Dry Bones Thoughts OBAMA WANTS AMERICAN JEWS TO HELP PRESSURE THE ISRAELIS SQUEEZE PLAY TO TAKE A MUCH MORE EVEN-HANOEO APROACH Killers As Victims' Heirs? it became the No. 1 issue. It is about time. As a member of the official American delegation and the only child of survivors he Holocaust Era Assets chosen to speak about the concerns of our Conference concluded in Prague aging parents from the perspective of the with a moving program at Terezin survivor families, I found my job to enlight- and a nonbinding declaration emphasiz- ing that survivors' needs in these, their last en the world about the issues we face. I was allotted seven minutes. years, should be treated with more urgency About half the Holocaust sur- than real estate, art or other res- vivors in the U.S. are living at or titution issues. below the poverty line and strug- Elie Wiesel set the tone bril- g on a daily basis for basic liantly by asking if the killers necessities. Though the number should become the victims' heirs, of survivors decreases annually, telling how the killers "stole not their needs increase and they only the wealth of the wealthy but present unique challenges. also the poverty of the poor',' and Holocaust survivors are not imploring the world to remem- like other aging Americans. They ber the survivors whom we have often have medical conditions allowed to suffer too much. Est her that began during World War Amazingly, survivors' needs Topore k Finder II. Injuries and illnesses from never appeared on the radar Spe cial those years can haunt survivors screen at prior international Comm entary today. Because of their wartime Holocaust-era conferences; but experiences, they are more likely this time, survivors and their to suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder. children raised their voices and were heard. If memory problems arise, the survivor may In Israel, survivors protested; in the U.S., be forced to relive Holocaust trauma. Each the survivors and their children (notably relived episode is a stab to the heart. And as Holocaust Survivors Foundation-USA and memory goes, the last language learned is Generations of the Shoah International) lob- bied members of Congress and wrote to draw the first one lost, so some survivors can no longer speak with their children. attention to the needs of aging survivors. There were many moving speeches at The efforts were successful enough to the conference, but specifics were lacking have changed the dialogue. At first, the topic regarding how to solve the residual fallout of aging survivors was not on the agenda, of the Shoah. There were calls for "heirless" then added as a "special session." Ultimately Rockwood, Md. T property in Central Europe to be used to fund services for survivors. Poland and Lithuania, two coun- tries with outstanding ANO TO DROP . IS SO property claims, are ISRAEL'S CURRENT BLATENTLY not interested in resti- ONE-SIOEO PRO-ISRAEL! tuting or compensat- POSITION WHICH ing Jewish property. Also, the German property experience had the effect of pit- ting heirs against needy survivors. The Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany han- dled property claims www.DrvBonesBloa.com in virtual secrecy; that and governments that participated in this, cannot be allowed again. the greatest theft in history? The controversial Claims Conference 80- It is time to speak directly with survivor 20 split — 80 percent to survivors' needs families to assess the needs. We look to and 20 percent to education and remem- brance — needs to change. As long as there Stuart Eizenstat and Christian Kennedy, U.S. are survivors unable to buy food or medical Reps. Robert Wexler, D-Fla., and Ileanna Ross-Lehtinen, R-Fla., and others for help necessities, they must be the 100 percent in this late hour. Let us not allow the killers priority. Use of victim money for these to continue to be the heirs of our murdered non-survivor projects must cease until the brethren. L-I needs of all survivors are fully funded. Nothing was officially acknowledged Esther Toporek Finder is president of The about the billions of dollars global insur- Generation After and a member of the coor- ers such as Generali and Allianz and oth- dinating council of Generations of the Shoah ers have retained from Holocaust victims. International. And what about the banks, manufacturers Reality Check Strange M y favorite book title of all time is Ring Lardner's Shut Up, He Explained. That's what I flash to every time I hear the phrase "teachable moment:' All too often it seems what is actually being taught is that an aggrieved minority member has the right to vent his anger while the target of his wrath has to clam up and take it. The recent "beer summit:' which brought together the president, a Harvard professor and the Cambridge police officer who arrested him, was billed as such a moment. It seemed to me that more could be taught, however, by each person's choice of beer. The president chose Bud Lite. He kind of had to do that, being the president and all. He wasn't going to pick some highfalutin' Belgian beer. No, it had to be the most recognizable domestic, and I felt sorry for the guy. Left to his own devices, it seems rews unlikely he would have picked a Budweiser, which defines mass market mediocrity as far as beers go. His taste seems way too refined for that. Ironically enough, Bud is now owned by a Belgian brewery, anyhow. The policeman, Sgt. James Crowley, took Blue Moon. It seems surprising a Boston guy wouldn't have picked a Sam Adams. But Blue Moon isn't what it seems to be, either. Marketed as a craft beer, a local Colorado product that con- noisseurs prefer, it is actually produced by the gigantic Coors brewery. So while the sergeant may have thought he was making a distinctive choice, he was also caught in the corporate web. Finally, Henry Louis Gates Jr., a renowned scholar in the field of black history, came up with Red Stripe as his favorite beer. This is, of course, a beer from a black-governed country, Jamaica. Its latest advertising cam- paign was built around a black spokesman who ended each segment with the slo- gan,"Hooray, been" Here again, however, we run into false pretenses. The majority owner of Red Stripe is now the Guinness Brewing Co. of Dublin, Ireland. So what was can we make of this teachable moment? First of all, presidents do not have unlimited power when it comes to making symbolic gestures. And a mug of beer is a shaky vessel for making a personal statement. It is, however, very good when used in a sauce for meatloaf. It all made me melancholy for the Detroit-area beers that are no more. There was Goebel, for years the sponsors of Tigers and Lions games on TV, with its ridiculous company symbol, Brewster the Rooster. There was E&B, Brew 103, so named because it took that many tries before they finally got the taste right. In one of early Detroit television's most treasured moments, the live camera didn't pull away from the host fast enough and caught him spitting a mouthful of the stuff onto an adjacent potted plant. There was Pfeiffer and Altes, hon- est German beers from the east side of town. Most of all, there was Stroh's, a name known to the last generation only as a purveyor of ice cream. All of them crunched up and dis- carded by their inability to compete with the national brewing giants and their massive marketing campaigns. As for me, it doesn't matter if it's a Dos Equis, a Pilsner Urquell or a Maccabi. On a muggy summer evening, just pour it straight and true. 7: George Cantor's e-mail address is gcantor614@aol.com. 19