-411111111111111W. -111 : errEt Oil 12 Friday, November 12, 1982 THE DETROlt JEWISH 'NEWS : • RENT • VIDEO • GAMESsio • • Fund Raisers • Bar Mitzvas • Birthdays • Graduations • Confirmations • House and Office Parties no coins . . . unlimited play a n k e y K O g n • • • a a Ideal for... a • I WEEKDAY SPECIAL 2 Games for $150 with this ad t a A-1 VIDEO GAME RENTALS ; 827-8880 • *6 Ms. Pao Man and more , AO II New Jew Has Emerged Since the Holocaust By REV. FRANKLIN LITTELL National Institute on the Holocaust PHILADELPHIA — At the recent Annual Confer- ence on Teaching the Holocaust, two of the key speakers agreed upon this point: the emergence of Jews from powerlessness has created a new kind of Jew. In earlier generations in Christendom the Jewish minority learned to live without power. The virtues cultivated were patience and long-sufferingness. The axioms were, "Don't make waves ... Don't fight back: MAGGIA Have you ever heard of Maggio? 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Vidal Sassoon, veteran of the Israel War of Inde- pendence, makes a very strong presentation of the thesis that the found- ing of the state of Israel has given us a new Jew — one conscious of his rights and dignities, without obsequiousness, not beholden to the generosity of others for the right to live. Whether we date the ap- pearance of a new type of Jew with the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising and other resistance actions, or with the establishment of mod- ern Israel, the message is the same: the suffering and wandering Jew of Chris- tendom is gone and a new Jew steps forward as pro- tagonist. The reaction of Christian anti-Semites, who can tolerate (temporarily) the Jew who is a loser, but can- not stand the Jew who is a winner (and hates with a passion the state of Israel), is further documentation of the fact that a change has occurred. The Jew who fought back in Warsaw, who revolted in Sobibor and other camps, who ambushed Nazi forces in the forests of Eastern Europe, was a new kind of Jew. He had to break from the traditions of his fathers, traditions developed during centuries of survival in Christendom. The transition was hard. The Jews of War- saw did not fight when they were 400,000 crowded in during the first stage of Nazi tactics: they only fought, those who were left, when it be- came clear that survival was no longer an option. For them the only ques- tion left was, "How shall we die?" The new type of Jew does not intend to allow that question to arise again. - In the Holocaust, the logic of Christendom - was brought to its final conclu- sion. The gentile Church Fathers had taught that God was through with the Jews, and that message was proclaimed for centuries thereafter in sermons and lectures. The Holocaust was a logical if terrible reading of that proposition. Today, the new type of Jew rallies to the banner: "Never again!" This slogan should not be identified with the lunatic politics of Meir Kahane and Kach in Israel. Kahane is as far from the center of Jewish life and Jewish survival as is the Satmer rebbe who prefers REV. LITTELL the miseries of Christendom to the glories of a restored Israel. "Never again!" receives its most important transla- tion into action in the oath of Israel's young recruits: "Masada shall not fall again!" The new problems of the new type of Jew, after 1,500years of alternating patronage and persecu- tion by officially Chris- tian nations, have to do with the responsible uses of power. This writer, an "out- grouper," has often won- dered why Americans feel so free to tell Israelis how to live and die. Public indi- viduals and agencies re- lentlessly apply a double standai'd, sitting on Cloud Nine to moralize about Is- rael's government and its actions. Not Soviet Russia, not red China, not the medieval fiefdom of Saudi Arabia, not the lunatic div- tatorships of Libya and Iran are bludgeoned by self- righteous judgments of the sort daily levied upon Is- rael. As for the media, we did not lie about Nazi Germany in World War II the way the media have in recent weeks lied about the IDF police ac- tion against PLO terrorists in Lebanon. The media have done everything possible, up to and including deliber- ate falsification of data, to portray that action — for which the whole civilized world should be grateful — as equivalent to World War III. The gentiles, and espe- cially anti-Semitic nests like the Near East office of the National Council of Churches, are propelled by traditional Christian anti- Semitism and resentment of Jewish survival. But why do some American Jews re- lapse so readily into ob- sequiousness and protective coloration when the hea- then rage? Why, to ask an impolite question, is there so much evidence of the ghetto mentality in the Jewish establishment — so much eagerness, for example, to prove that Jews, too, can hate Begin and Sharon and join the chorus to condemn Israel whenever a mistake is made or said to be made by that government? After all, legitimate gov- ernments make mistakes and in due time they are corrected: only dictator- . , ships "never, make mis- takes"! The question forces itself to the fore: Have some of these spokesmen for Ameri- can Jewry really learned the lessons of the Holocaust? Are they really this side of the mountain, along with the few sur- vivors of resistance to Nazism, alongside the people of Israel? Do they realize that America is radically differ- ent from old Christendom, that under First Amend- ment protection all citizens can stand up straight? Or are they still carrying the burdens and anxieties of state-church Christendom, still instinctively reverting in crisis to the postures of powerlessness? (Editor's note: Franklin H. Littell is a Methodist minister, professor of reli- gion at Temple University and corresponding faculty member of the Institute of Contemporary Jewry, He- brew University, Jerusalem. (He was educated at Cor- nell College, Iowa, Union Theological Seminary and Yale University. (Since 1958 he has been consultant on religion and higher education to the National Conference of Christians and Jews. Other public services in- clude: co-founder and first chairman of the In- stitute for American Democracy, an organiza- tion specializing in prob- lems of extremism and terrorism; founder and honorary chairman of the National Institute on the ' Holocaust; co- founder and first chair- man of the Annual Schol- ars Conference on the Church Struggle and the Holocaust; founder and honorary chairman of the Annual Conference on Teaching the Holocaust; founder and honorary president of the National Christian Lead- ership Conference for Is- rael. (Dr. Littell is the author of 275 major articles and 20 books, including "The Crucifixion of the Jews," "Religious Liberty in the Crossfire of Creeds" and "A Pilgrim's Interfaith Guide to the Holy Land." (He is a member by Presidential appointment of the U.S. Holocaust Memo- rial Council and by Israel Cabinet appointment of the International Council of Yad Vashem. In 1980 he re- ceived the Jabotinsky Medal from. Prime Minister Begin for his work in furth- ering Christian - Jewish understanding. (For nearly a decade he was an officer in the Ameri- can occupation of post-war Germany and in 1959 re- ceived the Grosse Ver- dienstkreuz from' the Ger- man Federal Republic for his assistance to religious and educational institu- tions and movements and for furthering American/ German reconciliation.)