World Disengagement Response Local rabbis speak out about Israeli pullout from Gaza. SHELLI LIEBMAN DORFMAN StaffWriter A s is the case in Israel and elsewhere around the world, local rabbis, too, possess varied — often passionate — views and feelings regarding the upcom- ing disengagement in Gaza. Their remarks range from strong feelings that the pullout would com- promise the security of Israelis, to support for the Israeli government's decision, to deep sadness for a loss of land that was said to be an everlast- ing gift to the Jewish people by God. When asked if they agree or dis- agree with the disengagement, here's how some of our area clergy — of several denominations — responded: • "I think it is insane. I don't run the country and I don't — and can't pos- sibly — know all the true issues of security and intrigue. Nobody does. "But what is clear to me is that we are rewarding terror. We are demoralizing a serious segment of our population. In doing so, we are compromising our security. We for- get history and are constantly doomed to relive it. We for- get that the issues that maintain the Jewish presence are not so much our fighting anti- Semitism, our sci- Tolwin entific gifts to the world [which go unheralded], our becoming trade partners with this county or that. Our existence depends on our being Jews. And we are losing on all fronts. "We better wise up, or we will be in worse tzores [trouble] than we are now And if you don't believe me, nobody would have predicted that we would be in this mess 10 years ago. "Why does "Palestine" need to Judenrein? [A Nazi-era German term for 'cleansed of Jews']? Let them make their country and let Jews live there? The whole thing is a scam. ,, — Rabbi Alen Tolwin, director, Aish Detroit, Southfield RESPONSE on page 57 Gm TURMOIL from page 53 been splattered with pullout news and opinion non-stop. They follow a usual pattern: anti-disengagement protesters rally; Prime Minister Sharon says there will be no delay in the evacuation; a Qassam rocket hits a settlement; police arrest young anti-disengagement protestors blocking traffic and a sol- dier refuses orders to aid in the with- drawal. The tension comes in all shapes and two colors. Orange is the color of choice for those against the disengagement, while blue symbolizes support for the pull- out. People don orange t-shirts, ker- chiefs, orange Lance Armstrong-style bracelets, skirts, and ribbons tied to their backpacks and cars. The blue supporters are far less vocal, though public opinion polls say they represent a majority of Israelis. By The Numbers Many here feel the divisive issue will spark a civil war. An 18-year-old girl passing out blue ribbons in Jerusalem disagrees: "The pullout isn't tearing the country in half; the Gaza settle- ments are a very small part of the country." In terms of population, Gaza settlers are almost negligible. Roughly 9,000 settlers will be evacuated from 21 Jewish settlements in the Gaza Strip and four settlements in Northern Samaria. However, these settlements occupy almost 50 percent of the land in the face of 1.3 million Palestinian Arabs. Several weeks ago, an estimated 40,000 people, including Trombka, his wife and children, along with both babies and great grandparents, tried to march to the main checkpoint leading into the Gush Katif settlement bloc in southern Gaza. Gaza has been declared a closed militarized zone by the Israel Defense Forces and only residents and immediate family members can enter. The police declared the march illegal and blocked the marchers. Tempers flared. Like the Trombka family, vehement- ly opposed to the pullout, there exist various factions. On one side are the Leah Stern is a reporter for Israel Broadcasting Authority Channel One in Jerusalem and Tel Aviv, and a contributing writer for the Jerusalem Post, Miami Herald and Detroit Jewish Nabs. Stern is acting as a co-producer for a documentary this month on the Gaza Disengagement scheduled to air on Al Gore's new cable network, "Current." Stern, 25, was born in Detroit and as an infant moved with her family to Miami Beach. children of religious Zionists, who are following the lead set by their parents. On the other are the university stu- dents, many who are secular but entrenched in the idealism of a cohe- sive Jewish state. The most populous sect is the reli- gious right wing of the ultra- Orthodox, known as Chassidim. They ascribe their activism to a mix between security concerns and the Torah. "All these cities surrounding us are in dan- ger," says 26-year-old Chasid, Shlomo Katz, "because once the border moves forward the missiles are going to come much closer to all the cities in the south of Israel. Hopefully, the Messiah will reveal and we won't have such ter- rible things happen." Still, for all their energy, the protest- ers gave up after the three-day protest at Kfar Maimon became idle. They chose civil disobedience over con- frontation, promising to return in the coming weeks. On Aug. 2, they gath- ered again, this time in Sderot, in a second attempt to march on Gush Katif. "I believe that their still is a chance to halt the pullout," Trombka admits. On The Horizon But if the disengagement in fact goes according to script, what will happen afterwards? That is what's most puzzling. Some believe that the disengage- ment won't solve anything as many worry that with no implemented guar- antee of peace from the Palestinian Authority or Hamas, Fatah and other, terror groups, that the plan may be fruitless. Trombka fears for his children and future generations. MU these cities surrounding us are in danger, because once the border moves forward the missiles are going to come much closer to all the cities in the south of Israel. Hopefully, the Messiah will reveal and we won't have such terrible things happen. — Chasid Shlomo Katz, 26 "The danger of disengagement is so great precisely because it has nothing to do with peace," he says. "Peace will not come because of disengagement, nor will terrorism cease. Quite the contrary, disengagement is the greatest reward that Palestinian terrorists could have hoped for, and it will further wet their appetite." Will Israel's democracy survive this volatile period? -What are the residents who have yet to leave Gush Katif going to do? Many have decided to wait and see if the government will actually drag them from their homes. Trombka is planning on moving his family to the areas soon to be evacuat- ed in less than two weeks' time. "We will live under the stars and sleep in sleeping bags if we have to," he says. "My feet are firmly rooted in the Land of Israel. It is something that is felt from within and I will try and spread the- truth to all corners of the Jewish world so that my children will be able to raise their children in Samaria just like I did." ❑ Answering Israel's Critics The Charge Israel's occupation of Gaza is oppressive, causing the Palestinians to suffer poverty, instability and corruption — and breed terrorists. The Answer Israel is scheduled to completely withdraw civilian and military per- sonnel and installations from Gaza over the next few months. Then will begin a test of Palestinian lead- ership to prove that without Israel's presence, they can eliminate lawless terror groups, reform their govern- ment and meet the basic needs of their people. — Allan Gale, Jewish Community Council of Metropolitan Detroit