http://www.jpost.com/com/Archive/13.Nov.1997/News/Article-7.htmlThe Jerusalem Post
Thursday, November 13, 1997 13 Heshvan 5758
Evangelical Christians Supply Major Source of UJA Donations
By ARYEH DEAN COHEN
JERUSALEM (November 13) -- An Evangelical Christian group has emerged as one of the leading contributors to the United Jewish Appeal in recent years, and its leader claims it has become the single largest donor to the UJA in 1997.According to Rabbi Yechiel Eckstein, director of the International Fellowship of Christians and Jews, a Chicago-based organization, his group will turn over some $5 million in contributions to the UJA this year, almost totally from Evangelical Christians.
UJA officials confirmed that the group is currently the largest donor in Chicago, that it raised $2.5 million last year, then "promised to double it" this year. UJA officials could not say whether they were the largest donor overall.
Despite the contributions, however, Eckstein said that Jewish Agency Chairman Avraham Burg and other senior agency officials had refused to meet with him. He said they are happy to take the contributions, but uneasy about being associated with the Evangelicals.
Burg refused to comment on that accusation yesterday, but a senior agency source said that "since taking office, he has told people that he planned only to deal with matters of the Jewish people, because it was their agency, and he did not plan to deal with groups whose fundamentalist agenda contradicts his world view."
Eckstein, an ordained Orthodox rabbi, said his group had initially raised money to bring Jews from the former Soviet Union to Israel, and is now involved in a project in conjunction with the Joint Distribution Committee to help feed and care for elderly Jews who choose to remain in the FSU.
In one case, one donor paid for an entire charter flight of 170 immigrants from Tashkent.
Eckstein, who appeals to donors via a series of television and radio programs, said the group also tries to alter stereotypes held by Jews regarding Evangelical Christians.
He said many Evangelicals make donations in keeping with the Christian tradition of tithing, based on Genesis 12, verse 3, where God tells Abraham: "And I will bless those who bless you."
One woman donated over $1,000 she had saved for a new car, saying she thought it was more important to use it to bring Jews to Israel. A postal clerk traveled from Atlanta to Chicago to personally deliver a wad of $100 bills he had saved from his monthly paycheck.