Document 6493151
Transcription
Document 6493151
WINTER 1984 VOL. XXXIV NO. 2 WOMEN'S AMERICAN ORT: Teaching How to Think O H 3 Assessing Jewish Feminism D6 ku xaoA PUN is HIST i ao>: ' rtei Israel's Protest Movement frioar O 5 8 WAO National Convention WOMEN'S AMERICAN ORT REPORTER • WINTER 1984 Public Education: An Editorial "99 Down—Organization sponsoring vocational training," The answer to this recent Sunday New York Times crossword puzzle definition is, of course, "ORT," While better lhan the more widely-used definition of ORT — " a scrap o r bit"— s still i superficial definition of our global network and particularly of W o m e n ' s American O R T . While o u r schools are our first concern and responsibility, o u r c o m m u n i t y activities are also of great importance. It is hoped that our concern for and activities on behalf of quality public education are becoming equally well-known. T w o weeks prior t o the appearance of the puzzle, the Sunday Times published a 7 5 page section on Education, almost a quarter of which was devoted to a chart summarizing some of the findings and r e c o m m e n d a tions of four studies and programs for change in education and articles on h o w these programs can be carried out and fi- Findings & R e c o m m e n d a t i o n s T h e overall findings of the four studies, Excellence, A Nation at Risk, Action for America's Competitive Challenge, and Educating Americans for the 21st Century, generally agreed that continued progress in education is vital to o u r survival, that we are losing o u r preeminence in science, c o m m e r c e and technological innovation, that more math, science, computer and technology education must be provided and that standards must be raised. The chart covered recommendations having to do with time, standards, curriculum, tests, teachers. Federal, State, and Local governments, the public, and financing. The pages of articles following this chart covered various aspects of Much at Stake One article titled, "In Reform Ideas, A Certain Deja Vu," compared a study, The Pursuit of Excellence, issued in 1958, by the Rockefeller Brothers, with some of the current reports, cited some findings common to the 195S and 1983 studies and spoke of some of the changes and reforms adopted in the years between. The article ended by quoting a 1963 newspaper headline which said, "Educalion Produces Many Reports, but Few Lead to Fast Action." It may be that action cannot be fast, but action there must be, for there is too much at stake. It is the very future of our democratic society that is at stake—and so as members of this great society and of Women's American ORT— we must keep pressing for, working for, and speaking out for quality public education. •• —fl. E. S. letters to the editor "Open Pages" To THE EDITOR: I have always been an admirer of ORT, and since becoming a member (of WAO) in Chicago some years ago, my admiration has extended to your excellent publication. j Most impressive is your willingness • lo open your pages to varied opin} ions in the best tradition of Amert ican journalism, and of course Yid' dish journalism. b Chicago, in. To THE EDITOR: The review of Yehoshafat Harkabi's book on Bar Kochba by Da. vid Szonyi (in your Fall issue) is ' one more manifestation of the self! hatred some Jews possess for their | own people and its glorious history. I Attacking Akiba and Bar Kochba I as a means of undermining the pres| ent Israeli government is just an• other tactic of the intellectual goon | squad which feels uncomfortable • with Jewish nationalism and selfidentity in any form. However, sid• ing with Hadrian's Roman Empire • which was about to turn Jerusalem j into another perverted pagan capi] tal in complete disregard of the promises to restore Jewish Jerusalem made by Trajan marks a new : low in self-denigration. Debunk Bar = Kochba today—debunk the Warsaw j Ghetto tomorrow! Why can't we • leave anti-Semitism to the gentiles? SAMUEL J. SPERLING Humanities Coordinator M. Van Buren High School Social Studies Dept. i Seaford, NY To THE EDITOR: The problem with Shelly Koenigsberg's letter to the REPORTER regarding American Jewish dissent and criticism of Israel's policies (Summer 1983) is that it proceeds from an incorrect assumption: viz., that the United States and Israel are peers—equally independent "functioning democratic governments," to use the letter's phrasing. In fact, Israel cannot remotely be considered economically self-sufficient—certainly not with respect to the United States. "The unpleasant truth," writes Lawrence Meyer in his highly praised book Israel Now: Portrait of a Troubled Land, "is that Israel has become a country living on the dole, dependent on foreign aid not to assist her development but to underwrite maintenance of a comfortable standard of living higher than she could afford on her own." In Dr. Koenigsberg's somewhat tiresome analogy, a father presumes to advise his economically independent son how to manage his income and budget. But as a virtual ward of the United States, Israel is precisely not economically independent, and the analogy does not hold. Rather. Israel pursues such policies as its West Bank settlement program with American (including American Jewish) money—and could not do so without this money. Aside from the consideration that Israel presumes to speak for, and demands the support of, Jews everywhere—which I think is the more important basis for the legitimate right of American Jews to express e legitimates Am • • : • _ • : : . - of Israeli policies that are judged destructive of Israel's or America's interests and that could only be carried out with our help. Brooklyn, N.Y. Feminist Agenda ; EDIT WE WELCOME LETTERS Address correspondence: here in Calgary to receive the R E PORTER on a regular basis, so that our Executive and general m e m b e r ship could become aware of much of the world-wide O R T news which y o u r R E P O R T E R would a p p e a r to carry. If you could see fit to send it to us on a regular basis, w e would be most appreciative; I promise to see to it that such a copy is curculated, o r the O R T news in it s u m marized and presented at o u r regular meetings, o r some such. O u r C h a i r m a n joms me in hoping that you can find it possible to meet with o u r request. MRS. MARILYN GOODMAN Calgary Section Canadian W o m e n ' s O R T Calgary, Alberta, C A To THE EDITOR: Turning the pages of m y current copy of the O R T REPORTER I got a terrible shock. There, under the heading, "Warehousing the Elderly" sat m y m o t h e r just as I remember last seeing h e r . T h e lady in t h e u p p e r left corner is m y mother. I spent all day thinking a b o u t h e r and what ( D r . F o r m a n ) had to say in his article. It is a terrible decision one must m a k e to put one's beloved parent in a home. This was m y mother's choice, though m y brother and I pleaded for her t o live with one of us. W e certainly had room. My m o t h e r did not w a n t to be a b u r d e n to h e r children. A t first when she went into Kings H a r b o r she was in fairly good condition and played Bingo, attended Services and entertainments, b u t she was there for six years. T h e last t w o were awful for all of us. M y mother suffered mini-strokes and in h e r final years did not recognize us a n d know where she was. While m y brother and I took turns visiting her every week, it was most trau- The" REPORTER Reserves the tight bership in Jewish women's organizations. I continue t o support Jewish causes and identify with the Jewish community, b u t am active in the National Organization for W o men, which fights for issues which concern all w o m e n ; the Equal Rights A m e n d m e n t , equal p a y for equal work and w o m e n ' s health issues. r agree with M s . Wolfe's r e m a r k s that if the Jewish women's organizations want to attract and keep their members, they must direct activities towards issues which concern American (Jewish) w o m e n : equal job opportunities in the Jewish c o m m u n a l agencies for w o m e n , Jewish-run day care centers, and higher pay for w o m e n professionals in Jewish agencies. Of course I was torn with guilt but h o w could I possibly care for this person w h o was incoherent, dizzy, bewildered, and totally confused at al! times. While a nursing h o m e seems to (Continued on page 6, col 1)' of the WOU Ccr >ard and ( mber of i Executive Committee; a member of the National Cabinet of the UJA; a trustee of the United Israel Appeal, and former chairman of the Large City Budgeting Conference of the Council of Jewish Federations; a delegate to the Jewish Agency Assembly, a member of the Board; and Executive Committee of the American Jewish JDC; and the Board of Directors of United HIAS Service and its Executive Committee, his leadership and devotion to ORT were instruments in the growth of the educat Beta 112,000 students throughout the Jewish world. A member of the Board of Jewish Counseling and Service Agency he also served on the Board of the Hebrew Youth Academy and President of the Jewish Community Federation—Metro West (N.J.). The Jewish people will miss his humanity, wisdom and vision. Our deepest sympathies to his wife, children, and grandchildren. • • reporter "o notional « wspnper for the Air Copyright 01984 by Women's / Reproduction will- out prior writ! r^i^'p^h • - ; • Published qi larterly by Woman' Editorial ond Business office 1 at 315 Park Aye iihw. ed. ed. ffiericai , NY, Inc. sc:o • 212-505-7700) Gertrude S. While of the Editorial Board NANCY L. DUDWICK Silver Spring, M d . Honorary National Preside Nathan Gould Executive Vice President On " A g i n r Editorial Board: To THE EDITOR: Marcy Marks Beverly MinkofF Florence Rosenthal ing a copy of the Fall, 1983 edition of the Women's American ORT REgerontology in which my brother, Dr. Benyamin Yanoov, from Bar Ilan University in Israel, was quoted at some length. I thought the article in question was excellent, as did my husband. While writing, I wanted to tell you that, in general. I was most im- SIDNEY E. LE1WANT The leadership and nationwide membership of Women's American ORT profoundly nourns the death of Sidney E. Lei w , honorary pre and i media ; past president of the American Federation, who died Dec. 5 at the age of 71. A close and warm friend af Women's American ORT, ith seles devotio he worked for the expansion and development of the global ORT program of vocational and technical education which was so dear to him, and his lifetime dedication to Jewish survival epitomized the selfless spirit of Jewish communal Associate Member, A,n e , i t a n J ewishP, eSi Ass DC i, .tion Se :ond ISSN : 0043-7S M Class p 3stagB paid at NYC, NY #o89780 linen's A mer orld ORT Ur affiliate of the American ORT Federati receives iti jnd from The Joint Distribi the United J swish App>rat which is supported by the Jewish Federations he sarily the ind breadth of coverage of the articles and news contained in the R E is irreversible" (Forum, Fall 1983) PORTER. In fact. I feel it would be reflects my own feelings about mem- advantageous to our ORT Section (Jewish) c must) r of WAO or its •dilon. No res;K««JbUityo ccepted \ or unsolicited mam ueifpto Po id circulation approximately 150,000. Annual ..ubsciption: m B m b ers S I ; non-wot**. r Dept., WAO, 315 Park /• WOMEN'S AMERICAN ORT REPORTER • WINTER 1984 Jewish Feminism: "Coming of Age" By AVIVA CANTOR October 1983 marked the "Bat Mitzvah" of the Jewish women's movement For it was in October of 1981 that Ezrat Nashim, the first feminist group in the Jewish community, was founded to advocate and press for equality of access for women to the central arenas of Jewish life. Now, some 12 years later in that same month, a prime Ezrat Nashim objective has been attained with the landmark vote of the (Conservative) Jewish Theological Seminary (JTS) Faculty Senate to ordain women as rabbis. The vote, a milestone in the struggle of Jewish feminism—and possibly even a watershed event—is but one of the achievements of the pasl 12 years. During this time, the issue of women's equality has been placed squarely on the "agenda" of the Jewish community. The subject of lectures, scholarly research, popular articles, task forces and conferences, it has inspired changes in synagogues, temples, schools and Jewish organizations — and even more significantly, in what might be called the atmosphere of Jewish life. "There is no aspect of the Jewish community that has not been affected by Jewish feminism," said Arlene Agus, one of the founders of Ezrat Nashim and currently the Director of External Affairs and Planning of Yeshiva University's Cardozo School of Law. Agus was a major speaker at the "Jewish Women's Conference 1983: Challenges and Changes" held at Congregation Ansche Chesed in New York City in October, devoted to evaluating the achievements and challenges of Jewish feminism, sponsored by the rce Center and paid 'ish Won New York Section for by its s icil of Jewish Women. of the National Count Dr. Paula Hyman, : lother Ezrat Nashim founder ntly Dean of the JTS Seminary College of Jewish Studies, observed that "much of what was considered radical 15 years ago has now become mainstream" in the Jewish community. "Fifteen years ago. when Jewish women looked into the mirror of Judaism, they saw nothing," she told the 250 participants in the conference. "Today we have begun to discern a pale woman's reflection in the mirror. This is the main accomplishment" of those years, she said. Two Main Issues Hyman divided the issues Jewish feminists have raised into two main categories: "equal access" and "the feminization of culture." In a recent interview, she expressed the view that "we haven't achieved equal access —that women should have all the opportunities that men have had, fo participate fully in religious and secular life and to have positions of status and authority." In the realm of the "feminization of culture"—exploring what a feminist perspective, a feminist interpretation of Jewish sources, experience, and history would have to contribute to Judaism—"we haven't done enough," she said. A run-down of the list of requests presented by Ezrat Naskim to the (Conservative) Rabbinical Assembly in March 1972 clearly shows that the gains in equal access have been spotty. • The inclusion of women in the minyan AVIVA CANTOR is Managing Editor of Lilith, the Jewish feminist magazine, and author of the Bibliography on the Jewish Woman {Biblio Press). Her recent contributions to our pages include "Women Rabbis & the Conservative Movement," and "Jewish Women & the Communal Agenda." (All photos Courtesy, NCJW. Credit: Diane Balestra) FULL PARTICIPATION OF WOMEN IN RELIGIOUS OBSERVANCES is a major goal of Jewish feminists. Above, morning services at the Conferente. Below, Conference speakers Dr. Paula Hyraan, Dean, Seminary College of Jewish Studies, Jewish Theological Seminary (right) and (left), Arlene Agus, Director, External Affairs and Planning, Yeshiva University, Cardoza School of Law, both founders of Ezrat Nashim, "the first feminist group in the Jewish community." ist stereotypes. Men and their sons are por trayed as participating in the synagogue and in study, while women and their daughters are depicted cleaning the house and cooking in preparation for their men's return from shul. i the s this • Divorce reform: The disabilities of Ganges local level have largely been piecemeal, eswomen in divorce procedures—being unable pecially among Conservative congregations, to initiate proceedings and lacking legal recreating a kind of crazy-quilt effect all over course when their husbands refuse to grant • Obligating women to perform miizvot a gel (religious divorce document)—are be(commandments} and be recognized as wit- ing recognized, said Hyman, but "with retiSom rvativ congregatio nesses in Jewish courts: neither of these fun- cence." No balachic solutions have dealt petely "integrated"; thers allow en aliwith the fundamental problem, hut Greent but do n clude the in the berg expressed optimism that "within 15 to still Byz ntin rules, s 20 years, women facing recalcitrant husallowing women aliyot on certain special ". . . much of what was bands will be authorized to deliver the get." occasions, such as a child's Bar or Bat Mitz(quorum of worshippers) and their full participation in religious observances: While the Reform and Reconstruct! on ist movements permit and encourage women's inclusion in minyan and in aliyot (calls to the Torah reading), and the Conservati : • . . ; • ; vah. In the Orthodox synagogues, of course, women are still spectators during religious services, cordoned off behind a mechitza (partition between the sexes). Even in the Orthodox community, however, there are certain ritual changes, such as the Shalom But ceremonies celebrating the births of baby girls, and women's prayer groups. The power of such models in ritual matters, said Orthodox feminist Blu Greenberg at the conference, "carries great weight." Significant Achievement Another significant achievement Hyman called attention to is the "grassroots supand proliferation of egalitarian religious mities, said Agus in a recent