Friday April 25, 1997
At national leadership mission, Orthodox Jews show diversity
DANIEL KURTZMAN Jewish Telegraphic Agency
WASHINGTON -- Moving from one warm reception to the next, the nearly 200 Orthodox Jewish activists looked like old hands on the Washington scene. "We came to see and be seen," said Rabbi Moshe Sherer, president of Agudath Israel of America, which brought activists from across the country here this month for a national leadership mission. "We feel it is extremely important" that decision-makers "realize there is a responsible and effective voice of Orthodox Jewry, not only from what they consider the cloistered areas of Brooklyn, but also from Oregon and Texas and Indiana." Through their presence in the nation's capital, Sherer said he hoped to illustrate "that the Orthodox movement of this country has spread throughout the entire nation and that it has independent views which Agudath Israel proudly articulates with dignity and with responsibility." In meetings at the White House, the Supreme Court and on Capitol Hill, top officials and government leaders briefed the activists on issues such as the Middle East peace process, benefits for legal immigrants, restitution efforts for victims of the Holocaust and church-state matters. Although the visit did not include any direct lobbying visits, the delegation was walking proof that the American Jewish community is not monolithic. Unlike most of the organized Jewish community, for instance, Agudah supports greater government involvement with religious schools. The group advocates school voucher proposals. Praising their work, Vice President Al Gore told the delegates: "Our administration has worked hard to stress the important role of religion and values in our families, communities and our country. "I want to applaud your work day in and day out to make sure that these values are imbued in Jewish communities and families throughout the United States." At the Supreme Court, Justice Antonin Scalia, a conservative, expressed concern about the way the high court has resolved recent church-state issues. He said the court has devised "formulaic abstractions" that moved jurisprudence away from America's longstanding tradition, which he said "favors religion." "When I say this before a Jewish audience, I sometimes jump up on the table and do `Tradition' from `Fiddler on the Roof,' " Scalia said. "My constitutional interpretation" of church-state issues "is based as his was, upon tradition," he said, referring to Tevye, the milkman. The activists were also briefed by Secretary of Health and Human Services Donna Shalala, U.S. special Middle East coordinator Dennis Ross, Undersecretary of Commerce Stuart Eizenstat, Acting Solicitor General Walter Dellinger and several members of Congress, including Sens. Alfonse D'Amato (R-N.Y.), Joseph Lieberman (D-Conn.). and John Ashcroft (R-Mo.).
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