Opinion Editorials are posted and archived on JNonline.us. Greenberg's View Editorial Shedding Energy Dependency T he call for energy independence in last week's State of the Union address has been expressed many times before, both by President George W. Bush and his predecessors. But there was a And this time I mean it" tone to the words that was lacking in the past. The goal to reduce gasoline consump- tion by 20 percent within 10 years, par- tially through the use of alternative fuels, is overdue and commendable. America's energy demands are indeed dependent on some of the most irrational and danger- ous regimes on the planet. Anything that weans us from reliance on Venezuela, Nigeria and the Persian Gulf states has to be good. If it can also improve the environment, so much the better. But it is not the solution for everything that has gone wrong in the Middle East, and its impact on the political equation regarding Israel will probably be minimal. Of course, for those who are convinced that oil is the only reason American forces are in Iraq, energy independence is the magic wand. The realities, unfortunately, are far more complex. Islamic terrorism will remain a global force, and if oil royalties fall precipitously in places like Saudi Arabia and Iran (where misman- agement already has required oil imports) the situation in the Middle East may grow more rather than less perilous. While ethanol also may be an answer for a grain-rich United States it can not be the solution for Europe, which will remain tied to the oil producing Arab states. Even ethanol does not come without a price for Americans. Diverting more corn products to energy needs means there will be less available for food production, and that will tend to drive up prices in that area. Since ethanol cannot be transmitted through pipelines (at least, with any tech- nology on the horizon), there will have to be an increase in truck traffic to get it to the market. That may well erase any initial environmental advantage. Then there are the concerns of an already battered bunch of Detroit auto- makers if mileage requirements are too severe and result in increased production costs. None of this is meant to imply that the president's call was misguided. Far from it. If there is follow through, and in a Democratic-controlled Congress there is more assurance than before that there will be, it can be a good start toward strengthening America's position in the world. But it will only be a start. Because there are no more magic wands. I "Groosht"). But on the maps, noth- ing resembling that showed up near Kaunas, which is where I thought it was located. It turned out that Grzdziai is, instead, situated in the north, almost at the Latvian border. Since great- grandpa Chlavna paid his taxes there, that had to be the right place. I promised myself many times that I would try to get there. But in the years I traveled to Europe frequently, I was denied visas to most Communist countries — and Lithuania was then part of the Soviet Union — because I was a journalist. Besides, I told myself, it was a fool's errand to look for a place that was probably gone. I wanted to stand there anyhow and just look out at the landscape my grandfather had seen: flat meadowlands stretching to the Baltic. Now here it was, the picture on my computer screen. I must have sat there looking at it for half an hour. My grandfather, whose Hebrew name was Nahum-Yehuda, took the name Julius when he arrived in this country. His first job was with a little congregation in Danville, Va. According to family lore, on his first day in town he was walking along when he saw a large man in the middle of the street, waving his arms and shouting, "I got religion." He had never seen such a thing back in Grzdziai and, still in a bit of shock, inquired who that was. "Oh, he's just a local character, name of Big Julius',' he was told. My grandfather went to the court- house next day and changed his name to George. It's the name that I, born seven months after his death, carry; although I could just as easily have been Julius Sandler. Funny, the things that can come over your computer. I E-mail letters of no more than 150 words to: letters®thejewishnews.com . Reality Check Welcome To Your Past I was sitting at the computer the other day, wrestling with words that refused to stay on the screen in any coherent pattern, when an e-mail clicked in. It was from a cousin I hadn't seen in 53 years. Gloria's family used to live upstairs from mine in a four-flat on Tuxedo. Since she was only 6 at the time, she has no recol- lection of ever having met me. But she did have big family news. She and her brother, Robin, had been doing some genealogical research and came across the actual documentation of our family's residence in a shtetl in Lithuania. My grandfather had managed to get out of there in 1904 at the start of the Russo-Japanese War to avoid being inducted into the Czar's army — no place for a Jewish boy or anyone else for that matter. He went to the British Isles, where he worked as a shochet in Scotland, which sounds vaguely like the punch line to a Yiddish joke. He then made his way to America in 1907. We knew that he had lit out from Lithuania with false papers. When he arrived at Ellis Island, he was given the Anglicized last name of his occupation, which he had decided by then was a chazen. So we became Cantor. But from the evi- dence on hand, back in the old hometown our last name probably had been Sandler. My cousins searched the tax rolls for a Chlavna Sandler, my great grandfather's name, and there it was. Not only that, they sent along a photograph of the town pulled off the Internet. That was the real shocker. I thought the place had been obliterated years ago. I didn't even know how to spell it. I knew the pronunciation (kind of like George Cantor's e-mail address is gcantor614@aol.com . February 1 • 2007 27