interview, there is tension between their egalitarian principles and the feeling that they have to allow all Jews within the movement to express themselves, "even if some members can only express themselves religiously in services where women are not counted." Agus found this "tolerant" approach unacceptable. considered radical • Enco rage bodies and o join dec aking e leadership and secular communities: The la . . . years ago has now become synagogue leadership of the community continues to be dominated by a handful of wealthy men mainstream...." and their hired male executives. The major fund-raising organizations, such as the local Federations and the UJA, continue to run separate men's and women's drives, with damental demands has yet been considered priority given to the men's campaigns; the seriously even though, said Hyman, the ha- UJA Young Leadership Cabinet is all-male. lachic (Jewish legal) mechanisms exist. A sprinkling of women across the country • The ordination of women rabbis and have succeeded to the presidency of local cantors: The Reform movement began or- Federations but have not supported any daining women as rabbis in 1972, with the changes in terms of women's participation graduation of Rabbi Sally Priesand; currently or special needs. there are some 61 women rabbis in the (Continued on page 4, col. I) Reform and Reconstruction ist movements. A minority are working as congregational rabbis. But there is still considerable resistance to the hiring of women except as assistant rabbis or educators, and the Reform movement has established a task force to work on the problem. Great gains have been made in training women scholars, said Hyman. They are beginning to explore women's experiences in Judaism and to incorporate them into curricula. This process has also made strides in the Orthodox community, added Greenberg, who told the conference that it will "ultimately lead to the ordination of women in the Orthodox community." Women scholars and educators have pointed out that most of the textbooks used in Jewish schools as well as Jewish children's literature generally, continue to promote sex- WOMEN'S AMERICAN ORT REPORTER • WINTER 198' Jewish Feminism (Continued from page 3) Until last year, there was no woman heading a major "coed" national Jewish organization. At that time Jacqueline Levine was elected to chair the National Jewish Community Relations Advisory Council (NJCRAC), and Esther Leah Ritz became President of the National Jewish Welfare Board. Neither have any major changes been made in the unequal position of paid female communal workers. A 1977 survey by the Conference of Jewish Communal Service disclosed that one in 500 women earned over $30,000 a year compared to one in four men; a follow-up survey in 193] raised the women's percentage to 3.5. The 1977 survey also revealed that only 5% of the paTed to 29% of the men; the 1981 survey upped this to 8% for women and 45% for Evan Bayer, a professional communal worker wifh the American Jewish Committee, told a Conference workshop that there are no women directors of Jewish community centers. And only recently has a large city Federation — Philadelphia — hired a The small number of tangible gains women have made even in the equal access area point to considerable resistance in the community. This generally takes the form o£ passive resistance; the strategy is to favor women's equality officially while avoiding, postponing or side-tracking attempts at implementing specific demands. "The feminist issues that we have raised are either seen as incidental or potentially dangerous for Jewish survival," said Hyman in the interview. "They have never been seen as positively linked with Jewish survival," or as a "moral challenge. Why," she asked the conference participants, "does feminism —which provides the opportunity for revivi- fying and refreshing Judaism—strike such fear into the hearts of Jewish communal leaders?" Puzzling Aspect Perhaps the most amazing—and puzzling —aspect of Jewish feminism is that whatever has been achieved to date has been achieved in the absence of a real movement —a body of people with political understanding of their situation, direction, goals, strategies and organization. Said Agus in the interview: "We haven't achieved a lot of our aims partly because of our tactics, and partly out of a lack of clarity of goals. If we rethink the last 10 years, this was not a revolution at all—it was pockets of resistance that we have formed." Several Factors An organization called the Jewish Feminist Organization (JFO) struggled briefly in 1974-75 before folding quietly. While the failure of JFO was variously attributed to "low energy levels," premature appearance on the scene, and structural defects, there were several other important factors-in its failure that go to the heart of the problems facing Jewish feminism today. One is that Jewish women have refused 10 organize themselves to struggle politically for equality. This is exemplified by the fact that the only two major national Jewish women's conferences—in 1973 and 1974—were organized not by women, but by the North American Jewish Students' Network, at the time a progressive umbrella group. After Network went on to focus on other issues and later, evolved into a right-wing group, there were no more national Jewish wornWhile there were local JFO meetings in Chicago, Los Angeles, New York, and Toronto in the immediate years after these two conferences, the approach of Jewish femi- nists in the past few years has been to ti to find established organizations to sponsc these conferences instead of organizing thei by themselves. V::c suit, of course, if L lack of control • the structure and Dntent of these Jewish feminist (Two ye; panel at the 92nd. Street Y was turned into an inane debate by the man in charge when he added a male rabbi to the panel.) And the recent conference at Ansche Chesed, under NCJW sponsorship was, in the opinion of one participant, "very tame." The approach of most Jewish feminists seems to be to influence "leaders" to lead the rest of the community in the right direction and to come up with solutions and strategy, rather than to struggle politically themselves for the attainment of equality. This approach, of course, is rooted in the politically naive premise that the people— men—holding the power will be willing to press for changes that will weaken or take away their power. Furthermore, even the "influencing" itself is not direct. The main activity of leading Jewish feminists has been in the areas of research, writing, publishing, and lecturing. While these are important prerequisites for action, they are no substitute for it. The assumption is that by some process of osmosis, the ideas expressed via these media will inspire correct action on the part of the "leaders." Even these written and spoken words are lacking in analysis of how and why the power structure keeps women powResistence to Confrontation This attitude and approach derives from the consistent, though unacknowledged, resistance among Jewish feminists to confronting the Jewish establishment on issues that concern them, and demanding specific reforms. At a session of the Ansche Chesed conference, a woman in the audience asked author Francine Klagsbrun, a Conservative Jewish feminist, why there was "no uprising" in the community when the ordination of women was tabled in 1979. Her answer was that many women were unsure of their position because their rabbis opposed ordination—even though the hearings held by the Conservative movement in the community had revealed high grass-roots support for ordination. Further, she said, "women were scared, mostly of causing divisiveness in the community." Said Hyman in her interview, "We are reluctant to get too far from the Jewish community." Nor have Jewish feminists employed the alternative strategy for bringing about social change: organizing their own institutions—• such as Jewish day-care centers; programs for women's higher education; aid to distressed women such as battered wives, the homeless, and the elderly; and publishing companies to print non-sexist material—or even organizational frameworks to fund such projects. (An organization called "Women to Women" funds only Israeli projects.) Lilith, the Jewish feminist magazine, continues to operate on a shoe-string while serving as well as the major referral center for people seeking services such as day-care, shelters, non-sexist wedding ceremonies, speakers, women rabbis, and sources for No Real Support Finally, Jewish feminist concerns have generally received little or no real support from the leading Jewish women's volunteer organizations, who have vast resources, political savvy, and large, though mostly inactive, memberships at their disposal, Their response has ranged from outright hostility to withdrawal, to paying tepid lip-service to general feminist demands such as ERA. The arguments advanced by most of these organizations on their lack of involvement in Jewish feminism is that it is not their reason for existence and/or that it will conflict with their fund-raising. Underlying these arguments is an unwillingness to deal with the issue of restructuring volunteerism to meet the needs of today's multi-committed— and vastly over-worked—women, and the Jewish community as a whole. In the final analysis, what has made the achievements of the past 12 years possible was not so much the work of the Jewish feminist movement, but, primarily, the faM-oul effect from the general women's movement and its revolutionary impact on society. Whether or not this will continue to obtain in what Agus called the "second stage of Jewish feminism," or whether there will be recognition—at last-—of the need for organizational structure to advance further, is the main issue Jewish feminists will now have to begin to confront. • • S=^ of your kosher cook ! . • ' • ( ' • • : ' cluck chef s apron. _ MltCHIG (blue scripo • FLEISHIG (red script) Postage & handling Total amount enclosed Thanks to Diet PARKAY people are starting to take traditional foods more lightly. From bagels to kasha. Diet PARKAY Reduced Calorie Margarine is helping to make traditional foods lighter. Because il has 50% less fat and 50% fewer calories than regular margarine. And it has a delicious flavor your whole family will tave. quantity quantity Street_ City . • ' • Connection PO. Box 6133 • seading. P A • 19610 _ _ _ tf i |; WOMENS AMERICAN ORT REPORTER • WINTER 1984 Landmark WAO Convention Stresses Needs of "Technology and People" In what is already being spoken of as "one of the most exciting, relevant and significant Conventions in its history," some 1200 delegates representing Chapters. Chapters at Large, Area Councils, Regions and Dislrics from across the country met in Los Angeles October 16-19 to focus on the theme of "People Need Technology/Technology Needs People." Innovative programming and a star studded roster of speakers including experts from the world of education, high technology, Jewish and American public life and the world ORT network, provided, in the words of Sandy Isenstein, National Convention Chairman, "a perfect occasion to highlight the importance :rconnection between scientific lal and fc adVi :al edui Setting the tone, the gala opening night banquet featured a major address by Congressman Ed Zschau (R. Calif.) and the presentation of WAO's Human Rights Award to Beate and Serge Klarsfeld fsee story below). Special guests included donors and sponsors of LAOTI. the Los Angeles ORT Technical Institute (which is scheduled to open in September 1986 and serve as part of ORT's expanding Operational Presence in America) and leading members of the Los Angeles communiiy. In his address. Congressman Zschau declared thai the development of high technology in the U.S. and around the world will, in contradistinction to conventional opinion, re~ nology, if "properly applied." will serve to "extend human strength and intellect and provide human beings with increasing freedom from routine and drudgery." Declaring that the purpose of technology is to enable human beings "to achieve their full potential," he stressed that the educational system in a high technology society must prepare people "to tolerate and adjust to change: the educational system must have a "broad-base" and must give its graduates the "ability for general thinking" and education should "continue for a lifetime." Unique Exhibit A unique high technolooy Exhibit featuring computers donated by Digital Equipment and Apple Computer and outfitted with ORT softRETIRING FROM WORLD ORT after a life- ware augmented by a Resource Center slocklime of service, Bernard Wand-Polak, Director ed with cassette tapes as well as WAO organiLatin American Operations, WOU receives a spe- zational liteurature. and an ORT Screening cial award from Mrs. MinkolT on behalf of WAO. Room showing ORT videotapes and films, enabled delegates to obtain the latest information and experience "hands-on" some recent developments in technology. A distinguished roster of guests from the ORT world offered first hand reports: Joseph Harmatz. Director-General. World ORT Union; Joshua Flidel. Director. WOU for Latin America; Israel Gorainik, Director-General, ORT Israel; and Jules Bloch. Director-General, ORT France. Parvine Moatamed, Coordinator. WOU Programs. U.S. was a special guest. In addition, Bernard Wand-Polak, former Director of Latin American Operations, FIVE PRESIDENTS: Helen Rosenberg, WAO who is retiring from the World ORT network, Honorary National President; Gertrude S. White, received a special award for his lifetime of newly elected National President; Beverly Min- extraordinary service and Nathan Gould. NakofF, whose term expired al Convention, and past tional Executive Director and Executive Vice presidents, Ruth Eisenberg and Florence S. Ros(Continued on page 12, col. 1) enthal. WORLD ORT UNION DIGNITARIES played an important role in the week's activities, delivering major addresses and participating in panels and informal meetings. With Beverly MinkolT, WAO National President (center); Gertrude S. White, Chairman, National Executive Committee (second from right); and Nathan Gould, National Executive Director and Executive Vice President (second from left) are Joshua Flidel, Director WOU for Latin America; Parvine Moatamed, Coordinator, WOU Programs, US; Jules Bloch, Director, ORT France; Israel Gorainik, Director General, ORT Israel; and Joseph Harmatz, Director General, WOU. FRESHMAN DELEGATES RECEIVED ORIENTATION at a special meeting conducted by Convention Chairman Sandy Isenstein right, and Reese Feldman, Chairman Organisation Subcommittee, Riling in for Ruth Talfel, Convention Co-Chairman, who could not attend. Beate Klarsfeld: 'Stalking Nazis for 20 Years9 By IRA RIFKIN In 1939. only months before Adolf Hitler plunged Europe into World War II, Beate Kuenzel, the only child of a Berlin insurance clerk, was born. Her father was a "good German," his daughter recalls, who. because he was ordered to. fought for the glory of the Third Reich. "My parents were like many Germans, neither for nor against Nazism," she says. "They were passive, the kind of people who made it possible for Hitler to come to pow- "Serge . . . introduced me to the history of my own country, and through him I encountered the terrifying reality of Nazism." Beate says. That knowledge changed Beate's life in a way that she. a child of Nazi Germany, could never have imagined. As her naivete crumbled, she became increasingly interested in the atrocities of the Third Reich. In doing so. she spurred her husband, a militant Zionist, into looking even harder at the conditions that led to the death of his father. In 1960, while in Paris as a student, Beate Kuenzel met her future husband. Serge Klarsfeld. as both waited in a metro station for the train to come. He was the son of a Jew who had died in Auschwitz, and he to!d Beate how he had hidden in a closet of the family apartment in Nice as his father was taken away by German soldiers one night in September of 1943, never to return. Single-Minded Mission They immersed themselves in the subject until they finally decided to dedicate their lives to a single-minded mission: They would hunt for members of the Nazi hierarchy responsible for ordering the deaths of six million European Jews during the war. The Klarsfelds have been successfully stalking Nazi fugitives around the world for nearly 20 years, yet until recently they were relatively unknown in this country compared with Simon Wiesenthal, the Holocaust survivor best known for capturing Adolf Eich- IRA RIFKIN is a slaff writer for the Lc* Angeles Daily News, where this article origi nally appeared, and from which it ix reprinte< with permission. i in Fra they 1 and in WAOsHUMAN RIGHTS AWARD is presented to Beate Klarsfeld by Beverly MinkolT, National President "with deep admiration and recognition for your untiring efforts to eliminate injustice.1" Israel, where they are repeatedly honored. Beate came to Los Angeles to accept WAO's Human Rights Award, presented to her at fhe Convention's Opening Night Banquet, on behalf of their work. A friend's death caused Their obscurity outside of Frar • and Israel changed earlier this yeaT with the extradition of Klaus Barbie from Bolivia to France to stand trial for his alleged role in the deaths of 7,000 Jews deported from France to German gas chambers and forcedlabor camps. The Klarsfelds were largely responsible for the return to France of the 69-year-old former head of the Gestapo in Lyons, France. Barbie is currently in a French prison awaiting trial. Barbie's case made headlines in this country when it was revealed, also by the Klarsfelds, that the United States had protected Barbie after World War II in return for his intelligence information and had arranged for his resettlement in South America. The news of U.S. involvement touched off shock waves in this country, but it came as no surprise to the Klarsfelds. "It was much more surprising to the young people in particular, than it was to me because we know that all the Allies, the English, the French, also shielded Nazi war says , upset by it, but Serge and I are very much realistic," she continues, speaking in heavily accented English. 