•-• Opinion OTHE V i EWS A Jew Down Under A ustralia is about the size of the United States, so a visit offers just a glimpse; but squeezing in Jewish sites can be a highlight of the trip. On a city bus in Sydney, I spotted an elegantly dressed older woman sitting primly with her purse on her lap. I recog- nized her as a Holocaust survivor whom I had seen earlier at the Jewish Museum of Sydney as she was speaking with a group of Jewish teens dressed in the uniforms of their private school. The museum was packed with student groups, all non-Jews except for her group. Each group was directed to view the well-done displays explaining Jewish lifecycle events, the Holocaust and the fascinating history of Jews in Australia. Jews arrived in Australia in 1788, with the first shipload of convicts from England. They have been an integral part of Australia, contributing to the govern- ment, military, business and professions. The Great Synagogue in Sydney, the largest and oldest of the city's 20 syna- gogues, sits on a busy street across from Hyde Park, a park reminiscent of New York's Central Park albeit small Jewish community meets smaller. The building is so at the Jewish Community Center auspicious that tours with a on a large lot with an area of video explaining Jewish life trees planted by the National and practices are scheduled Council of Jewish Women. twice a week for tourists of Nearby, in Embassy Row, a lovely all stripes. The grandeur residential area with dozens of of the edifice rivals many embassies from many countries, European cathedrals; the it was easy to spot the Israeli simple elegance and lovely embassy — not because it was services reflect its tradi- visible, but because it was sur- Jeannie Weiner tional Judaism. rounded by ugly concrete barri- Community Unlike the Jewish com- ers and several armed police in View munity in Hobart, Tasmania, cars. Other embassies had some Sydney's Jews have the security but their edifices were opportunity for a full Jewish lifestyle. open to view. Hobart's synagogue is the oldest syna- The visions of the differing Jewish com- gogue in Australia and is also in the heart munities filled my thoughts as I watched of the city, but it has few Jewish partici- the woman on the bus. I had heard her pants. On Shabbat, two services are held, story of survival — a story of horror, loss, one "progressive" led by a congregational luck and strength. I moved to the open "reader" and the other "traditional," with seat next to her, telling her that I had the women sitting upstairs by an electric heard her discussion with the students heater in the unheated building. Voices of earlier that morning. I worried that I the past, if not the present, are in atten- might be disrupting her, but she looked dance in Hobart's charming synagogue. up with a warm smile: "Oh, an American!' In Canberra, Australia's capital, the Australians seem to know after two words spoken if an American is speaking. "I wanted to go to America after the camps. I tried to go to America, but I met my husband and we couldn't get in to America so we somehow picked Australia;' she said. She spoke at length about her volunteer work at the Jewish Museum and I learned that her husband had died, but her chil- dren and grandchildren lived nearby. "Now I have no one my age she said. "But I am glad I came to Australia. The country has been good to us. Like America. We must count our blessings for the countries we live in. We must never forget to be grateful." Then it was time for her to get off the bus. She rubbed my hand and stood up. "Am Yisroel Chai [the Nation of Israel lives]," she whispered. "Have a safe trip." Before stepping off the bus and wav- ing, she instructed the driver to direct us to our stop. My husband and I had once again been rewarded for adding Jewish exploration to our travels. I I Jeannie Weiner is a West Bloomfield resident. Judgment Day Jerusalem T he Israeli presidency is largely a ceremonial position and has only one real purpose: to uphold the honor of the Jewish state. Yet, over the last six months, as accu- sations of sexual crimes accumulated against him, President Moshe Katsav resisted demands to resign, insisting on his right to remain in office until being formally charged — even though, by tainting the presidency with scandal, he has betrayed the job's core requirement. Now, with impending charges that include rape, sexual harassment, obstruc- tion of justice and fraud, he is being dragged out of office: On Jan. 26, the Knesset approved the president's tempo- rary suspension. But not before Mr. Katsav called a hysterical press conference in which he blamed the media, the police and the attorney general for hounding him. For Israelis, this is a time of near- despair. A former justice minister is on trial for sexual harassment; leading tax authority officials have been arrested for fraud; the finance minister is under inves- tigation, and any of a half-dozen alleged financial scandals could topple Prime Minister Ehud Olmert. "There is no judgment and no judge," Israelis tell each other, quoting a talmudic 28 February 15 2007 phrase. With the looming threat of a nuclear Iran, and jihadist Hamas and Hezbollah pressing against its borders, Israel faces an internal challenge that is no less daunting than the external ones: to recreate a society that is worth fighting for. Never before has Israel faced greater dangers, and never before has it been so bereft of trustworthy leaders. David was also an adulterer. But they knew their leaders were devoted to the nation. The same can hardly be said about today's politicians, who absorbed the wiles of the founders but not their self-sac- rifice. Perhaps the greatest threat to the political system today Yossi Klein is a corruption of the spirit of Halevi leadership. In refusing to accept Special responsibility for sullying the Commentary presidency, Mr. Katsav repre- Deeply Seated sents a new class of Israeli lead- The roots of Israel's ethical crisis go back, ers who reject accountability for failure. ironically, to the heroic founders of the Though last summer's war didn't achieve state. Personally stoic, the leaders of Mapai, any of its objectives, none of the architects the socialist party that led the state in its of Israel's first military defeat admitted formative years, created a culture of crony- responsibility. ism. Possession of a "red card," marking Mr. Olmert continues to insist that Israel Mapai membership, was often a precondi- won even though Hezbollah has rearmed tion for securing scarce employment. and Israeli deterrence has been weakened Cronyism was coupled with frontier by the very war that was intended to recklessness: Under constant siege, and restore it. True, the army chief of staff, Dan overwhelmed with impoverished refugees, Halutz, did resign in January — but only Israel created a culture of improvisation, to pre-empt a call for his dismissal from a bending of the rules. With the country's a commission of inquiry investigating the survival constantly in the balance, Israelis war, and without any admission of failure indulged the sexual improprieties of their on his part. military heroes; Prime Minister David It used to be different. When Avraham Ben-Gurion defended the philandering Ofer, housing minister in the first gov- general, Moshe Dayan, by noting that King ernment of Yitzhak Rabin during the mid-1970s, was accused of corruption, he shot himself, leaving behind a note that insisted on his innocence while adding that he couldn't bear the shame. And when the wife of Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin was found to have kept a bank account in Washington, in violation of the law at the time forbidding Israelis to hold foreign currency, Rabin took personal responsibility and resigned — incompre- hensible by today's standards. What's Needed Corruption among Israel's leadership is arguably no worse than anywhere else. But a nation facing immediate existential threats needs leaders who can inspire. No citizen in the West makes the kind of sacrifices, from compulsory military reserve duty to punishingly high taxes, that Israelis routinely endure. To a large extent, they endure those hardships willingly: Teenagers vie for every slot in elite combat units; at times of national emergency, even reservists who haven't been called up vol- unteer for service. Israelis deserve a leader- ship worthy of their sacrifices. The founders of Zionism hoped to turn the Jews into a "normal" people, a nation like all other nations. They envisioned a country maintaining normal international relations while creating an admirable soci- ety — externally normalized, internally