World ROUNDUP Demjanjuk Indicted Berlin/JTA — Convicted Nazi guard John Demjanjuk was formally charged with being an accessory to the mur- der of 27,900 Jews. The Munich State Prosecutor on July 13 issued the indictment accusing Demjanjuk of being an accessory to the murder of 27,900 Jews at the Sobibor death camp in Poland. Trial date has been set for mid-October. John The 89-year-old retired Demjanjuk autoworker, who has spent most of the post- war period as a U.S. citizen, was extra- dited to Germany in May and has been held since then in a Munich prison. According to the German Press Association, Demjanjuk was formally accused of having been a guard at Sobibor, where he allegedly drove thou- sands of victims into gas chambers. Among the evidence against him is SS identification. His name is on a 1943 list showing that he was transferred to Sobibor, the press group noted. Earlier this month, Demjanjuk was declared medically fit to stand trial, but medical experts said he could not be on the stand longer than three hours per day, broken up into two segments. Demjanjuk, who was born in Ukraine, has claimed that he was a Soviet pris- oner of war in a German prison camp. He reportedly was later trained to be a guard and was transferred from an agricultural posting to Sobibor, where he stayed for seven months before being transferred to the concentration camp at Flossenbuurg. After the war he was labeled a displaced person and in 1952 immigrated to the United States. Germany was able to apply for his extradition after Demjanjuk was stripped of his U.S. citizenship for lying about his Nazi past. Israelis Can Buy Land Jerusalem/JTA — Israelis may purchase property in all parts of Jerusalem, Benjamin Netanyahu said. The Israeli prime minister's comments Sunday to his Cabinet at its weekly meeting came after the U.S. State Department told Israel's ambassador to the United States over the weekend that the Jewish state must halt a construction project in eastern Jerusalem. "I would like to re-emphasize that the A18 July 23 0 2009 united Jerusalem is the capital of the Jewish people and of the State of Israel," Netanyahu said. "Our sovereignty over it cannot be challenged. This means, inter alia, that residents of Jerusalem may purchase apartments in all parts of the city. "(I)n recent years, hundreds of apart- ments in Jewish neighborhoods and in the western part of the city have been purchased by or rented to Arab residents, and we did not interfere. This says that there is no ban on Arabs buying apartments in the western part of the city and there is no ban on Jews buying or building apartments in the eastern part of the city. "I can only describe to myself what would happen if someone would pro- pose that Jews could not live in certain neighborhoods in New York, London, Paris or Rome. There would cer- tainly be a major international outcry. Accordingly, we cannot agree to such a decree in Jerusalem." In 1985, American philanthropist Irving Moskowitz purchased the land on which the Shepherd Hotel sits. It is located near an Israeli compound hous- ing several government ministries. He plans to build 20 apartments there. Yes, Franken Washington/JTA — Al Franken has won the Minnesota Senate race after eight months of recounts and legal challenges. In a unanimous, unsigned decision, the Minnesota Supreme Court ruled that Franken, a Jewish Democrat, "received the highest number of votes legally cast" and is entitled "to receive Al Franken the certificate of elec- tion as United States senator from the state of Minnesota:' according to media reports. His Republican opponent, Norm Coleman, then ended his legal battle, officially conceding the race. Coleman, who also is Jewish, said further litiga- tion "would damage the unity of our state." With Coleman's defeat and the deci- sion by Pennsylvania's Arlen Specter to join the Democratic caucus, the Senate now has no Jewish Republican mem- bers. The House of Representatives has one Jewish Republican, Minority Whip Eric Cantor of Virginia. During the court battle over the Minnesota vote, Coleman has been serving as a paid consultant to the Republican Jewish Coalition, an organi- zation for which he often stumped dur- ing his years in the Senate. Franken was ahead by 312 votes after a statewide recount, but Coleman had sued, arguing that the recount applied differing standards to ballots depending on the county. The Franken victory gives Democrats a 60-vote, filibuster-proof majority in the Senate. Franken is a former writer and performer on Saturday Night Live. President Obama welcomed the news. "I look forward to working with Senator-Elect Franken to build a new foundation for growth and prosperity by lowering health care costs and invest- ing in the kind of clean energy jobs and industries that will help America lead in the 21st century," Obama said. Local Economic Workshops Jewish Detroiters suffering under the strain of current economic conditions can join Part 2 and Part 3 of the Jewish Assistance Project of Metropolitan Detroit's summer "Get Help" series. "Losing Your Job, But Not Losing Your Way:' a panel forum, will be held at 7 p.m. Tuesday, July 28, at Young Israel of Oak Park, 15140 W. 10 Mile. Workshops facilitated by partner agencies of the Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit will be held at 9 a.m. Tuesday, Aug. 4, at the Max M. Fisher Federation Building, 6735 Telegraph Road, Bloomfield Township. Workshops will include job search strategies, healthcare for the uninsured or underinsured, managing credit and debt, mortgage negotiation and maxi- mizing your food budget with chef Matt Prentice of the Bingham Farms-based Matt Prentice Restaurant Group. Both events include an agency fair where Jewish social service agency rep- resentatives will address specific con- cerns, and offer registration for work- shops and individualized consultations. For information, call (248) 203-1519, or e-mail mayer@jfmd.org . Fewer Israeli Millionaires Jerusalem/JTA — The number of Israeli millionaires has fallen by 28 percent, nearly twice the global total. According to the Merrill Lynch World Wealth report released June 25, Israel now has 5,900 "high net worth individu- als," defined as those with at least $1 million in liquid financial assets, down 2,300 from the 2008 report. The number of global millionaires fell by 14.9 percent, according to the report. In the United States, the number dropped by 18.5 percent. Hong Kong lost the most millionaires, 61 percent, from the previous year. According to the report, the number of Israeli "ultra-high net worth indi- viduals," with liquid assets of at least $30 million, fell by 24.6 percent, from 97 to 73. Farmington Hills Blood Drive Jenna Garber, a 2009 North Farmington High School graduate, is hosting a blood collection drive through the American Red Cross as part of a summer scholarship program. The drive takes place 1-7 p.m. Tuesday, Aug. 4, at the Farmington Community Library, 32737 W. 12 Mile, Farmington Hills. Walk-ins are welcome, but appoint- ments are encouraged. Contact Jenna Garber at x3trackstar197@aim.com or (248) 320-4516. Donors will be entered in a raffle; one person will win four tickets to Cedar Point in Ohio and a $50 gasoline card. Other prizes include a two-year lease on a Lincoln Mercury Milan. Donors must be at least 17, weigh more than 110 pounds and be in general good health. Every two seconds, someone in the U.S. needs blood. The Red Cross must collect six million donations each year. Jerusalem And Tourism Jerusalem/JTA — Travel and Leisure magazine's annual poll ranked Jerusalem as one of the best cities in the world for tourists. Jerusalem was ranked 17th overall, above cities such as Tel Aviv, London and Paris, and third in the Africa and Middle East list. Answering Israel's Critics The Charge Amid tensions over criticisms of Israel's treatment of journalists, a unanimous vote of the International Federation of Journalists last month expelled the National Federation of Israeli Journalists from its ranks. The Answer The Israeli group called the expulsion biased, unfair and one-sided, which pushed Israel "into a corner" and labeled it an aggressor. - Allan Gale, Jewish Community Relations Council of Metropolitan Detroit © Jewish Renaissance Media, July 23, 2009