'There (Continued on page 12, col. 1) WOMEN'S AMERICAN ORT REPORTER - WINTER 198' network news The ORT Spivack Educational Center in Holon was recently awarded the President's prize for the second consecutive yei Wins the exceptional volunteer work performed by its students and teachers. President's Prize The students undertook to help the neighborhood's few hundred elderly residents, particularly the blind. They visited hon ies regularly, did domestic and repair work, organized holiday celebrati' )ns for the Golden Agers, made toys and distributed them to kinderea tens in the neighborhood, helped youngsters with school work and performed plays and musicals in hospitals. Through the collaboration of ORT Milan with the Lombardy region authorities in joint projects researching educational techORT Italy nology and methodology, the five-year business and Meets commercial school ORT operates in the Milan Jewish Demands day school continues to meet the demands of parents and students. Recognized by the Ministry of Public Instruction, the curriculum offered gives students an all-round education, equivalent to a high school diploma, as well as access to the job markets. Sections in computer technology have been added recently both to the curriculum and after regular hours, enhancing the already wideranging courses in Italian, English, French, math, physics, science, business and office skills which helps play an essential role in keeping this community vibrant. A number of innovations in curriculum as well as additions of "state of the art" equipment are currently being incorporated Innovations in classes at the Bramson ORT Technical Institute at in NYC, designed to help those seeking to learn the Bramson latest developments in high technology and business as well as the unemployed. Through the addition of a number of computer terminals linked to a remote IBM 4341 system, and an on-site PRIME 550 super minicomputer, computer programming has been vastly expanded. Students now have easy acess to terminals for computer time and the school is also increasing its number of microcomputers, since the expansion of its APPLE lab and the establishent of a second micro computer laboratory. NEW DIRECTIONS NEW CHAPTERS NEW DIRECTIONS NEW CHAPTERS-AT-LARGE Help Us Charter New Chapters-at-Large in the Following Target Areas for 1983-84: J»^ v'T'V Spr.ingfield/Holyoke, Massachusetts Danbury, Connecticut >*H\ jf I X ^ . Ann Arbor, Michigan Binghamton, New York S\ ^> jr \ ^r Louisville, Kentucky Uttca, New York S J - ^ | _/^ > * T X > ^ L ^ Omaha, Nebraska Kingston, New York .^^^^/^Jt > ^ "^—T v ^ Evansville, Indiana Sant3 Ros3r Califorrlia Panther Valley, New Jersey ^^M ^ B / T ^ V ^>v 7^^^^^. Vineland, New Jersey ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ 9 | " ~ ^ ^*S ^ \ t ^ ^ H ^ ^ ^ Portland, Oregon Frederick, Maryland ^^K J , i .S sC^^^^^^r Sacramento, California Anapolis. Maryland y T / / | / v ^ \r -f W Long Beach, California Naples, Florida ^ —\ J^ ^ \S Beverly Hills, California \ . J ^ \ X. 1 X Santa Monica, California New Part Richey, Florida Florida Keys, Florida ^ s , L ^ * ^ Give us the names of your contacts... Give us the names of your friends... Give us the names of your daughters... your acquaintances... your neighbors... Give us members to support our global program! MAKE THE VOICE OF WOMEN'S AMERICAN ORT BE HEARD IN ALL COMMUNITIES ACROSS THE U.S. THIS YEAR YES, 1 HAVE A NAME FOR YOU: May we use your name?.. Yourname ......... Send to: FIELD EXPANSION DEFT. WOMEN'S AMERICAN ORT NATIONAL OFFICE 315 PARK AVENUE SOUTH NEW YORK, N.Y. 100IO Telephone: (212) 505-7700 letters to the editor Project. What The Hunger Project dered milk should not constitute a have a stigma—like a stepmother ix concerned about doing, is to asso- problem in those countries where or other bad ideas—it does have a ciate itself with organizations such water is not drinkable. Water can useful function. It gives totai care as ORT that are actually taking be boiled and then mixed with powto people who need it. I have concrete action to make the world dered milk, making it perfectly safe learned to live with that thought. a better place. Other than describ- for drinking. We ourselves lived for Maybe there is a better way, but ing how it has signed up 2,604,854 many years in Bolivia, South Amerour society has not yet found it. people "as an expression of their ica, and did drink powdered milk Years ago when people lived on commitment," there was no other mixed with boiled water. Even imfarms, grandparents were part of indication of The Hunger Project's pasteurized milk has to be boiled, as it is not 100% safe to drink. the large households—but certainly activities. Students will also use Computer Assisted Instruction (CAI) in mathe- our lives are different today—and Critics have condemned The Oakland, Calif. matics and Accounting, and study special packages as Visicalc. my dear mother understood that. Hunger Project as an attempt to HERTA RAPP Word Processing has also seen major expansion and now has four It is a year since my mother died, give the world of est a "do-good" Jacquard 425 systems. Extremely sophisticated, these machines include but to us she died long before— image and the letter did little to she no longer knew us or herwhen an Optical Character Reader (OCR). dispel these criticsms. Like ORT, Being a member of O R T for over self. the est organizations are interna- 12 years and the mother of three The Department of Electronics Technology is now offering Robottional in scope, and are now con- asthmatic children, I was extremely ics in its curriculum, aided by a Smart Arm and a Genesis Robot. Comducting training sessions in Israel. distressed t o see the picture accomputer Aided Design (CAD) is aJso stressed, and the college continues to Livingston, N.J. In my opinion, while est may be a panying t h e article entitled "Teachoffer an advanced course allowing students to build their oyn TIMEX/ Hunger Project temporary pep pill for some who ers a n d Public Education" on page To THE EDITOR: go through the training, it is a 15 of your Fall 1983 issue. I also I regret to see that your publi- Mickey Finn for the Jewish Comwas an educator and never smoked cation has allowed its "Letters to munity as a whole. while in t h e vicinity of m y students. the Editor" collection to have beH o w can t h e pictured teacher >c for; ntro" c a r e " for the students leaning over versial organization, The Hunger Encino, CA him when h e is inflicting his smoke Project. on them? Also, what kind of examThe Hunger Project is an entity TO OUR READERS: Since the letter from the Hunger ple and influence is he having on his which has close ties with the same organization that rakes in large Project's NGO Representative to the students when they see him indulgsums of money providing est "train- UN appeared in our pages-, we have ing in his habit and they are making ing." The Hunger Project is essen- received tz number of letters com- decisions whether or not to smoke? tially manned by est "graduates" ment'mg on, and raising similar quesJANET HANRAHAN and therefore embodies est's rather tions about that organization's purun-Jewish world view in expressed pose and activities. Subsequently we Bainbridge Island, W A efforts to "end hunger and starva- made several inquiries and learned that the issue I s very complex with Correction tion by the end of this century." • clet • easy c Est "training" itself is controverYour Fall. 1983 issue included an We would, he er. like sial. The four-day program it proarticle in tribute to o u r recently d e vides, at a rather hefty expense to mind our readers that the purpose ceased H o n o r a r y National Presi11 its participants, is physically and of our "letters column is to enable dent, Florence Dolowitz. I call y o u r emotionally debilitating. Psychiatric attention to the photograph of M r s . journals have reported psychotic press the if views on a variety of Dolowitz beneath which is a caption breaks following the training. Some subjects-—including responses, pro stating that it was taken a t the 23rd of the individuals that get through and ct?n, to articles that appear in National Biennial Convention in the training, aside from vigorously our pages—and to letters from other N e w York, 1975. attempting to sign-up all their rela- readers. Thus, publication of a let-. Correction: T h e picture was taken tives and friends for est seminars, a couple of years earlier at a meetfind themselves on an emotional endorse the ' of the individual ing of t h e North Shore Long Island "high," as the seminars have con- or organizat -but simply that we vinced them that they are essentially believe that view1 has a right to be Region held in Westbury, Long I s T h e region banner is hanging Gods within their own universes. presented toOuri eadt **• • • land. behind M r s . Dolowitz in the photo, Therefore, using the kind of posi- —The Edit,>rs) and some of the lettering of t h e retive thinking approach that breaks gion name can clearly be seen. I was the sound barrier. The Hunger Proj- To the Editor: region president at the time. ect believes that if enough people . . . In reference to the article in simply "take responsibility" to end President, District II, WAO hunger, it will disappear. Ignorance, about World Health Efforts, regardsocial injustice and political corrup- ing bottle feeding of children with NYC, NY tion—factors that all have a good milk formula — of course, breast (We sincerely regret the error and deal to do with world hunger—are feeding is the best possible nourish- appreciate the correction. — The not a major concern of The Hunger ment. But after breast feeding, pow- Editors) . - ' " • - - - . - --.-•:; - • • • - ; . - . - : i= " . . ' ' • • .v.: ad from page 2) Page 7 WOMEN'S AMERICAN ORT REPORTER • WINTER 1984 "Dissent in Judaism": An Opposing View By ETHEL C. FENIG Meyer Bass' article on "Dissent in Judaism" (Spring '83) rests on the unquestioned assumption that liberalism is as natural a home for Jews as air is to humans or water to fish, and all that need worry us are some minor pollution problems. It can no longer go unchallenged. Upset at the transformation of American Jewry, Bass accuses them of "biand conformity, adopting the current . . . conservative mentality as their own." Well, so what? Conservatism is not anti-Jewish, nor the intellectual equivalent of pork. It isn't an alien philosophy grafted onto liberal Jewish naturalness. No one "owns" it. It isn't conformity, bland or otherwise. For a variety of reasons Jews are abandoning or modifying their traditional liberalism. Instead of sinking to name calling, Jewish liberals would do better to understand why the change is Bass makes the totally unsubstantiated claim that there is no "dissent," that "timidity" characterizes Jewish thought with "limits on our right . . . to express criticism," Bass implies Jewish life is not, holy of holies, "democratic." Nonsense! Meyer Bass was certainly free to express his "dissenting" opinions in the REPORTER. Similiar views appear ad nauseum in both the Jewish and secular media and are voiced at meetings and conventions. But he is absolutely correct stating "opposing views are no longer tolerated." Seldom is there support for a conservative "viewpoint, an unapologetic understanding of Israel. He continues. "Democracy can only be predicated on the experience of an open society where dissent is accepted as a tenet of human rights." Again correct. So accept the fact that there are Jewish conservatives, religious Jews, Jews who back Menachem Begin, identify with Gush Emunim!. During all the years secular liberal Jews and organizations dominated Jewish public life in America—during all the years the Labor party controlled the Israeli government there was little or no talk of the "right to disagree" or "the need for religious and cultural pluralism in Jewish life"—despite the fact that organized Jewish life was basically monochromatic and those with differing outlooks such as the religious or conservative were relegated to marginal roles within the greater community, with little influence, made to feel their attitudes were un-American, un-Jewish, or "not good for the Jews." In the past several years, the situation has begun to change. The same receptivity to new ideas and people that has occurred in the United States at large has also penetrated its Jewish leadership. Formerly-ignored voices have become louder and stronger, at ihe same time as some of these formerly powerful have waned. Seeking new alliances and new solutions, these new segments have expanded Jewish But how ; i the Jewish representatives ETHEL C. FENIG-is a writer and tec living in Chicago. adjusting to the new openness and the new diversity in their community; to sharing their leadership with people whose opinions and core beliefs differ so radically from theirs? A Strong Response Unfortunately, the majority can't tolerate it. Many resent it and strike back, discrediting the emerging ideas as Jewishly inauthentic; at the same time claiming paradoxically that now, suddenly there is "no dissent" in Jewish life, it is suppressed. Ironically, they are correct. However, the liberal leadership is not the victim, hut the cause. Exaggeration? No. A few examples. • Outraged and out of power now that an avowedly conservative President is in the White House with Jewish votes, some liberal Jews seek a scapegoat, and find it in OPEIl FORUm agement, and on their own initiative, many of these Christians have stretched out a hand of friendship toward Jews. It has been slapped down—and hard. Understandably Jews are somewhat suspicious because so many people from this background have been so anti-Jewish in the past; some still are. Fundamentalist support for Israel is further questioned because it is often based upon an envisioned ultimate We Jews have carefully courted various liberal, left groups of all kinds for years, often diluting or distorting Judaism while ignoring our own interests. We've been rewarded with abuse and scorn; Israel is regularly condemned in the harshest terms. Yes, it is time for Jews to "build coalitions But Menachem Begin was enthusiastically supported by the Sephardim, who don't necessarily equate Western civilization with cultural superiority. Meyer Bass, like many other liberals, does not like Menachem Begin. That is, of course, his privilege. But his disapproval distorts his perspective. Bass parrots the (erroneous) canards about Begin and the Israeli government—a leader of "an underground . . . organization that . . . restorted to terror tactics," "Judaea and Samaria are "Occupied Areas" where "Israel's tough, restrictive and sometimes punitive occupation policies have . . . sharply divided factions in her Knesset." As a person who argues for the right of disagreement within the Jewish community, sidized by a major Jewish organization. Ignoring the basic liberal article of faith—free"For a variety of reasons, (American) Jews are abandoning dom of the press—a few demand an end to or modifying their traditional liberalism. Instead the subsidy, or at least revamping the magazine's tone. As far as I know, and to its of . . . name calling, Jewish liberals would do better credit, the organization has not yet interto try to understand why...." fered. But it makes one wonder: Does freedom of the press and speech extend to only those who agree with the liberal line? with other responsible constituencies." Most Bass is amazingly unperturbed that Begin's • As a private citizen, an employee of an elements of the New Right, the Old Right, party, the Revisionists, was forced out of the World Zionist Organization because the latAmerican Jewish organization living in Is- and Fundamentalism meet this standard. ter disagreed with them. No dissension alrael publishes an article which supports the A "Democratic Revolution" lowed in those not-so-halcyon days. Israeli action in Lebanon. As a result, the But if the liberal old guard is upset by In Mr. Bass's eyes, virtues become defects the