THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 11r., NEWS Friday, April 20, 1984 1110.•- Nur ► ■ PPI" 41111.0., ,'N0W AT ,cFPFiess Continued from Page 1 nominee of the Democratic Party will have within that party strong extremes, the very hawks on the right, the very doves on the left and all of those in between. It is that sense of delicate bal- ance that I am concerned about." Farrakhan, who heads the Nation of Islam group, offered his assessment of the Fuhrer in a March 11 nationwide radio broadcast. It was largely overlooked then because in the same broadcast he urged blacks to ostracize a black reporter, Milton Coleman, who dis- closed in the Washington Post that Jackson had re- ferred to Jews as "Hymies" and to New York City as "Hymietown." In his March 11 broad- cast, the Chicago Tribune quoted Farrakhan as say- ing: "Here, the Jews don't like Farrakhan, so they call him Hitler. Well, that's a good name. Hitler was a very great man. He wasn't great for me as a black per- son, but he was a- great German, and he rose Ger-' many up from the ashes of her defeat by the united force of Europe and America after the First World War. "Now, I'm not proud of Hitler's evils against the Jewish people. But that's a matter of record. He rose Germany up from nothing. Well, in a sense you could say there's a similarity in that we're rising our people up from nothing. But don't compare me with your wicked killers." Two Jewish leaders de- nounced the Black Muslim leader for extolling Hitler and urged Jackson again to repudiate Farrakhan. Rabbi Alexander Schindler, president of the Union of American Hebrew Congre- gations, said, "Mr. Far- rakhan has placed a storm cloud over Jesse Jackson's rainbow coalition, and the result is a dark and deeply disturbing shadow over the American political scene." Schindler added, "I pray that Rev. Jackson will use this latest wild and irres- ponsible statement by his supporter, Louis Far- rakhan, to at last publicly dissociate himself from Mr. Farrakhan and the danger- ous demagogy he repre- sents.' Julius Berman, chairman of the Conference of Presidents of Major Ameri- can Jewish Organizations, said: ` 4 If Mr. Farrakhan plans to do for the black people what Hitler did for the German people, he is an even greater menace to our country, to American blacks and to the cause of racial justice and racial amity than he has already shown himself to be. I ONE HOUR PHOTO "Calling Hitler a 'great man' — even 'wickedly great' — is simply obscene. The sooner black leaders and especially Jesse Jackson repudiate Mr. Far- rakhan and his kind of thinking, the better off all Americans will be." Far- rakhan, at a press confer- ence, accused the media of distorting his remarks but insisted that Hitler could be called "great" in the context of history. "I don't think you would be talking about Adolf Hit- ler 40 years after the fact if he was some miniscule crackpot that jumped up on the European continent. He was, indeed, a great man, but also wicked. Wickedly great," Farrakhan said. Xathan Perlmutter, na- tional director of the Anti- Defamation League of B'nai B'rith, has rejected an offer by Farrakhan that they hold a meeting because his continued threats and pub- r M1115 -ir 1 lic utterances "have created an atmosphere far more conducive to fear and divi- siveness than to rational discourse." In a letter to Farrakhan, the ADL leader said his ini- tial reaction to a meeting had been "affirmative be- cause I too felt that conver- sation among reasonable people, no matter their dif- ferences, is constructive." Farrakhan made his re- quest for, a meeting two weeks ago while Perlmutter was out of the country. Perlmutter went on to say, however, that upon re- turning and reading Far- rakhan's new threats di- rected against Washington Post reporter Milton Cole- man and his wife, he had been convinced that there was "no value" in it. Perlmutter termed the Farrakhan praise of Adolf Hitler as an "incredible and deplorable ignorance of his- tory." 5 X 7 ENLARGEMENT WITH EVERY ROLL PROCESSED (through April) VISIT OUR PRINT GALLERY AND GET 20% OFF • ON ALL CUSTOM FRAMING 29316 NORTHWESTERN HWY. JUST N. OF CARLOS MURPHYS SOUTHFIELD Passover, Easter share some holiday rituals 357-5333 - NOP/ tio. 'At --mar 'No.- —ow Nino- BY MARC TANENBAUM Passover and Easter coin- cide again this year, as they do so often. But historical evidence shows that their similarities of ritual prac- tices are more than coinci- dent. The late Prof. Julian Morgenstern, a great Jewish Biblical scholar, wrote an important but little-known book called Some Antecedents of Chris- tianity. In that study, he discloses that the entire Holy Week observances simply cannot be under- stood — as Jesus and his early followers understood them — apart from their rootedness in Judaism. The pilgrimage to Jerusalem with the carry- ing and waving of palm branches — the lulav — was an early Israelite religious practice of the country. Jews of Palestine inaugu- rated the Passover festival in those days by such rites of purification before Passover. Jesus and his dis- ciples, who were mainly Galilean farmers, consti- tuted a distinct Jewish sect who conformed to that time-honored Jewish folk- ritual. Also, in the early Jewish agricultural calendar, Sun- day was a sacred day and was measured from sunrise to sunrise. Sunrise services on Easter Sunday, therefore was based on the Israelite practice of religious services at sunrise, and the Jewish belief that the day was the beginning of a new year and new life. Prof. Morgenstern also notes that the theme of death and resurrection also traces back to the Jewish tradition that King David went to the Mount of Olives before Passover where he struggled with and defeated the Angel of Death, and then resurrected, he re- turned to Jerusalem in a joyous procession. While Judaism and Christianity are today two distinctive and independent religions, these historic facts suggest that Jews and Christians bear a unique family relationship more significant than both have been willing to acknowl- edge. A Seven Arts Feature School Bible clubs challenged Grand Rapids — The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) will chal- lenge the legality of Bible classes held during school hours in two western Michigan school districts, according to the West Michigan ACLU President Charles Bearden. Bearden said last week that he would file a com- plaint with the Michigan Department of Education charging that the Bible clubs, which have been meeting during lunch hours at elementary schools in Sand Lake and Howard City, violate the Constitu- tional guarantees of separa- tion of church and state. SAVE $3.00 ALBUM or CASSETTE SAVE $2.00 OFF THE LIST PRICE ON ALL BILLY JOEL ALBUMS AND CASSETTES! N 9 MILE WE GIVE GOOD EAR! W. OF WOODWARD - ACROSS FROM FEtM DISCOUNT DISCOUNT ROCK • JAZZ • CLASSICAL RECORDS • TAPES • ETC. Mo sle C co, 547 SAMS Rock Et Jazz - - OPEN 7 DAYS VIM 398-1922 - Classical 13