Michigan Board of Rabbis states that "an individ- ual who accepts Jesus as the Messiah is a Christian." The term "Christian" simply means a follower of the Jewish Messiah. Europeans who believe Jesus is the Jewish Messiah are still Europeans and Africans who believe in Him are still Africans, just as Jewish people who believe that Jesus is the king of the Jews are still Jews. The amount of money used by the Behold Your God campaign to reach the Jewish people through the world on a per-capita basis is minimal. I would think that far more is spent on Jewish education each year. What Jews for Jesus is doing is a kind of Jewish education! But money is not the issue — truth and saving human souls from spiritual death is, and if just a few respond to the truth, all the money is worth it. Kim Glander Clawson Combining Forces Your Editor's Notebook "Jesus Not Our Messiah" (Aug. 27, page 5) recognizes the danger to all Jews from Jews for Jesus and its huge, well-financed drive to convert Jews based on the disproved claim that Jesus is the Jewish Messiah. I have been deeply involved for most of my adult years in making friends with Christians of all stripes, sometimes defensively disproving their conversion attempts or just in conversation showing them in their religious books (and ours) that Jesus Christ has not fulfilled even one claim specified as proof that Jesus is the Jewish Messiah. Jews for Judaism has been working hard all over the U.S. to help reclaim Jews who have bought into Jews for Jesus and messianic Jews. The organiza- tion has been very successful for years. Its newest challenge is to help Jewish communities oppose the kind of pro- gram we are now the target of. I am delighted to see the Jewish Community Council openly state its objections and organize resistance by combining efforts with the Ecumenical Institute for Jewish-Christian Studies in Southfield, NCCJ in Detroit and NCLCI, a national organization headed by David Blewett, director of the Ecumenical Institute. The work is excit- ing, especially when we find friendly Christians who support our basic tenets, denouncing all and any attempts at con- version. Every Jew needs to know the basic background about Christianity and how to respond to Christian messianic claims and why they are not valid. The only solution to this growing threat to our security is through education between friends. It is being done. More needs to be done and now! Leonard Michlin Waterford Setting Moore Straight I wish to respond to [filmmaker] Michael Moore's documented com- ments concerning Israel and the