metamorphosis of American Jewry, it when practiced by the opposition. Israel, • Menachem Begin accepts an award from was and is still absolutely livid at the fairly under Begin, did not suppress the Labor a fundamentalist Christian organization that recent defeat of the Labor Party by Mena- Party; people are as free as ever. And yet, strongly supports Israel. The liberals howl, chem Begin and the Likud. They still haven't "after 35 years and five major wars, Israel claiming the fundamentalists want to de- reconciled themselves to this democratic rev- finds itself in conflict." No, no, no. This is stroy the Bill of Rights, and denounce Mr. olution, the fact that after 30 solid years of not sudden. When has Israel not been in Begin for exercising his right of freedom Labor rule, Menachem Begin, a leader of conflict? Why can't he interpret this as an of association. the opposition, won election and re-election example of a vibrant democracy continuing The list could go on and on. as Prime Minister. In Israel's history, the to function under extreme external pressures I believe that, whatever their, reasons, Jews views of Begin and his party, Herut, have lihilation? should certainly listen to, and become ac- at best been ignored and at worst, wildly There is "a storm of controversy and quainted with, all segments of the population distorted and-a Hacked. dissension over government policy," Israeli Menachem Begin of the Revisionists, a ship with them and with Israel. Doing so man with deep respect for and knowledge opinion is "split," the various ethnic groups doesn't necessarily imply agreement with the of Judaism; a man who didn't need to re- are supposedly even more hostile. Well, there entire philosophy of that group, it merely place Judaism with socialism or other ideol- goes his argument that dissension is not alacknowledges the "religious and cultural ogies. Menachem Begin, content at being lowed in the Jewish community! pluralism" that exists in America, while Jewish and proud of living in Israel; who But Bass's confusion and those of his feloffering those opportunities for open dia- understands all too well the depths to which low thinkers regarding "dissent" and Israel logue that didn't previously exist. peaks as he asks a question that has been Christians and Moslems will sink. By all means there should be a "shedding Menachem Begin as Prime Minister of repeated so often that its implied answer has of 'parochialism, passivity and paralysis' by Israel. Oh, how it grated! What can the become unquestioned Truth. the adoption of vigorous countermeasures Jewish liberals say to their Genlile liberal "Why," he whines, "should American Jews and responses—such as the "education of friends? What will they think? (Continued on page 10 col.]) membership, clear articulation of the issues, and a strong commitment to action." So far it hasn't been implemented. Let us truly listen to these new voices, understand them Open Forum is designed to serve as a vehicle for the free and and see how we can work together. The Fundamentalists Adherents of the New Right and Fundamentalist Christianity have had very little contact with the organized Jewish community. This wasn't merely because of antiSemitism, although it certainly played a part. Many Fundamentalists live in small towns with few or no Jews. Interests of those on the right and the Jews usually do not overlap: indeed they are often in opposition. Despite this, with absolutely no encour- open expression of ideas and opinions on issues affecting Jewish life both in the American and world community. Its basic principle supports the right and seeks to provide the opportunity for topics of concern to a democratic and vital community to be aired publicly in the interest of stimulating responsible discussion, reflection and debate even if those views differ with those of the editors of this publication or WAO as an organization. WOMEN'S AMERICAN ORT REPORTER • WINTER 198< OPETl FORUHl By LEON SHELEFF Traditionally one of the main principles of Israel's political, military, and diplomatic posture has been that all its wars have been forced on it by the aggressive intentions or actions of its neighbors. Linked to this fact, and arising out of it is the additional principle of maintaining as broad a national consensus as possible on the justice and unavoidability of a war, given added pertinence because of the unique nature of the Israeli Army with its heavy reliance on civilian reservists. The lapse of time since the start of the war in Lebanon (considered by many to have violated these two principles) now provides us with a perspective from which to gauge the validity of these principles, as well as to assess the myriad consequences of ignoring them. Internally, the most noted consequence Israel's Prote and varied, and those who wish to underP e0 P Ie a t P res " ent—at its deepest and most meaningful personal and national level—would do well punishment, when an individual feels that a war is being waged which lacks mora! justification, strategic imperatives, or political advantage. In dealing with the problem of selective who hold the has, for the most part, adopted a policy of restraint. Nearly all the resisters have been tried, not in court-martial, but through the disciplinary procedures of each unit, where the maximum penalty is 35-day i m prison mem. For the reservist, this often equals the period he would have served anyway, and at the end of his term of imprisonment he is released back into civilian life, although shortly afterwards received an add it call-up. Many members of Yeisk Gvul and likeminded non-members are not always confronted with the direct challenge of refusal, since they are able to resolve their problem by personally requesting their superior officers not to call them up for duty in Lebanon. Often such requests are granted by officers who respect the resister's motives, who know of a given individual's impeccable service in the past, and who may even identify with the sentiments expressed. s l a n d t h e m o o d of t h e Israe!i Zionist cause dear, and those ferael's welfare is of major concern. As of October 1983, the number of soldiers who had been imprisoned for refusing to serve in Lebanon was over 100. Some of these draft resisters were acting spontaneously on their own; most have organized them s into a play on words in Hebrew which c otes not only, ' These is a border, " but al primarily in this case, "Ther e is a li for w h o m f the war, when a group of several hunred reserve soldiers, officers, and members f combat units, came out with a public eclaration stating their opposition to the ". . . until now, a key aspect of Israel's strength and spirit has been that in matters of security, there is a national consensus." has been a widespread opposition to the war, including, for the first time in Israel's history, the phenomenon of draft resistance, or to be more precise—the deliberate violation of orders to serve in Lebanon. The mood in Israel now is of a country divided over the justice and justification of a prolonged war. For since its outbreak in June 1982, Israel has witnessed mass demonstrations, protest vigils, and selective conscientious objection on a scale unknown heretofore. Never before has our society witnessed the outpouring of resentment and frustration that marked the war in Lebanon from its earliest days. Thus, today Israeli society is, in many respects, reenacting the agonies and trauma which the American people underwent during its Vietnam war. Although some of the pressures have subsided since our pullback to the Awali river, most of the scars have remained. Indeed, white the Israeli casualty rate fa major factor in the decision to withdraw) has been reduced, the withdrawal itself has led to renewed debate over Israel's moral responsibility for resumption of the internecine slaughter in Lebanon m thewakeofthepuliback. A Unique Aspect The unique aspect of protest in Israel today—both in contrast to previous wars and in comparison with similar protest in other countries—is that so much of it emanates specifically from those who are integrally bound up with what is considered the mainstream of Israeli life. Many of the most vocal protesters are reserve officers in the army, members of crack volunteer units, instances, recipients of awards for heroism or for exemplary conduct. Manifestations of the protest are many war and asking not to be called up for service in Lebanon, as such service would run counter to their conscience. Over the course of time the numbers of signatories swelled to over 2,000, and the group has slowly been making an impact on public opinion. A Crucial Dilemma The movement now serves as an overall address for those whose opposition to the war raises moral questions of conscience. Some (veterans of many of Israel's past wars) are facing a crucial personal dilemma they never envisaged would confront them. Yeisk Gvul provides these people with a philosophical basis for their action, as well as legal advice and moral support. It has also made a point of ensuring constant pubicity for what is a new phenomenon in Israeli life; occasionally paid advertisements appear in the newspapers, giving the names of the latest soldiers who refused to serve and were punished, and calling upon the government to recognize their right to selective conscientious objection. Demonstrations of support have been held outside the military prison, and a recent all-night open-air concert and happening attracted over 10,000 people. At a far deeper level, the movement is Israeli public that there can be, in principle, lental but that there limit; self or herself) that lay down the parameters of permissible behavior for a thinking, concerned individual — however loyal to the state, however responsible in fulfilling civic obligations, however responsive to the needs of his people that person may be. To the contrary, it is precisely these qualities, they claim, that demand personal sacrifice and dictate the act of refusal and acceptance of 1 III Most Notable Instance While Yeish Gvul is an ongoing movement, the most.notable instance of refusal during the course of the war was that of Eli Geva, a high-ranking officer with no known affiliation with any protest group. Geva's protest was aimed not against the war as such, but against one specific aspect of it: the plans to send Israeli troops into the besieged area of West Beirut. Geva, the son of one of Israel's bestknown generals, was widely acknowledged as an outstanding combat officer with a MEMBERS OF "MOTHERS AGAINST SILENCE," demonstrate outside Hie Defense Ministry in Tel Aviv which destroyed an Israeli military compound in Tyre read "Admit failure; pull the IDF out of Lebanon" and Video Games: Dangerous "Addic By DAVID ALLWYN Are our nation's young people" turning into "video addicts" or simply learning to cope No one has the answer at this point, but as the video game cra^e continues to escalate, there is growing concern among many parents, teachers and school officials at the pull coin-operated video games still exert on their children. Video games, critics argue, are nothing more than "junk food for the mind." Arcades, they contend, encourage truancy problems, and drug dealing occurs at some of of these compose music, build imaginary structures, etc., can produce "robotized," ill-tempered adolescents. are basically a harmless form of entertainment. However, they say, these games do have a positive—they teach hand-eye coorther motor skills that will dinatio someday be useful in a computer-oriented society. Most importantly, kids obviously love them. Moves to Ban As the coniroversy rages, some parents are pressing municipalities to ban video game :ctronic games may induce their object, they argue, is "to destroy the menacing obstacle before it has a chance to destroy you." In short, war games. Video games, say these opponents, in contrast to useful computer games, which, they feel, allow youngsters to create graphic designs, DAVID ALLWYN is a new contributor. "According to a recent survey, teenagers now play video spend over 10 million hours a da: studies or other iiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiEiiiiiiitmiiiiii WOMEN'S AMERICAN ORT REPORTER • WINTER 198' OPEIl FORUTT1 st Movement promising future, who had added to his renown during the fighting in and around Beirut in the early days of the war. His opposition to entering West Beirut was based on the anticipated heavy casualties, both to civilians trapped with the PLO forces, and to Israeli troops endangered by the difficult conditions of urban warfare. Geva was not alone in expressing his reservations about the proposed action, and it is widely considered in Israel lhat one of the was the pressure on the military and political leadership from members of the elite units that had excelled in the early stages of the war and would be expected to bear the brunt of a West Beirut offensive. Geva was, however, the most outspoken of those who shared his views,'taking his arguments to the Chief of Genera! Staff, the Minister of Defense and, finally, the Prime could not, in al! good conscience, lead his soldiers into a battle which he so bitterly opposed, yet unwilling to abandon his troops, Geva asked to be relieved of his command and to fight as an ordinary line soldier, assuring his superiors that if the order to enter West Beirut was given, he would, as an ordinary soldier, carry it out. He simply could not, as an officer, take responsibility for the lives of his men or of innocent ci- Photo Credit: Andre Bruti e protest group composed of parents of Israeli l November), following the suicide truck bomb n, killing about 50 people. Some of the as will we pay the price of your failnrel" For reasons never made pubiic, the army decided neither to grant Geva's request nor put him on trial. Rather, he was relieved altogether of his post in Lebanon and transferred from permanent service to reserve duty. It is of interest to note that, while the at the time of the Eli Geva affair, the army • • : . ' - . . , v;s:':.?]S lion" or Valuable Learning Tool? parlors: indeed, several municipalities, including Babylon, L.I., Oakland, Calif., Marlborough, Mass. and Durham, N.H. have already enacted ordinances that restrict the use of coin-operated video games by teenagers during school hours. Some large cities, including Boston, Chicago and San Francisco, are presently considering proposals to regulate the public use of these games. This past summer, Paul Nuzzi, 18, a college freshman from Kings Point, L.I., an innocent bystander, was shot to death following an argument and fistfight over a PacMan game. There have been other incidents around the country, scraps, people injured. 