72 Friday, September 24, 1982. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 7n,stitutionalized' Anti-Semitism, Increasing Hatred Exposed in Perlmutters"Real Anti-Semitism' Book Xenophobia, dislike of the unlike, has been a frequent annotation for anti- Semitism. The hatred that stems from time immemo-. rial to this day has many other aspects. This continuity of prej- udice is summarized in the newest work on anti- Semitism, "The Real Anti- Semitism in America" (Ar- bor House). Its author is Nathan Perlmutter, na- tional director of the Anti- Defamation League of Bnai Brith. His co-author is his wife, Ruth Ann Perlmutter, who has served, among other positions, as women's division director of Israel Bonds in Florida. One of the chapters in this volume, "The Stamp of Anti-Semitism," em- phasizes the continuity, and states: "Why? Why the persis- tent continuity of anti- Semitism, from ancient and agricultural Egypt to splendorous and militaristic Rome on to classless and scientifi- cally Marxist Moscow? And in all the way sta- tions in between, in time and space, like some pe- rennial poison flower? "In our time, studies have abourrded. Authoritarian personalities, it has been suggested, are the carriers of bigotry and anti- Semitism. Alas, however, I have known too many authoritarian personalities who, politically speaking, wore white hats, their authoritarianism com- promising, but nonetheless furthering do-good causes. Among them have been Jews. "Other studies have traced anti-Semitism to the crucifixion story, and while indubitably the crucifixion of Jesus has played a horrific part in the rationalization of anti-Semitism, from John to Torquemeda and from Torquemada to Father Coughlin and beyond, I wonder. To be sure, the Christian - professing czars scorned Jews as Christ killers. "But the incredibly long wandering, 40-year march from Egypt' was an escape by Jews from the jurisdic- tion of pharaohs who pre- ceded Jesus by centuries. Romans persecuted Jews before taking note of Chris- tians and couldn't have cared less about the crucifixion. Voltaire scorned Christianity yet poured his venom on Jews. "Books, tracts, doc- toral theses, sermons, colloquia, workshops, conferences, seminars have attributed anti- Semitism to capitalism and to communism, to political opportunists, to xenophobia, to father- hatred, to Jews for being too passive and to Jews for being too aggressive. "But for all that these and dozens of other explana- tions may each contain seeds for the sowing • of anti-Semitism by given people in given places at given times, the question remains, Why is anti- Semitism so ubiquitous and perennial? "Why did Egyptians along the Nile, Americans along the Mississippi, dime- less thugs in Berlin and fat cats in posh country clubs, rich, poor and middle classes, black and white, male and female, children and grandparents, church- goers and atheists, the let- tered and the unlettered, the Left and the Right, not infrequently have in com- mon one thing? — their amenability to anti- Semitism?" The totality of coverage of the aspects relating to the never diminishing anti- Semitism is what makes "The Real Anti-Semitism in America" so important. Oil is under scrutiny. Russia is studied for the revelation of "in- stitutionalized anti- Semitism." Therefore the Middle East and Israel's obligation to defend her- self are a major consider- ation, as indicated in the following: "Today, for all the sig- nificant progress Jews have made in the United States, for all that we have never, in all the millenia of our wanderings, enjoyed a safer harbor than here in the United States, Jews are nonetheless uneasy. "Not because of a sensed personal danger, like Tevya's in czarist Anatevka; nor is the unease attributable to lingering re- sentment from boyhood frustration with patterns of discrimination; it is not be- cause of father-experienced humiliating stereotypes; it is not because of neo-Nazis, stirring again, for we know their shadows are longer by far than their hulk; curi- ously, more ominously, it isn't even due to anti- Semitism. "Rather is it a fear of Jewish endangerment coiled in state policies, themselves free of anti- Semitism, which in plausi- ble scenarios spring free, NATHAN and RUTH PERLMUTTER jeopardizing Jewish secu- rity. The dominant anti- Semitism in the haunting of Jews today is without famil- iar anti-Semitism. It is nothing personal . . . as yet. "Oil, for instance, is not anti-Semitic. It is a-Semitic. The parching thirst for it, however, has changed the world's Middle East foreign pol- icy, and in the process has compromised Israel's international standing, and has contributed to the sure-footedness of Is- rael's implacable enemies. "Jews. worry about that and worriedly ruminate .. . What if a Middle East war were to deprive the world of oil? Would a darkened world, a world ground to a halt, scapegoat Israel? Scapegoat Jews, Israel's ad- vocates? "Soviet-American trade is detente's carrot. It earned dollars and pounds, its yens, francs and marks now pla- cate capitalists who only yesteryear vowed unyield- ing hostility to the red menace, to red fascism, terms perferred to com- munism because more lurid, they more accurately described capitalist views. "Detente's acquired technology and supplemen- tary food correspondingly soothes Communists who only yesteryear swore undy- ing contempt for capitalists. For many Jews, however, to say nothing, in this context, of the millions of gentile captives in the Soviet cage, contributions to the stabili- zation of the Soviet system are a helping hand to the one major power in the world today that has in- stitutionalized anti- Semitism. "Peace, sweet peace, yearned for universally, prayed for in a thousand languages, everyman's shared icon, the effectua- tion of which is a states- man's passageway to immortality, can in