ERROR: Random File Unopenable

ERROR: Random File Unopenable

The random file, as specified in the $random_file perl variable was unopenable.

The file was not found on your file system. This means that it has either not been created or the path you have specified in $trrandom_file is incorrect.


Get on TheList!
STORIES IN THIS ISSUE
FEATURES
     Choice schools
     Mystery writer's success
     The greening of Jewish America
VALLEY
     Merger of UJA, CJF
     AIPAC's eyes on D.C.
     Church-state separation
     Silvers praised
NATION
     Healing the bipartisan rift
     Orthodox bring out thousands for rally
WORLD
     Publishers compete over Anne Frank biographies
ISRAEL
     Conservatives pursue action on conversions
OPINION
     Editorial - Put on a clip
     Analysis - Let's let pluralism happen
     In the Mail - Letters to the Editor
     Latz - 'You people,' our people
ARTS
     Don't 'fuggit' about this movie
     Meyer Lansky through a filter
BUSINESS
     Jewelry made with art and soul
     Business Calendar
TORAH STUDY
     Compromise and consolation

Singles Connection
HOME PAGE

March 5, 1999/17 Adar 5759, Vol. 51, No. 23

Jewish senator leads effort to heal bipartisan rift

DANIEL KURTZMAN
Jewish Telegraphic Agency
WASHINGTON - A handful of senators gathered in the spirit of post-impeachment reconciliation last week at an interfaith ceremony on Capitol Hill.

Sens. Joseph Lieberman (D-Conn.), the Senate's only Orthodox Jew, and Sam Brownback (R-Kan.), a Methodist, organized the event in hopes of starting a bipartisan healing process to move lawmakers beyond the polarizing divisions of recent months. Although the low turnout - only seven senators showed up - did not appear to bode well for a new spirit of comity, many of those at the gathering said it may be a sign of the pro-gress that has already been made toward reconciliation following the impeachment trial.

"This very divisive, troubling episode actually, I think, united us, as men and women, as individuals who happened to be senators," said Lieberman, who, along with Brownback, co-chairs the Center for Jewish and Christian Values, which coordinated the gathering.

Putting a positive face on the low turnout, Rabbi Yechiel Eckstein said the fact that more senators were not there may actually be a "good sign" that they have already heeded the public's call to move on.

"Having a closure service a week and a half after" the end of the impeachment trial "may have even been too late," said Eckstein, the center's president. Still, he said, the event "was as much a closure of one door as it was our attempt to open up the new door of cooperation and renewal."

Joining Lieberman and Brownback were three Democrats and four Republicans: Sens. Daniel Akaka (D-Hawaii), John Ashcroft (R-Mo.),Christopher Dodd (D-Conn.), James Inhofe (R-Okla.), Charles Robb (D-Va.), Jeff Sessions (R-Ala.) and Ted Stevens (R-Alaska).

Also participating in the ceremony were Senate Chaplain Lloyd Ogilvie, Rev. Joan Brown Campbell of the National Council of Churches, Richard Land of the Southern Baptist Convention and Archbishop Justin Rigali of St. Louis.

Lieberman, for his part, said that while the Senate may have already made strides toward reconciliation, in light of the disconnect between Washington and the rest of the country, lawmakers must "find ways to reach out to the public, to reconnect, to reassure them of the worthiness of our intentions."

An observant Jew who last month found himself sitting in trial of President Clinton on Shabbat, Lieberman pointed to examples of reconciliation in the Bible. There is inspiration to be found, he said, in the story of Isaac and Ishmael, who came together to bury their father, Abraham; in Joseph for giving his brothers for selling him into slavery; and in what he called "the reconciliation of God with all of us, His highly imperfect creations."


Home