93% (22 million) of America's •ames.Children of all ages . , . on them—time once given to sports, creative outlets." "Parents in cities are trying to get kids out of hangouts." says one Chicago public official who favors a prohibition on the use of video machines by those under 18. "Is is definitely an addiction," says one worried mother. "Society has always legislated to protect children — drinking, bars, smoking," she adds. "There is fear anywhere children congregate," counters the marketing director for one manufacturer. "When I grew up there were poo! halls, bowling alleys, pinball machines. Parents are just afraid of (he un- was sent in weeks later, following the assassination of Bashir Gemayei, President-elect of Lebanon. Ostensibly sent to prevent a bloodbath between Christians and Moslems, Israeli soldiers ended up as passive bystanders while vengeful Phalangists wrought atrocities upon Palestinians in the Sabra and Shatila camps. It was this very passivity that led to the most significant protest connected with the war, when 400,000 people gathered in the square in front of Tel Aviv's City Hall to call for a judicial inquiry into Israel's role in the massacre, and call upon Prime Minister Menachem Begin and Defense Minister Arik Share , to r iign. ation of 400,000 one of the high marks of opposition to war, it focused mainly on the happenat Sabra and Shatila. Prior to this, other onstrations had been he!d hy various covered the war in the Falklands—even the much-vaunted BBC comes off poorly in contrast to the independent reporting by much of Israel's government-owned radio and teleIndeed, the ultimate testament to the strength of Israel's democracy came from one of [he biggest mishaps of the war—the bystander role of Israei's army to the massacre of Palestinians by Christian Phalangists at Sabra and Shatila. The government, finally acceding to pubiic pressure, appointed the Kahan Commission, which recommended that Defense Minister Sharon resign, and made critical comments about then Prime Minister Begin, and the present Prime Minister (then Foreign Minister) Itzhak Shamir. The report itself drew much positive response from public figures and newspapers throughout the world, and is generally considered to have made a major contribution to restoring " . . . Yet today, like the U.S. in the '60's, Israel has had to face the issue of protest against an unpopular and prolonged war...." >nd year— the Peace Now movement (about a month Noi s the of i after the war had begun), at a stage when especially ; I becoi some of its members were being demobil- in the mo? difficult of circus ized, or returning from stints of duty for have the protests grown and taken on new short holiday breaks. Most of the speakers forms. One of the most significant has been who addressed this crowd of some 100,000 the spontaneous grass-roots movement of were those who had fought in Lebanon. "Mothers Against Silence," who, in public They spoke of their distaste for the war, meetings, and in private interviews with caband in some instances movingly invoked the inet ministers, have called for a withdrawal memory of their fallen comrades. Peace of troops and described the anguish of their Now could, in fact, claim that it had un- constant concern for the safety of their sons impeachable credentials for voicing opposi- in Lebanon, exposed to surprise ambush and tion, as it had been in the forefront of those embroiled in the regular eruptions of that who had foreseen the possibility of 3 war nation's factional fighting. and had warned against it. Some six weeks Grassroots Movement before the war actually broke out, Peace Another small grass-roots movement has Now had organized a rally of some 30,000 people at a time when there was a strong found expression through maintaining a 24hour vigil by a handful of persons, acting in possibility that military action would be taken in response to the killing of an Israeli relays, outside the home of the Prime Minister, bearing signs against the war. and with diplomat in France. The later assassination attempt in London, a few weeks later, did an up-dated number of those killed. On sevindeed touch off the war in Lebanon. One eral occasions, reservist troops have, on their of the ironies of the war is that about a . demobilization, also come to express their year after the attempt on his life, the injured protest. Less public, but far more prevalent, Ambassador came out with a statement tttat has been the refusal of many soldiers to (Continued on page 10, col. jl was critical of the war, arguing that such a response to the attempt on his life was not justified. DR. LEON SHELEFF, head of the DepartA spate of articles against the war have ment of Sociology and Anthropology at Te! appeared in our press and Israel's leading Aviv University, and Associate Professor at its Faculty of Law, is author of "Disobe- operatoi Joseph Pearce, author of Magical Child and The Bond of Power, is one of those who look askance at video games as a learning experience. He compares their learning value to the nutritional value of pure cane sugar. Video games, according to Pearce, consist of "empty calories, momentarily satisfying, but ultimately more detrimental than bene(Conlinued on page 10, col. )I national prize for its honest and open coverage. Al one stage, the entire Israeli press, mainly critical of the war, was in the running for an international prize, finally denied it because of behind-the-scenes machinations of the prize committee. Indeed, the fibre of Israel s democracy has never seemed stronger tin particular when contrasted with the chauvinistic and jingoistic manner in which, at about the same time, most the British press science" in the volume Civil Rights in Israel: Essays in Honor of Deputy Chief Justice of Israel. Haim H. Cohn, as well as a captain in the Advocate General's office in the Israeli reserves and a member of the Israeli Civil Rights Association. A contributor to the Hebrew Encyclopedia, he is author of The Bystander; Behavior, Law. Ethics (Lexington, 1978); and Generations Apart: Adult Hostility to Youth (McGraw Hill 1981). WOMEN'S AMERICAN ORT REPORTER • WINTER 1984 OPEIl FORUm (Continued from page 9) ficial. And the younger the mind, the more detrimental the effects," be claims. David Sudnow, a visiting professor of sociology at the University of California's Berkeley campus, currently working on a book on the subject, sees video games producing "an assembly-line mentality. You're just standing there, doing what the machine tells you to do; move, shoot, move, shoot. What you get is a technologically controlled person. It is hardly playing a game," he asserts. But Miicbell Robin, a professor of child psychology at the City University of New York (CUNY) and^ a paid consultant to Atari, sees "absolutely no evidence that video games are mesmerizing children." He says that adults fear computers because "they didn't grow up with them." Some Positive Views Sherry Turkle, an assistant professor of sociology at M.I.T. who has studied [he im- Dissent (Con ued from page 7) discourage open forums to discuss Israel's tactics, strategies, and internal disputes in a democratic society such as ours, where the right (o dissent is axiomatic? . . . Why then does the American Jewish leadership meekly follow the political line of whichever Israeli party happens to be in power?" The answer is so obvious, so breathtakingly simple that apparently it has evaded those who ask: Israel is a sovereign nation that has a democratically (one of the few—and in that Israel (Continued from page 9) receive or to wear the ribbon traditionally allocated to those who served in them following each of Israel's wars. On the personal level, the most poignant expression of protest has been that of a small number of bereaved parents, who wrote to former Prime Minister Begin, criticizing him directly for embarking on the war, and, in some cases, accusing him of responsibility for the death of their sons. Some of the families have allowed these letters to be published, noting that there has been no official response to them. Indeed, some of the families were not even sent the traditional letters of condolence which the Prime Minister sends to the bereaved on behalf of the Israeli people. A Heavy Price So, overall, a heavy price has been paid for this war—it has been political, economic, and moral. Economically, it has been a tremendous burden, and a major factor in the economic crisis currently confronting our sumer electronics. According to industry estimates, these games (in arcades and on home cassettes) are currently grossing many billions annually (compared with about S3 biflion a year for all the movies shown in theaters around the U.S.), even though they overproduced in the last year r so. And Pac-Man, Space Invader and Missile Command are being joined by Space Fury, Space Vultures and Communist Mutants from Space, to name just a few. Until this year, four companies—Mattel, Magnavox and Astrocade—dominated the field. Currently, there are at least another half-dozen producers of game machines and about a dozen new companies making software for these firms. With Timex Corp. coming on the market shortly with a S99.95 lightweight, compact home computer, there is clear evidence that the age of electronics is totally upon us, whether we want it or not. Video games seem sure to remain a factor in the 8Q's com- 15 Million Households According to a recent Gallup survey, 93% (22 million) of America's teenagers now play video games. The average teen spends $1 a day on them with many devoting one or two hours a day to them. Children of all ages, the survey shows, are spending upwards of 10 million hours a day on these devices, time once given over to sports or traditional creative outlets or studies. And the craze is not limited to youngsters: at the end of 1981, there were close to 8 million households with video game players, but by the end of this year, that number pact of video games on children, doesn't will have grown to 15 million households, agree wilh the critics. She feels the games industry sources believe. And video games are still in an early stage of development; "There is a point in development, usually despite some recent setbacks, the video game between the ages of 7 and 9, when compe- market remains a success. tency becomes a central issue for kids. ChilPac-Man alone grossed three times as much dren want to develop and test their skills, as "Star Wars," the most popular Hollywood mentally and physically. At that point, the movie, earned in the five years since its games become an important medium for release. Over 100,000 Pac-Man arcade mamastery." chines have already been built, and retailers Jorge Reina Schemont, associale professor have waiting lists of customers for all kinds in the Annenberg School of Communications of home cassettes. at the University of Southern California, is At least a half-dozen magazines are deanother who feels that video games can voted to electronic game-playing. Publishers have a positive effect on kids. "They are are firing off books on how to beat the mademanding and require high levels of ab- chines. straction, dexterity, and coordination.'' ScheEven Disney, a conservative company, has mont thinks video games should be used in licensed Bally-Midway Manufacturing to inpublic schools to introduce children to com- stall $50 million worth of a new "Tron" puter technology. video game in arcades across the country. What no one does dispute is that more Several Hollywood studios . are hurrying and more video games are definitely on the space films into production, primarily so they way. Arcade games and home cassettes still can spin off video game and home cassette are one of the fastest growing areas of con- Since time immemorial children nave been using games mastery as a valid way of learning what it feels like to learn, applying knowledge from one set of experiences to another—in short, growing and developing. Now in the 1980s, for better or worse, electronic games seem to be one of the ways youngsters are accomplishing this goal— whether the older generation is ready for it or not. • • area, the only) elected government that sets policy and implements actions deemed best Jewish community here, gleefully highlighted and spread by those who wish to delegitimize directly affects the Israeli population; they and suffer citizen another country, far removed physically and psychologically, emotionally and financially from the tough realities of Arab intransiminimal rights in interfering in her life-anddeath internal affairs. No matter how we may feel personally, our function is different. Basically, it is to be supportive, to strengthen and explain Israel's needs to all Americans. Those who are uncomfortable with Israeli policies can easily convey this to Israel's leadership. To claim otherwise is arrogant country. The personal and political price has also been high, for it is generally felt that the major reason for Prime Minister Begin"s resignation (coupled with the mystery of his disappearance from the public scene and the well being) is directly related to the depth of his belated, but full, realization of the negative consequences of the war, and the fact that he feels himself betrayed by those on whose advice he relied regarding the original decision to enter Lebanon. But perhaps most important is the moral aspect, for until now, a key aspect of Israel's strength and spirit has been that in matters of security, there is a national consensus. The differences—ideological, ethnic, class, religious—that are a regular part of the Israeli scene have generally been separated from security issues. The importance of a national arking on the extreme For protests and divisions within the country are a heavy price to pay for whatever benetary successes, ihese gained at a heavier rate of casualties than had ever been anticipated, imperialism, obliterating the rights artd capabilities of others, Israel is not an American ican Jewish colonial outpost. Israel's Law of Return has not been rescinded; it is still an integral part of its philosophy. American Jews are welcome to move to Israe!, where !hey can express their views and live with the results. What Bass and his fellow thinkers are advocating is a government-in-exile by noncitizens. Jewish kinship has its limits. Ironically, there is a twisted kernel of truth that disagreements about Israe! have been suppressed. American Jewish supporters of Israel—who are probably the majority —are cowed. Knocking Israel has become de riguetiT within certain segments of the For those parents understandably worried that their children will become "game junkies," compulsive gamblers, sitting for hours pumping quarters jnto slot machines, just the way some people do in Las Vegas, psychologists stress the effects depend on the child. If the youngster has the friendships, the emotional and parental support he or she needs, then video games will not pose a threat. It is the youngster already seeking a way out of school, out of responsibilities, out of growing up, that is most at risk. Kids with sound values, say the psychologists, will experience video games for what they are—science fiction, imaginary and benign. For teenagers, they stress, have an abundance of energy and need to test the waters of life—be it through cars, motor- ally dismissed with a "Well, what do you expect? They don't believe it, they just have to say/write it," attitude, while the vocal critics are praised as brave, their influence exaggerated. What a distortion of reality! Indeed, for anti-Israel complainers to even label themselves "dissenters," inviting identification with those brave souls in Russia, is rather obscene. By all means let pluralism and diversity reign among the Jews. Let the voices of the traditionalists, the conservatives, the "Lovers of Israel" be heard throughout the land! • • cation and social services); one that has developed an ethos in its fighting spirit that stresses respect for human life, the minimization of unnecessary harm and destruction; and the creation of bonds of comradeship within the units. It has, over the years, been a constant source of pride, not just for its military successes, but for the manner in which it has safeguarded its nation's security while contributing to the maintenance of a democratic framework. Surely those entrust"Not Enough" ed with the decisions of when and how to :cr=ls. activate its awesome power musi fully understand and appreciate the nature of this reof i , is not enough to satisfy the demands sponsibility. protesters. Like the United States in "Operation Peace for the Galilee" was s, Israel today has to face the issue intended to bring peace to the north of the est against an unpopular war honestly country—thus its official name. Yes, today, urageously. It must do so also in the the northern frontier is quiet (though, truth very pccial circumstances of the many to tell, it had been so for almost a year unique aspects of its army: an army that before the Operation). Yet to achieve its is an integrative force for the coun- goals, over 550 Israeli soldiers have been sisting mainly of young people draft- killed there (in ratio to America's population, the equivalent of over 25,000 soldiers), and of passage, and an older generation of re- m Israel, among large sectors of the population, there is a lingering sense of despair, ups for training, and sometimes for wars; shame, and regret. Perhaps the words of the an army that serves many functions beyond Prophet Jeremiah say it best: "Peace, peace, QD those of most armies ffor instance in edu- when there is no peace." with their benefits themselves only negligible. Indeed, this view has been voiced even by some who were party to the original decision to invade. One cabinet minister has acknowledged that never again should Israel go to war without a clear national consensus suporting such action, and another has admitted that, in retrospect, had he known the full outcome, he probably would not have agreed to all the actions taken. WOMEN'S AMERICAN ORT REPORTER • WINTER 1984 Teaching Students How to Think By ALAN D. HAAS As many critics are now pointing out, the American educational system is not working as well as it should. The reason, some believe, is that students can't think or reason as well as they should. It's not enough for students to accumulate facts, they stress, unless they can integrate and transfer these facts to new and constantly arising problems. For instance, a student can become knowledgeable about science or history or English, but that youngster needs to he able to take that mass of information and classify it, compare itT make inferences, draw conclusions, and formulate hypotheses. Otherwise, a student becomes merely a receptacle for data which he or she cannot apply properly to solve problems both in school and later on in life. Thus education is incomplete, it is stressed, unless students can not only read, write, and do math, but make use of the facts accumulated throughout their school years. A recent survey of test results by the National Assessment of Educational Progress discloses a serious decline in inferential reasoning by students in junior and senior high school. The same organization's evaluation latic ;ates . drop i problem-solving ability as well, fo tion experts point out, poor reasoning and thinking ability are often at the root of defiSituation Critical . Educators feel that progress must be made in these areas if schools are to do a competent job of preparing youngsters