Hot Works Presents North Oakland County Art Festival August 14-16, 2009 " jI 0-1 ✓ -11 7 1)1 \?2 .1-1 1 T T1_ .71"/ Y5) z-IN.-)..) „Lyn-) V71 I (Arr. qty . 646,AGA Pad I ti . r 1 , 114 h ela trt.--> jvc41 : 14 :4..) . rt v 6.1 1.rd 8,, Cut; 10. Uftt, Yinea /flour i t'Ap, o.stsorrth kj ::+tyrsAt emte.,,5 .1 kawr.r An r2ni Mbre.t.-1114c.dio Orro World class artists at Olds World Canterbury Village, a 19th century village and designated historical landmark. 2369 Joslyn Ct, Lake Orion, MI 48360 FREE ADMISSION and FREE PARKING Friday 6pm-9pm, Saturday 10-8, Sunday 10-5 Free Live Entertainment • Great beverages and food • Interactive Demonstrations • More! The Chadwick Group, VC, Teen Art Competition Grades 9-12 or ages 1319 Produced by Hot Works, LLC, the same company that produces the award-winning Orchard Lake Fine Art Show www.HotWorks.org you missed the Orchard Lake Fine Art Show, you wilt Cf.Ale(1.,1arli..qttni .N ottg 16 August 13 - 2009 Postville Redux from page 15 deal for these little towns. They're overburdened and under-resourced." Postville was handling its diversity quite well, the authors claim, until the massive immigration raid ripped hundreds of families apart and pushed Agriprocessors into bank- ruptcy. In one particularly heart- breaking chapter, Devlin and Grey provide an eyewitness account of the entire operation, including a detailed look inside the makeshift detention camp where detained workers were held incommunicado. The authors paint a damning picture of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security's immigration arm, which conducted the raid, as well as the federal court that cooper- ated to railroad nearly 300 illegal aliens, mainly Guatemalans, into plea bargains obtained under false pretenses. The U.S. Supreme Court has since forbidden such tactics, but that doesn't help Postville. To date, the authors note, neither the town nor its defeated workforce has received any federal aid. Grey and Devlin do not investigate the role played by Agriprocessors or its former owners in Postville's downfall, saying they are sociologists, not lawyers or investigative journalists. Former Agriprocessors manager Sholom Rubashkin and three other plant managers go on trial Sept. 15 for federal charges, including harboring illegal immigrants, plus wire, mail and bank fraud. The four defendants plus Aaron Rubashkin, Sholom's father and president of Agriprocessors, will be tried next year on more than 9,000 charges of state child labor law violations. The authors' hands-off approach to the plant and its owners is understandable from a legal perspective — as of press time, the trials have not yet begun — but it leaves a gaping hole in the book's portrait of the myriad forces that brought Postville to its knees. Postville's population since the raid has shrunk by 40 percent and its tax base has been destroyed. Fewer than 50 Latinos remain from a former population of more than 1,000, most of them formerly detained illegals ordered to testify in the Sept. 15 trial. Approximately 250 Jews also remain, unable to sell their homes About half are Lubavitchers, some of whom are worried, Goldsmith reports, that they will not be rehired by the plant's new owners, SFIF Industries, a company formed in May by Canadian plastics manufac- turer Hershey Friedman. Lubavitch kosher slaughter, or shechita, is increasingly unpopular in many Orthodox circles because of con- cerns regarding Chabad Messianism. Authors' Points In a nine-point lesson list, the authors demand an overhaul of the country's immigration policy, more help from government and industry for towns struggling with the effects of globalization, and ways to compel industries and organizations that deal with immigrants to adhere to "the highest ethical, legal and humane standards." But, as long as Americans con- tinue to demand cheap food, they write, little will change. "Many Americans are in absolute denial that the bulk of their pro- cessed and packaged food comes from illegal labor:' Devlin says. "It's a triangle: employers who want maximum profit, workers who need the work and consumers who want cheap food." Maybe people expected too much from Postville, the book concludes. "The town never was and never could be a multicultural paradise," it states. "Many outsiders — individu- als, organizations, and the media — believed they had the right to make Postville what they wanted it to be." ❑ Answering Israel's Critics The Charge A guest columnist in the Wall Street Journal last month noted that, in the last three years, Israel has been criticized 87 times by Human Rights Watch. The Answer The columnist also pointed out Human Rights Watch's unfairness as in the same period it criticized Palestinians only eight times, Hezbollah just four times. - Allan Gale, Jewish Community Relations Council of Metropolitan Detroit © Jewish Renaissance Media, Aug. 13, 2009