our time, in the Middle East, sour Jewishly shared longings for it. "Jews are anxious about a Middle Eastern peace that is imposed and that, though it results in the absence of war, and renders oil safe, makes being Jewish in Is- rael hazardous. Being ac- customed to worrying, the Jewish psyche's tolerance for apprehension is ample. "So Jews worry, too, about the fallout of world disapproval and animus, as they continue to press for support of Israel's security and consequently, gradually, increasingly, are perceived by a peace- minded society as intransi- gently indifferent to `peace."' There is the radical J-ew who has turned to the left and' who is an obstacle to pursuance of justice. Noam Chomsky and his negativism are selected to illustrate such obstacles, as the authors state: "In 1981, Professor Noam Chomsky, patron rebbe of the expired but still faintly respiring New Left, authored an intro- duction for a French book, -"Treatise in De- fense Against Those Who Accuse Me of Falsifying History." Its author, Robert Fourisson, prop- ounds the theory that the Holocaust never hap- pened. The Holocaust, it seems, is a Zionist fiction. "Chomsky's introduc- tion, he has assured listen- ers, is not intended as an af- firmation of Fourisson's macabre and cruel anti- Semitism. Rather is he, in gifting his name and presence to the book, affirm- ing the Nazi apologist's freedom of speech, freedom to stoke the embers of Jew hatred. "In an ironic way, the rad- ical or revolutionary Jew is among anti-Semitism's more pathetic victims. His God has failed him so often." Quoting Mark Twain's his‘toric essay "Concerning the Jews," the authors pose an old question regarding jealousies of Jewish accom- plishments, and they relate it to a posed obscenity whether Jews should strive to make their children "av- erage" and not to excel. There is a warning in this volume to Jews not to "default on our covenant with Sinai." There is this moving admonition: "Moshe Dayan, musing on the dual challenge Jews have always faced — of hav- ing to fight their oppressors and simultaneously to fight for the preservation of their Jewish identity — would of an evening read poetry aloud with his wife. "Nathan Alterman's 'The Battle for Granada' was a poem he found especially poignant. In it, Samuel the governor, a 13th Century leader of the Jewish com- munity of Spain and the Berber king's commander of Granada's army, is ad- dressed by another Spanish officer: . . . for apart from the military campaigns of Granada you have another war a war of your own an unending war. It is the war of your people, whose shepherd you are. It is the war of your lan- guage whose hosts you com- mand. It is the war- of your son, whose teacher you are, to teach him the writing of antiquity . ." („) Nathan and Ruth Perlmutter have rendered a great service with a power- fully revealing book. Would that it could be placed in the hands of all Christian ministers, government offi- cials and even Israel's an- tagonists in the Middle East! Its major importance is, of course, for Jews, how must be informed, who must not be misled by false prop- aganda. —P.S. Institute Developing Pacemaker Analyzer REHOVOT — For the half-a-million heart patients throughout the world whose life depends on the reliable functioning of an implanted pacemaker there is now good news from Israel's Weizmann Insti- tute. Institute scientists, work- ing with physicians at Is- rael's Chaim Sheba Medical Center, have developed a comprehensive new system for checking the total per- formance of pacemakers. The Pacemaker Function Analyzer (PFA) is the result of a joint research effort by the institute's Dr. Henryk Fischler of the Department of Membrane Research, and Prof. N. Neufeld of Tel Aviv University's Medical School working with Drs. Salomon Behar and Shlomo Feldman. Advanced electronic techniques are employed to detect a wide range of pacing malfunctions and to provide detailed analysis of what has gone wrong. Test results are available simultaneously in three forms: digitally, on a scope and as a print-out. The finished product was designed by COM Scientific Industries Ltd. of Haifa, which has incorporated the latest microprocessor technology into the self- contained PFA. The new device monitors each element of the pacemaker — its battery and electronics as well as the electrodes attached to the heart. All this is done without causing the im- planted pacemaker to miss a single beat. The painless test, which takes only a few seconds, is completely external: four electrodes are attached to the body's extremities to check the patient's EEG (electrocardiogram) as well as the pulses produced by the pacemaker itself. The instrument's elec- tronics correlate the heart's own function with that of the pacemaker and signal any irregularities. The PFA can be adjusted to test any pacemaker presently on the market and to compare cur- rent performance with that at the time of implantation. Clinical tests of the PFA have been under way at the Heart Institute of Israel's Chaim Sheba Medical Cen- ter since 1974. To date, some 250 pacemaker patients with various heartbeat irregularities have been examined. The PFA's developers point ou'r,, that their device is design& for use in various medics' situations: in both genera' pacemaker clinics; in spE cialized clinics; and i intensive-care units. The system operates as continuous monitor, givii off an alarm and registerii any intermittent failure a print-out for futu analysis. Pacemaker informati can be transferred electr ically via a special. to phone for total analysis the new PFA. In additi PFA software can be dated for compatibility w new pacemakers now be developed. Commercial developm of the PFA is being carr out by Yeda Research a Development Co., RehoN li which handles the licens' to industry of Weizmann!, stitute inventions. [ (,,1