for their role in society. "A great deal of emphasis of fate has been placed on basic skills and passing tests," notes Bernard H. McKeona, a program development specialist for the National Education Association. "Unfortunately, kids don't learn by simply answering A, B, Although it is debatable if American schools ever did a good job of teaching thinking, the situation is now so critical that many schools and colleges are designing new programs to help pupils think and reason integrated into existing courses and/or taught as a separate subject. In some areas of the country, students are being exposed to thinking skills as early as the fourth grade. The University/Urban Schools National Task Force, which is concerned about the problem, is initiating a program in the publie schools of New York, Chicago, San Francisco, Detroit, Minneapolis, and Memphis to teach thinking and reasoning as part of the English and math curriculum for high school juniors and seniors. If the program proves successful, it will be extended to other parts of the arch i encourages educators to believe that the thinking process can be taught. There are many different methods used by schools and colleges to teach thinking. Here Lateral Thinking. The Edward de Bono school of thinking, developed originally in England, and widely used in New York City schools, sees to show students how to break out of traditional thinking patterns. This means trying to devise new ways of looking at problems. Structure of the Intellect. This approach was developed by J. P. Guilford, and breaks down intelligence into more than 100 skills, some 25 of which are considered to be critical in schools. Thousands of separate lessons have been created to teach these skills. The ALAN D. HAAS, a regular contributo discussed "Teachers and Public Educatior :onach :chjwn the whole into parts, sequencing, seeing relationships and synthesizing. Exercises unrelated to school are used, and the principles are transferred to classroom applications and sociates in Washington distributes the materials and trains the teachers. At the A. Philip Randolph High School, which New York's City College runs with the Board of Education, a course in thinking is part of the curriculum zn each grade, from the 9th through the 12th. )omAnother approach is being u trueington, Ind., where the Agenc tion at Television has created for Children, is sponsored by Montclair State College in New Jersey. Through it, a series of books are made available to young children. Though they appear to be novels, they actually are carefully crafted didactic dcvicss in which young readers arc exposed to issues that provoke philosophical questions. It is not designed to produce a generation of young Platos, but affirms the belief that keted by Innovative Sciences in Stamford, Conn. Instrumental Enrichment. Developed by the Israeli psychologist Reuven Feuerstein, this approach is geared to low achievers. It seeks to tap the intrinsic motivation to learn, using problem-solving tasks to bring out abilities that can then be applied to schoolwork. Many of the exercises require little reading ability, so that all children can benefit from them. Curriculum Development As- About" to help educ Lessons tie in with Ian science, "ThinkAbout" is a 15-minute color progr, three years has mush The Agency is also ] series, "It Figures,'" About," which deals forthcoming languageOne very innovative At the West End School in Lynbrook, Long Island, which employs t le Philosophy for Children program, a fou th grade will e S.O.I. In: program's headquartei in El Segundo, Calif. Strategic Reasoning. Based on th« cepts of the late Albert Upton, this apf concentrates on six problem-solving tute JS of 60 differ which in the p other "What- Pupils read short specially written it about why the chara and then talk what they did. ORT: "The Teacher Is the Key Throughout its 100 year plus history, ORT's basic educational philosophy has a!ways been to help students develop their creative potential—to enable them to emerge as whole individuals, capable of adapting to new situations, as opposed to just learning to pass their exams, finish school a d then go on to hoped-for greener pasture ORT has always believed that its teachers ferent, that they are better trained t normal run of teachers; that they st from their leagues; and that, in general, leed for skilled teachers and has pooled resources with the Ministries of Education and Labor to look for solutions to the problem. Joint research and sludy have led to the development of special ORT courses and syllabi which aim at training technical teaching students how to think. Obviously, the key to accomplishing this is the quality of the teacher, who works with, motivates and trains his students. Thus, to transform its philosophical concept into reality, ORT works constantly and unceasingly to maintain a staff of expert teachers who can not only transfer their skills, knowledge and enthusiasms to their students and awaken their creative spirit, but introduce them to a logical and disciplined mode of thinking as well. For, as one expert has claimed, the questions a teacher asks in the classroom must stimulate the thinking processes of the learn- over and above the instructional level—that, in fact, they often act as catalysts in the lives of those whom they teach. How is this achieved? Where do ORT teachers come from? How are they trained and continually upgraded? What draws them to teach in the ORT system? Some ORT teachers come from the ORT network itself, from among its 800 schools in Israel, France, Latzn America. India and elsewhere, some from programs in countries where ORT no longer operates, such as Poland; Others come from industry and bring invaluable practical experience. at recruiting teacher candidates from among those who lack format pedagogical training and from industry. Participants must be highly motivated and devote four or five evenings a week to studying the principles of teaching, the learning process, adolescent psychology, technical methodology, specialized subject matter, theory and social studies. Graduates of the course receive a certified Diploma and Teaching Permit. One of the proble :hat many teachers in education today is mply transfer their es, highly-qualified people in technology i more attracted to industry than to edution. Recently, this trend has been modi- of :ais technical and vocational schools. ORT, which has the largest vocational and technological education network in the country, has daily basis, for the required hours, to students whose motivat pacities may vary, and whose n Special Training One teacher who took the c join the sti .ff of the ORT Syngalowski Cen says: "Before the course, I w; 1975, •nfiand n , but I had difficulty lra> ny skills. I see tbat knowing and transferring people is absolutely essential, my students have benefited from training I received. I am educating ntinued on page 16, col. 1) WOMEN'S AMERICAN ORT REPORTER • WINTER 1984 27th National Biennial Convention (Continued from page 5J President received an award "for his vision to build an American Presence." Major organizational addresses were presented by Beverly Minkoff, WAO National President, "Keynote"; Gertrude S. White, Chairman, National Executive Committee, "Progress Report"; and Nathan Gould presented "Perspectives," outlining challenges facing the organization in the months to come. Seven concurrent Panels, comprised of ORT dignitaries and prominent personalities active in Jewish, academic, civic, and political life, helped give expression to the concerns affecting both contemporary American Jewry and the nation at large: "New Educational Standards: How Will They Affect Our Youth?; Education for the World of Work: Are We Preparing Our Students for the Job Market?; Jewish Unemployment: Cause and Effect; Economic Equity for Women; International Organizations as Forums for Political Pressure: Their Virtues and Vices: "High Tech" in Israel's Future; and "1984": Fact or Fiction. New programming included an orientation meeting for freshmen delegates, an Awards Assembly highlighting achievement in Membership, Expansion, Education, Community RESOLUTIONS CHAIRMAN Louise Stein, center with Co-Chairmen HileH Cross, left and Barbara Rosenthal. Klarsfeld {Continued jrom page 5) a Cold War and the mation about the Comm able to the Allied nation "There's no morality So?" Beate Klarsfeld is Nazis had infors mat was vaiuz secret service. implex, intense Honor Roll, Donor, Golden Circle and Financial Oversubscription, and 14 special workshops carefully designed for Chapter and Chapter at Large delegates which focused on the importance of the Chapter in relation to organizational policies and goals. In five Commissions, delegates were provided with an arena for an examination of policy, dissemination of issues and strategies for action on key organizational and community objectives: "The ORT Program"; "Organization"; Community"; "Basic Assignments"; and "Capital Funds." To enunciate WAO's position on community and global issues, delegates approved a series of Resolutions on ionics such as "ORTs' Unique Role in the Western Hemisphere"; "Women's Rights"; "Preservation of Democracy"; "Anti-Semitism—A Call to Action"; "Israel and ORT Israel"; and "The Member and the Organization." In Plenary Sessions and other meetings they discussed issues such as quality public education, tuition tax credits, public school prayers, censorship and the growing influence of the Radical Right, and dedicated themselves to the continued struggle against anti-Semitism at home and abroad; the fight for Soviet Jewry's right to emigrate; the attainment of full equality for women; the security of Israel and the betterment of conditions of embattled Jewish communities around the world. They evaluated the giant strides made by technology and the educational challenges facing ORT, devised strategies to expand ORT's worldwide operations, encourage the maintenance of the highest educational standards, and dedicated themselves to both the global and Jewish character of ORT's program. TERSPECTIVES" for the Organization were delivered to the closing Plenary Session by Nathan Gould, National Executive Directcr and Executive Vice President. cers: Helen Rosenberg, Honorary National President; Gertrude S. White, National President; Reese Feidman, Chairman, National Executive Committee and Nathan Gould, Executive Vice President. As Mrs. Isenstein summed up: "This Convention created a positive climate in which to accelerate organizational progress. Our deliberations reflected the enthusiasm, strength, vitality, and dynamism thiU exists throughout the country. Those of us m attendance were privileged to see democracy at work in the A musical show, "The Wizard of ORT," was presented by members of the Southern California Region. The week culminated with the election and installation of a new slate of National Offi- :ones, winning organizational woman of seemingly irreconcilable conti have been made against her life and her dictions. She has raised her two children husband's. Jews, even though she has never formal She would have to be both tough-minded converted to Judaism from the Luther; and fearless to publicly slap the face of a faith into which she was born. West German chancellor surrounded by gunHer appearance gives the impression of .. carrying security guards to protest his warsmartly dressed, upper middle-class resident time Nazi connections. She did that in 1968, slapping the face of ex-Chancellor Kurt of some Paris suburb whose only concer Georg Kiesinger while shouting "Nazi, Nazi." is her family. But in conversation she com^ across as tough-minded and fearless, despi Beate received a four-month suspended the repeated threats, and even attempts, th: jail term for the incident, which she describes as a decision to "publicly slap the generation of our fathers." It has been written that Serge's motivation for tracking down Nazis is to avenge his father's death and that Beate's reason for her devotion to the work is to atone for the sins of her father and her father's generation Leave your Footprints on the Sands of Time.... . . . . a bequest to Women's American ORT in your Will insures the future for over 100,000 ORT students all over the world. . . . . name Women's American ORT as your life insurance beneficiary. Legacy & Insurance Endowments Women's American ORT 315 Park Avenue South New York, N.Y. 10010 (212) 505-7700 traditi with e e participation from representatives of all echelons, particularly the Chapters. All sessions led us to a reaffirmation of our commitment to ORT as a global movement in Jewish life and to our fundamental responsibilities—to grow in numbers and in units of organization, to increase our financial productivity, and to broaden and deepen our involvement in the community, strengthening our impact as a mass membership organization, capable of affecting change in Jewish life." • • "->.-; i r breakfa: cribed to her smissed the motivation, id her husband by others. "I feel no guilt because of th. imes of What I iy parents. TheTe is no collecti nsibiiity. feel it to change the mentality that ows this to happen." Public recognition of the Klarsfelds' work important, Beate continues, because it foc es attention on the issues. That is why addition to the tedious legal research concted, for the most part, by her husband, attorney, both Beate and Serge fly around Id publicly confronting Nazi fugitives the and the government officials who still protect them. Beate has also been arrested or detained in Syria, Morocco, Poland, Czechoslovakia, West Germany, and Bolivia during attempts to embarrass officials of those countries into deporting Nazi fugitives so they could be brought to trial. "It's easier to do something that is public and when you have mobilized public opinion. With publicity, they are guilty even before the trial starts," says Beate. The Klarsfelds first began pursuing Barbie in 1971 after a German prosecutor declared invalid a suit filed against Barbie 10 years earlier by a group of German Jews. The prosecutor ruled there was no proof of genocidal intent in Barbie's actions, that he may not have known the fate that awaited the Jews he deported from France. The Klarsfelds began interviewing hundreds of survivors of Barbie's reign until they found one that provided proof that Barbie knew what he was doing. "Deported or shot, there's no difference," the witness reported Barbie as having said. That bit of information enabled the Klarsfelds to get the Barbie case reopened. Working from photographs contained m the orhcial file, they soon were able to determine that Barbie was living under an assumed name in Bolivia. Beate flew to South America, where she was arrested for holding an illegal news conference at which she exposed Barbie's hiding place to the world. Yet Beate insists that the actual trial "is not important for us. "There will he no surprises in the trial. All the information is already out and he will be sentenced to life in prison. My husband will represent the families of the victims at the trial," she says mafter-oMacUy. "What is important is the public education this will be in France, where the history books still read that the Germans were responsible for what happened to the Jews. "This is not true. Some 90% of the Jews arrested in France were arrested by French police who cooperated with the Nazis. "It is important that the young people know that. It is too late to change the older generation, but the attitude of the young people can be changed. That is how this can be stopped from happening again." Q D WOMEN'S AMERICAN ORT REPORTER - WINTER 1 Fact Finding Trip Evaluates Situation of Falashas Although their origins are shrouded in mystery, there is little doubt that for many centuries the black Jews of Ethiopia — the Falashas — have faithfully practiced preTalmudic Judaism. Today, in some 470 scattered and isolated mountain villages [hey strictly observe lhe laws governing Shabbat, Kaskrut, and circumcision. They celebrate Biblical holidays {Rosh Hashanah, Pesach, etc.) but until recently knew nothing of Purim or Hanukah. When first visited by Jews from abroad, the Faiashas were astounded. Until that moment they had believed they were the only Jews in the world. blamed for misfortunes and illnesses. When a natural calamity occurred, they were often cursed and beaten. Sometimes their villages were burned and the inhabitants forced to Hee. Since the revolution, the government has sought to rectify past injustices by distributing lands to the Falashas and by outlawing the expression of such primitive beliefs. 'Those who call them names can now be brought to court and will be punished," Mrs. Kohrman states. "Although they said this does not eliminate deeply ingrained prejudice, at least now they have recourse to the authorities. Synagogues Functioning In'1976 the World ORT Union undertook a program of rurat development in the Gondar province of Ethiopia, where the largest concentration of Falashas lives. Lamentably, this program was closed by the government in 1981. In May of 1983, Margery Kohrman. a National Vice President of Women's American ORT, traveled to Ethiopia with a national mission sponsored by NJCRAC (National Jewish Community Relations Advisory Council). The mission's goal was to obiain current information on the Falashas and to bring them moral support. The NJCRAC mission visited three Falasha villages in "Although we had heard reports lo the contrary, the synagogues in the villages we visited were open and functioning." Mrs. Kohrman continued. "We have no reason to believe thai the situation is different now in the hundreds of villages we did not see. However, the status of Hebrew remains unclear. Although many Falasha priests and teachers speak it fluently, only one would use it in the presence of any official. Publicly, all declared that they no longer teach any Hebrew, although government people assured us that this is not illegal, that it was the teaching of Hebrew by ORT to which the government had objected. To us it was clear that of tukuh, the round thatched huts in which most Ethiopians live," Mrs. Kohrman explains. "Except that each Falasha village also contains a synagogue, operated by a Kess, a priest trained to transmit the Jewish religion. Traditionally this prayer house is only a large tukul, although ORT had replaced the ones we saw with modern buildings. In Ambober, the largest Falasha village, we also viewed a road which ORT actually had Created." Proud History "Ethiopia continues to be implacably opposed to the emigration of any of its citizens, and all who are caught trying to cross the border have been imprisoned. Recently the government has also begun to arrest and imprison the families of those who succeed in escaping, which has signifi- cantly reduced the numbers of those willing to attempt the arduous and dangerous flight. "Nevertheless," Mrs. Kohrman concludes, "it would appear that there is no immediate threat lo the Falashas. either from persecution or from the counterrevolutionary rife of the late 1970's, when Falashas were caught the crosi warfare and many tragedies < curred. "Slow but inexorable changes will undermine the ethnic and religious distinctiveness of the Falashas. Already, educated children express the desire to leave their ancestral villages in search of a better life in the towns and cities. Unless the Falashas can be brought to Israel, they are probably doomed to extinction within a few generations." "The Ethiopian Jews speak of themselves as Beta Yisrael (the House of Israel). They are a living testament to the wonder and miracle of Jewish survival. Helping them to make aiiyah is a matter of highest priority for Israel, which in 1983 alone received about 1,700. Now almost 5,000 Falashas live in Israel. All receive the tremendous support and assistance they need to adjust to the modern Jewish state. Helping them reach Israel must be a high priority for American Jews as well. "However," Mrs. Kohrman warns, "we must approach this delicate and difficult task with great concern for the sensitivities of the Ethiopian government, so as not to jeopardize the safety of the very people whom we seek to help." •• "Ethiopia is an ancient land with a proud and unique history, the only nation in Africa which has never been governed by a European power," Mrs. Kohrman "Since the 1974 revolution, however, the govern; become closely tied to the Soviet Union, both ecor and ideologically." At one time the Falashas numbered at least million, but centuries of persecution, famine, and conversions have reduced their numbers to about 25,000. They continue to pray and yearn to be brought to their spiritual homeland, Jerusalem. However, modem politics are frequently unsympathetic to the concept of messianic redemption, and the borders of Ethiopia remain tightly closed to emigration. Despite a wealth of detail and discovery, Mrs. Kohrman is cautious about drawing too many conclusions from the mission's limited experience. However, on a few questions she believes that group's experiences were broad enough to permit generalizations. "We evaluated the Falashas' situation not against Western norms," she states, "but against the fact that Ethiopia is one of the world's poorest nations. Like others in the area, Falashas live by subsistence-level farming, in northwestern Ethiopia, which has been plagued by serious drought for the past several years. They are perhaps slightly better off than their neighbors, because of the continuing concern of groups like ours, and the lasting benefits of the ORT program. The sad history of oppression and persecution suffered by the Falashas began when their lands were confiscated at the end of the 16th century, and they were forced to bi craftsmen, potters, weavers, jewelers, and smiths, in order lo survive. Because the very primitive peoples of this era shared the superstition that such crafts were "evil arts," they believed that all Falashas practiced a kind of witchcraft and were possessed by the "evil eye." As such, they were often T* JUDAIC DESIGNS • • • • • • a Cases and Yarmulkes Specialty items for children Traditional and contemporary Challah Cloths & Matzah Covers Tablecloths and Napkins The finest from Israel, France & U.S. Wall Hangings • Latch Hook 'Yes! Send me absolutely free, my copy of you new Catalog. Fleischmann's Margarine ^ to show you how mqch healthier traditional cooking can be with June Roth's Low Cholesterol Jewish Cookery. In it you'll find favorites like noodle kugel and bjintzes mad the sensible way. Fleischmann's Margarine can be part of your traditional cooking. Fleischmann's from 100% corn oil. It's tow in STITCHERY BY HENYE 5710 W. Mariposa #19, Phoenix, ftZ B5Q31 only $1.95 plus Sl.QL r___ with the front label from any package •f F-leischmann's Margarine. 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WOMEN'S AMERICAN ORT REPORTER • WINTER 1984 in the community Expressing their members' interest and commitment to the Houston Public Library, the President and Jewish Community Relations Support Chairman of the Greater Houston Region (District IX) for presented iestimony to the Mayor and members of Houston Library the City Council recently, voicing their membership's deep concern about a proposed S2 million budget cut for the Houston Public Library, and causing a tentative vote lo "consider favorably" the restoration of funds. Citing "the great concern today about quality education." and the fact that "children, youth and adults depend on the library to make available to them materials which will upgrade their informational base," WAO asserted that "students and teachers must have current information available as an adjunct to resources in the public schools. . . ." Stressing their concern that the first area to feel cuts would be those that provide scientific technical and industrial information," at a time of iocal unemployment of over 10%, WAO urged the Council to maintain a budget that would provide "the most recent information available to our citizens to train them to step into future technology." Under a theme of "Light Their Way to Freedom" some 26 WAO areas around the country joined in the 13th annual observWAO Areas ance of Women's Piea for Human Rights for Soviet Participate in Jewry the week after Hanukah, December 10-17. BeWomen's Plea ginning on Human Rights Day, the nationwide event, sponsored by the Leadership Conference of National Jewish Women's Organizations, with the cooperation of the National Conference on Soviet Jewry and the National Jewish Community Relations Advisory Council, the observance is a "Call to Action" aimed at bringing the now-worsening plight of Soviet Jewry before the public. For with emigration at its lowest since the early 70's and restrictions tightening—the concern, commitment, and action generated by nationwide Plea activities are now seen as more important than ever. The areas are: Hampshire Hills Chapter-at-Large, District I; Mohawk-Hudson Area Council, Brooklyn Region, Mohansic Region, Queens Region,'Rockland Region, Suffolk Region, District II; North Central Jersey Region, District III; Allentown Chapter-at-Large, Makefield Chapters-at-Large, Pittsburgh and Rochester Regions, District VII; Indianapolis Coordinating Committee, Madison Chapter-at-Large, District VIII; St. Louis Region, District IX; Northern California Peninsula Region, Greater Denver Region, District X; Greater Phoenix Region, Greater San Diego Region, San Gabrie! Valley Region, Southern California Harbor Region, and Las Vegas Coordinating Committee, District XI. In addition to Women's League for Conservative Judaism, the National Convenor, and WAO, other National Jewish Women's Organizations who participated in the observance include: American Mizrachi Women, (AMTT), B"nai B'rith Women, Emunah Women of America. Hadassah, National Council of Jewish Women, National Federation of Temple Sisterhoods, National Ladies Auxiliary, Jewish War Veterans of the U.S.A., Inc., Pioneer Women, the Women's Labor' Zionist Organization of America, Women's Branch Union of Orthodox Jewish Congregations of America, and Women's Division, American Jewish Congress. stration of its support for career education, the Blu Chapter, Cleveland Region (District II) Award awarded a $100 U.S. Savings Bond to a grad to Voc-Ed Fairdale Vocational School, Terry Schwinhard. Student as this year's Exceptional Vocational Studen t, who went on to represent the Jefferson County Public Schools in the VICA (Vocational Industrial Clubs of America) a showcase for tion for plumbing Skills Olympics, yp, o the the trade trade and te skills of some 2000 vocational students in 30 occupational areas ational students in 30 occupational It's Tough Out There Teaching How to Think (Continued fi om page 11) ing in th e classroom disc ussions is not hav tea 7 ight or wrong an swer, k ut marshall ing the s trongest possible argume nts to back up what ;ver they say. Recent tests of moie than 2,000 middleclass students in New Jersey v p<ho were gi1ren this iinstruction had academi; gains nes r peer using the techniqui At the higher level, Marymount Manhattan College in New York City now requires new students to register for a one-year course in "Critical Thinking," an exploration of the analytical skills essential to learning. "We found that incoming freshmen needed to learn disciplined thinking to write a good essay," noted Eileen Bertach, dean for academic affairs at Marymount. At LaGuardia Community College in Queens, New York, students take a Critical Thought Skills course, in which they learn to measure risks, set objectives, and evaluate results. "Many students need the course because they have great gaps in their education," asserts Dr. Michael T. Hoban, director of developtmental education. "Over 75% of reading, or other basic skills," he adds. In New Orleans, Xavier University, a private black college, has a six-week course in reasoning for its pre-med students. At Hunter College Elementary School, in New York City, a school for the gifted, report cards to parents have a section rating thinking skills. Marks are given for critical, creative, and logical thinking. But perhaps before we can have students who can think we have to have teachers who can think. The Institute for Curriculum and Instruction in Coral Gables, Fla., its director, Lyle Ehrenberg, and the associate director, Sydelle Seiger. hold seminars and workshops around the countrv, training teachers—who will then train other teachers—to carry out thinking strategies in the classroom. Seiger and Ehrenberg operate a program intellectual competency in students. They teach teachers to focus on five types of learning" fact learning, concept learning, principle learning, attitude learning, and skill learning. For each type there are distinct thinking strategies. Irving Sigel, distinguished research scientist at the Educational Testing Service, in Princeton, New Jersey, runs programs similar to, but less structured than, the one by Seiger and Ehrenberger. Dr. David Weikart, president of High/ Scope Educational Research Foundation in Ypsilanti, Mich., runs a nonprofit foundation that is training teachers to train their colleagues to help students apply effective thinking procedures to school work. The National Council of Teachers of English has calied for its members to take special responsibility for the teaching of thinking, because "thinking and language are closely linked." The organization has suggested that teachers employ crearixe thinking to help students recognize relationships that lead to new ideas, logical thinking to create hypotheses and detect fallacies, and critical thinking to ask questions and make judgments. An interesting discovery that has grown out of these teaching-teachers-lo^think programs is that parents who are authoritarian do not encourage children to be independent thinkers. Such children, it was found, often have difficulty in handling abstract problems or conceptualizing. Such children usually have to be taught to be active learners, to ask questions, to solve problems. Thus some of the problem lies with the average citizen's attitude about thought and thinking. In many places it is viewed with ;nt \ s to a they "If a were not going to the P.T.A. n choir practice or to a baseball game, because he or she needed time to think, such a person would be shunned by the neighbors," points out Carolyn Kane, an English instructor at Culver-Stockton College in Canton, Missouri. And, "if a teenager were to announce that he or she was not going to the dance tonight because 'I need some time to think,' the parents might start thinking about finding a psychiatrist," she goes on. "Like Julius Caesar, we distrust people who think too much." Thus for too many Americans, thinking is a neglected art. For too many school kids, studies "won't do me any good." As social animals, we tend to be suspicious of people who spend time alone, "to think." But America runs on ideas, and good ideas require thought. Einstein understood that. Today's decline in thinking skills, many viewing, the lessening of reading for pleasure, the debasement of language, the reduced other factoi lent in thinking and re But i ing' skills is nei essary for all students, pedagogues, fro who lag behind their peers. Thus, many educators believe, this is the key goal now facing America's schools. If they can accomplish it, they will succeed in their basic function—to help give our nation's youngsters the necessary tools with which to embark on the road to a resilient and self-reliant life. • • In order to get a good job, you need more than a degree. You need the skills demanded by industry today. We Can Help At BRAMSON ORT, we provide the latest college programs in high technology and business such as: Accounting, Business Management, Computer Programming, Electronic Engineering Technology, Ophthalmic Technology, Secretarial Studies and Word Processing. You Get Small classes, individualized instruction, the latest equipment, with plenty of practice time, placement assistance, excellent and committed faculty. Far information contact: BRAMSON OCT DISE PRICED TO SELL CLASSIFIED AD SECTION ir publication will rec, •se to 500,000 reader r 1 50,000 hor Holders-Mitts 4 pic : nent Plans Available. Write on Official Siai ompiata details. Val- sga Avenue, Canoga rentals, toys, crafts and gifts, travel, etc. RATES: 60<2 per word. P.O.B. and telephone numbers = 2 words; abbreviations and zips — 1 word All ads must be typed, double spaced and prepaid; check or money order to Women's American ORT, Inc. must accompany copy. Ail ads will be subject to acceptance at the discretion of the editors and will be included in the earliest issue following their receipt. Send copy a n d p a y m e n t to W o m e n ' s A m e r i c a n O R T , ln< Classified Seclion/315 Park Ave. South/New York, N.Y. 10010 "Short ORT-er" Cooking -I Spiral Bound 135 pgs. Family Recipes-Hoi)day ion-S7.50 inc. posiage. Mail check ro WAO-Sou'h xard Region, 323 S. 21 si Ave., Hollywood FL. Coming: Identifying the Gifted WOMEN'S AMERICAN ORT REPORTER • WINTER 1984 the booh reporter THE REDEMPTION OF THE UNWANTED, From the Liberation of the Death Camps to the Founding of Israel, by Abram L. Sachar. St. Martin's/Marek, N.Y. 1983. 334 pages including maps, notes, documents and index, S19.9S. HAVEN-THE UNKNOWN STORY of 1,000 WORLD WAR O REFUGEES, by Ruth Graber, Coward-Mann, N.Y. 335 pages including photographs and index, $15.95. AMONG THE SURVIVORS OF THE HOLOCAUST - 1945, The Landsberg DP Camp Letters of Major Irving Heymont. American Jewish Archives, Cincinnati, 1983. I l l pages including photographs, no price listed. Reviewed by DAVID M. SZONYI In the past few years, there has been a remarkable outpouring of general studies, monographSj memoirs, and other works on the Holocaust. According to Judaica Book Ne\ at least 150 s will have appeared fay the end of 1983 the smattering of such books which appeared annually as recently as 10 or 20 years ago. Yet the overwhelming majority of these books deal with the cataclysmic slaughter of six million Jews by the Nazis and their collaborators between 1933 and 1945. There is a relative dearth of material on both the refugees who managed to escape from Europe before or during World War II, or on the Holocaust survivors who became "displaced persons" and who languished in German "DP camps" until as late as 1957. Indeed, we still have no overall history of either the refugees in genera! nor the DP's in particular. But each of these books plays an important role in closing this historical gap. The Redemption of the Unwanted, the most ambitious and important of the three, is subtitled "From the Liberation of the Death Camps to the Founding of Israel." Abram L. Sachar, the founding President of Brandeis University, has written what is the first history devoted to the period from the last years of the Holocaust to the signing of the first Arab-Israel armistice agreement following the new Jewish state's war of independence (1944-1949). Three Distinct Events Photo Credit: Ruth Gruber REFUGEES FROM EUROPE: PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT'S "GUESTS," waie at the Statue of Liberty as their ship enters New York Harbor, Aug. 3, 1944. (From "Haven: The Untold Story of 1, )p0 World War II Refugees," by Ruth Gruber.) into Palestine; and the Jewish revolt against British rule in Palestine, as well as the diplomatic and military battles which led to the founding and securing of the State. Truman's Efforts Although the time period covered is short, each of these developments is momentous and deserves a book in itself. Inevitably, then, The Redetnption of the Unwanted has an uneven quality. Sachar is strongest in chronicling President Truman's efforts on behalf of Holocaust survivors, and particularly the key role played by his Jewish special assistant, David K. Niles. Under Niles1 prodding, Truman in 1945 and 1946 "ordered that the borders of the American zones in Germany and Austria be opened to the survivors trapped in Eastern Europe and the Balks . . . , insisted that the Displaced Persons Camps be administered as shelters rather than as quasiprisons, and persisted in applying unremitting pressure on the British government to modify the White Paper that restricted Jewish immigration to Palestine." In the following two years, again at Niles' urging, Truman came to favor the creation of an independent Jewish state despite the opposition of the State Department's Arabists (whom Truman called "the striped pants boys"). After a memorable meeting with Chaim Weizmann, the President also backed the efforts of Zionists leaders to have the Negev included in the new state's borders. The two chapters on the remarkSachar covers three distinct, if able Bricha comprise a compelling closely inter-Telated. series of events: and succinct narrative of Jewish the last years of the Holocaust, ingenuity, courage, and persistence. Jewish and non-Jewish resistance to But in writing about the Holocaust, the Nazi onslaught and (he post-war Sachar has a tendency to jump from trials of German leaders; the Bricha topic to topic. And his narrative of efforts under which several hundred the 15 months between the UN parZionist activists guided thousands of tition resolution and the armistice survivors through circuitous routes agreement has the opposite probto European ports, from which they lem: it focuses on the military asattempted to immigrate "illegally" pects of the War of Independence to the exclusion of almost everyDAVID M. SZONYI, Associate Director of the Radius Institute in New York City and a contributor to many lewisk publications, frequently reviews books for the REPORTER. Sachar, it should be added, does elate a great deal of fascinating need ota 1 material and conveys nuch useful information. While it hardly constitutes the in-depth treatment this intense, dramatic "turnabout" period in Jewish history deserves, The Redemption of the Unwanted can still be read with considerable profit. During the Holocaust itself, the attitude of the American Government toward Jews trapped in, or trying to flee, Europe was indifferent at best, outright hostile at worst. True, second and third Roosevelt Administrations initiated two conferences on the refugees—at Evianies-Bains, France in July 1938 and in Bermuda in April 1943 — but both ended with almost no concrete results, in large part because the U.S. itself was unwilling to modify its rigid immigration quotas. Such historians as Henry Feingold, Saul Friedman, and Arthur A. Morse have chronicled how some key bureaucrats in the State Department, led by Undersecretary of State Breckenridge Long, continually obstructed efforts to help Jews in Nazioccupied Europe. Saga of 1000 Refugees There was, however, one bright, if curious, exception to the Roosedifference to the refugees. In June 1944 the President announced his intention to "invite" as his "guests —i.e. outside of ihe normal quotas —1,000 refugees to come to the U.S. They were interned in a military camp in Oswego, in upstate New York on the shores, of Lake Ontario. And before ihey left Europe, the 1,000 refugees (actually, 982 because of last-minute complications; about 90% were Jewish) had to sign a release form promising to return to Europe when the war ended. Haven recounts their story. Author Ruth Gruber was delegated by then Secretary of the Inferior Harold Ickes to meet the lucky refugees, and to sail with them back on the Liberty Ship Henry Cibbins from Naples to New York. During the hazardous two-week journey— the ship was almost bombed one time and torpedoed another before it left the Straits of Gibralter—she came to know many of the refugees' remarkable odysseys of survival, which she recounts here. Haven also includes a good section on life in the Oswego camp, where a host of Jewish and non-Jewish organizations assisted the refugees—it was in Oswego that ORT established its first Vocational Training Program in the U.S. (it lasted two years before being transferred to NYC)— and where the townspeople proved friendly and helpful. Gruber a!so describes the long, surprisingly arduous and ultimately successful struggle by Ickes, Camp Director Joe Short and others to persuade a Congressional committee and the governmental bureaucracy to allow the refugees to stay in this country, permission for which was not granted until December 1945. And in a concluding chapter, she brings us up to date on how successful most of the refugees were in starting "new lives" in America. Haven is Ms. Gruber's twelfth book, and it profits from her considerable experience as a journalist and author. It has a narrative fluidity and tells a moving story personably and well. DP's at Landsberg The 400-500,000 Holocaust survivors who found their way to American DP camps in 1945 lived in austere, often primitive condi tions. Only 27 when he was p in charge of the Landsberg Cam in September of that year (wher Jacob Oleiski was in charge of th ORT program that was to have suc major impact in years to c o r n e l then Major Irving Heymont por trays life in the camp in Amon the Survivors of the Holocaust — 1945, which contains some 34 le ters to his wife written during 10-week period (September 19-De cember 5, 1945). This slim wor reveals how traumatized many o the survivors were and the difficu ties that ORT was to encounte Thus, although conditions at Lands berg were very overcrowded, th DP's resisted being taken by trai to the nearby Fohrenwald Cam because such trips reminded them of "transports" to the death camp Unfortunately, some members o the Army weTe insensitive to th survivors' deep wounds (a DP caught with three pounds of stole butter was sentenced to thre months in jail). Personal Transformation The real hero of Heymont's le ters is the author himself, wh worked incredibly hard to unde stand the refugees' sensibilities an needs, and to attend to the dozen of tasks needed to provide them with adequate food and shelter, a well as ORT's educational and v cational programs. In ihe proces Heymont, like Gruber, evolved from being a marginal to an "affirme member of the Jewish people." All three of these books show how the physical and psychologica suffering of the Holocaust survivor continued long after Germany sur rendered and the last concentratio camps were liberated in May 194 Yet they also relate how they en dured and coped with difficult situ ations during the transitional year of homelessness between the tortur and slavery of Nazism and fu freedom in the U.S., Israel or else where. As such, Sachar's history Gruber's memoir, and Heymont letters testify to the resilience and resourcefulness of the human spir no Poignant Love Story A FORBIDDEN LOVE, by Chay- Malek, the father, also dreams of ym Zefdis. Berkeley, N.Y., 1983. peace for the Middle East. $3.95. pp. 404. As they grow from boy and A touching and dramatic love girl to man and woman, thefr chil story set amidst the struggle of the dren, Layleh and Uri, fall in love Arab-Israeli conflict, this novel writ- attempting through the years of po ten by WAO's National Director litical conflict to remain loyal to of Public Affairs, Chayym Zeldis, each other despite their other obli uses a pair of young lovers, a mod- gations and the tragedies that occur ern Romeo and Juliet, Arab and Layleh enters university, planning Jew — separated by their cultural to become a teacher, and Uri join heritages—to point up the futility the military, hoping the fighting of the current situation in the Mid- will soon cease and peace will pre vail. Throughout, their love with dle East. Two families live side by side in stands the censure of their families Jerusalem: the Arnons are a Jewish the conflict of their nations, and family whose father, Arie, believes the trials of separation. In all, a in the possibility of peace between poignant and moving story of the Jews and Arabs — but not in the triumph of love over the barriers of 20th century. The Maleks, an Arab language, culture, and world polifamily, live next door. Mahmoud ucs. on WOMEN'S AMERICAN ORT REPORTER • WINTER ]984 ORT Teachers (Continued from page II) my students—not just teaching them my area of specialization!" A unique aspect of some of the Israeli schools are the "diploma projects" required for graduation, exercises in applying logic and principles creatively—and clear thinking. Some are so sophisticated students sel! them to industry or start their own businesses. ORT Israel also offers teacher-training courses for practical engineers. Other teacher-training courses developed by ORT Israel are in semitechnical subjects, such as fashion, commercial studies and painting. Supervised teaching is also part of these courses. Precious Legacy. One teacher-training unit is located at the Moshinsky Pedagogical Center in Tel Aviv and another will open shortly in Jerusalem. Every year, over 1,000 teachers take courses there. Emphasis is on technical upgrading and on "problem-solving" teacher methodology. Courses are given for teachers who work in special education centers in Holon and Kfar Saba, and there are one-day seminars throughout the year on general subjects. Research on and development of new curricula and study material for a broad range of subjects, including electronics, computersciences, mechanics, auto-mechanics and carpentry, are also part of the curriculum. In France teachers have to cope with a constant influx of immigrants from North Africa, many of whom have to be brought up to required French educational standards. Teachers have to be expert in the use of audio-visual methods as well as skilled in applied pedagogy. In the urban areas where French ORT schools are located, teachers often must be the students' friends and counselors, as many of them come from families trying to adapt to a new country. Also, most ORT teachers continually work at upgrading themselves. All are helped by refresher seminars and by the tutorial system which enables new teachers to be supervised by experienced colleagues. An in-house teaching evaluation system has been established throughout ORT France. "Most Important Aspect" An ORT France teacher who emphasizes the importance of continuous self-betterment is "David." A graduate of an ORT school and the ORT Central Institute, his specialty is nuclear engineering, and he now teaches math and electronics at ORT-Montreuil. For David, the most important aspect of teaching is to establish communication with his students. "The effort a teacher must exert varies in relation to the motivation of his students." he says: "Young people need reassurance, motivation and discipline. They must be encouraged, and they must be convinced by the teacher that what they are doing is applicable and useful. I always adapt myself to the level of the students and create a climate of confidence, because a relaxed class is one in which the teacher teaches well and the students learn well." He feels that his experience as an ex-ORT student has enabled him to establish excellent rapport with his students. "My approach to teaching has changed over the years," he says: "A growing mastery of my subjects and teaching methods has changed my classroom personality. Teachers must constantly adapt to different student levels and personalities—this I regard as extremely important. He also believes lhat the material covered by examinations doesn't keep pace with technological change. He says: "To train students adequately, curricula must be related to industrial needs. As well, teachers have to work together and use material from other disciplines." In Latin America, teachers are trained and upgraded at the Teacher Training Institute which is part of ORT Argentina and the network on that continent can count on high quality personnel, who are not only specialists in their fields, but who, as individuals, bring to their work an original mind and a creative spirit In New York at the Bramson ORT Technical Institute, teachers' evaluation sessions and students' assessment of their teachers are an integral part of the structure. Director Ira Jackoll believes that "evaluation helps teachers to improve. Of course, teachers also attend seminars and conferences in their areas of specialization, as well as in teaching methodology." Most Bramson ORT teachers have had some experience in industry, as well as either Masters or Doctoral Degrees. Its over 250 students can choose to study electronics, opthamology, computer sciences, or business administration skills. There is also a Learning Resource Department, which includes Jewish Studies, English, Math and Physics. Close interdepartmental contact and a frequent exchange of ideas is stressed, and teachers serve on Advisory Boards with industrialists and businessmen, so they can keep courses up-to-date and reality-oriented. Extra-curricular activities keep them in touch with the world of work and they pass this knowledge on to students. "We ask a lot of our teachers, who must adapt to our unique, selfpaced method of instruction. This requires much more preparation and ingenuity. Our teachers must be willing to try—that's why so many of them are young. Bramson is an excellent experience for them!" Despite the fact that industry offers salaries double those currently paid by Bramson, the school has managed to recruit and retain a highlytalented faculty. "The challenge is greater at Bramson," Jaskoll declares, "and so is the teacher's sense of accomplishment. Members of our faculty work long hours, but they enjoy the person-to-person teaching. There is discipline, of course, but our atmosphere is comfortable and relaxed." Indeed, Bramson's teachers—as well as all in the ORT networkbelieve in people; they get involved in much more than teaching, and the satisfaction they take in the enriched lives of their students is a large part of their reward. • • These are some of the treasures of the Jewish families of Central Europe. As Hitler was methodically exterminating their Jewish owners—and millions of other Europeans of all faiths—he was just as methodically collecting in Prague all the Jewish art and sacred objects he could gather from Bohemia and Moravia, today's Czechoslovakia. He wanted to show the collection in a proposed "museum of an extinct people." Rescued from the Nazis at the end of the war, this collection can now be seen for the first time in the United States, in an exhibition tided "The Precious Legacy: Judaic Treasures from the Czechoslovak State Collections." It dramatizes art and history, tragedy and transcendence. And the treasures have become what their owners wanted them to be: links in a chain of continuity, beauty and faith. So long as we treasure these things, the people who loved them can never be extinct. 'The Precious ^Legacy: Judaic Treasures from the Czechoslovak Slate Collections" appears at the Bass Museum of Art Miami Beach January 21-March 18.1984; The Jewish Museum. New York, April 15-Angust 26.1984; San Diego Museum of Art San Diego. September 22-November 18.1984; New Orleans Museum of Art. New Orleans. December 15-February 10 1985- Detroit Institute of Arts Detroit, March 12-May 5,1985; The Wadsworth Atheneum. Hartlbrd. June 3-July 29.1985, Philip Morris Incorporated It takes art to make a company great. Makers of Marlboro. Benson & Hedges 100 s. Merit. Parliament Lights. Virginia Slims, and Players: Miller High Life Beer. Lite Beet and Lourenbrau Special and Dark Special Beer; 7UP and Diet 7UR