2 Friday, September 7, 1984 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS PURELY COMMENTARY PHILIP SLOMOVITZ The Red Cross is not a crucifix A regrettable incident is on the communal menu. Otherwise highly idealistic and dedicated to human val- ues, opposition has been expressed in some quarters to the wearing of the Red Cross emblem. Noreen Petersen, assistant direc- tor of the office of public affairs of the Southeastern Michigan Region, calls the protest to our attention. Because the major protester against the wearing of the Red Cross emblem is a dedicated blood donor, and because of his sincerity, there surely will be no objection to linking his name with the issue that has just arisen. Here are the facts as stated by Ms. Petersen: One of our multi-gallon blood donors has presented us with a cause of concern. The donor, Mr. Samuel D. Haber of Southfield, tells us that multi- gallon donors of the Jewish faith do not wear the small pin given to them by Red Cross re- presenting the number of gal- lons the donor has given. Mr. Haber also informs us that when he elects to wear his gallon donor pin (he's a 12- gallon donor), he is criticized by his peers because he is wear- ing a "cross." The pin is shaped like a blood drop with the Red Cross emblem in the center. Mr. Haber thinks Jewish blood donors would wear the gallon pin if it was available with a Star of David in the cen- ter. Try as we might, we have been unable to convince Mr. Haber that our red cross is not a religious symbol., It is the emblem of the American Red Cross while the red Star of David is on the emblem of the Israeli Magen David Adorn Society, the Israeli Red Cross. Ms. Petersen is correct in her analysis and it merits support, urging Mr. Haber and all concerned to be realistic in so urgent a matter. It is the humanity of it that counts and the Red Cross insignia must not be judged as a crucifix. The founder of the Red Cross, Jean Henri Dunant, was not a cleric or an ecclesiast. He was a great humanist who inspired one of the world's most important movements, and the Red Cross must be treated as such. (Note the historical account of the Dunant- Red Cross creativity in The Jewish News Purely Commentary, June 8, 1984.) The surprise is that a protest like Mr. Haber's should have been called to the attention of the Red Cross authorities and to public notice at so late a date. The cross irritates the con- scious Jew because of the tragic ex- periences that are on record in the per- secutions of Jews under the influence of the cross through the centuries. But the Red Cross must not be confused with the tragic and should be treated in the glory of immense humanism. There has also been heard the pro- test over International Red Cross fail- ure to embrace and include in its ranks the Magen David Adorn of Israel. While cooperating fully with the MDA, the Israeli counterpart of the Red Cross, the pressure that often re- sults in injustice has kept Magen David Adorn from the international af- filiation. Not to be forgotten, however, is that the American Red Cross con- tinues to battle in support of the MDA's right to be in the International Red Cross. Hopefully, Mr. Haber and his fel- low loyalists to the Red Cross as mul- tiple blood donors, as well as the army of Jewish supporters of the Red Cross, will recognize the justice of Ms. Peter- sen's appeal in behalf of her move- ment. We endorse her urgent appeal as an expression of realism and justice. `The shame of Israel' Meir Kahane's tactics, his irra- tional call to Arabs to emigrate from Israel, was described by one member of that nation's Knesset as "the shame of Israel." That one percent of Israel's population appears to have differed by having given Kahane a mandate to propagate hatred and to endorse vio- lence does not diminish the description of shamefulness. Kahane is already in this country on a fundraising mission to enroll sup- port for his policies and actions. There is always a supporting element, even for violence and racism and fascism. Therefore, the need for the emphatic declaration that such intolerance is in- tolerable. Israel can provide a solution to the regrettable that enabled a Kahane to gain a seat in the Knesset. It can mod- ify the present regulation enabling one percent of the voting constituents to gairi parliamentary representation. A five percent rule would obviate it. That's of course, an obligation for Israelis to pursue. The urgency of such a change becomes obvious if the claim is true that 500 Arabs voted for Kahane, even though they are his target. The explanation is that such a group of Arabs mobilized with an opportunity to register a vote for a candidate who would disgrace Israel and the Jewish people with his ter- rorizing policies. Israel will surely know how to obviate such shameful- ness in the future, and American Jews, when approached for financial support for terrorism in Israel, shoud know how to react to the impending dis- gracefulness. Accepting the challenge of politicized clericalism For a few days after the national conventions of both political parties, in the aura of clericalism and the attempt to fan religious fervor in the political spheres, there were very many who wondered: why the silence in Demo- cratic ranks? Walter F. Mondale pro- vided the answer. He explained towards the end of last week that he could not deal with the issue in a mere interview, that it needed a thorough analysis and a proper response to President Ronald Reagan's statement that "religion and politics are neces- sarily related." The impression gained thus far, th'at a pre-election, frightened Con- gress submitted to the trap of adopting legislation that would lead to the abandonment of the principle of Sep- aration of Church and State, has gained wide acceptance. It would be a slur on the common sense of the American people to judge a temporary silence as yielding to the Reagan politicized-religion viewpoint. Now we have on the record Mondale's readi- ness to challenge, which means reject, the Reagan proposals. It would have been better if Mon- dale were to do the replying at a church rather than at the convention of the B'nai B'rith.,But, be that as it may, the response should be made at once before it becomes overdue. The American people must be made aware of the danger that stems from a call from U.S. Senator Paul Laxalt, who is regarded as President Reagan's closest friend, to 45,000 ministers in 16 states, addressing each as "Dear Christian Leader." Senator Laxalt wrote: "As chairman of Reagan- Bush '84, the President's authorized campaign commit- tee, I am writing to ask you to play a significant role in what may very well be the most pivotal election of this century. "President Reagan, as you know, has made an unwaver- ing commitment to traditional values which I know you share. In addition, he has, on several occasions, articulated his own spiritual convictions. As lead- c. R onald R eagan ers under God's authority, we cannot afford to resign our- selves to idle neutrality . . . Join us to help assure that those in your ministry will have a voice in the upcoming elections — a voice that will help secure the re-election of President Re- agan and Vice President Bush." While it is of the utmost impor- tance that Mondale do the replying to Reagan, the rejection of politicized religion is already on the record from many sources. The Presidential chal- lenge is widely accepted. The religious fanfare in the current political cam- paign has become the concern of many in the media and -James Reston thus met it in the New York Times in his column: There are several things wrong with this. It goes beyond the right, which both parties practice, to preach for or against the moral and social is- sues of the campaign, and it is not quite clear who appointed the Republicans as "leaders under God's authority." It is also risky for what President Reagan calls "America's party" because it divides the country, appeals to Walter Mondale the convinced and ignores the unconvinced, who also have a vote. Senator Laxalt's political pamphlet proclaims that "President Reagan has been faithful in his support of issues of concern to Christian citi- zens." No doubt Mr. Reagan's school-prayer, anti-abortion and women's rights policies are "of concern" to many Chris- tians, but not to all Christians or even to all Republicans, and not at all to many voters of different religions or secular persuasions. This is what is beginning to concern some of the President's campaign advisers: that his religious arguments will lose more votes in the North than they will pick up among the fundamentalists in the South, and encourage vot- ers of other religious convic- tions to oppose him in Novem- ber. After all, Mr. Reagan's school-prayer, pro-life and anti-E.R.A. policies are not the only "issues of concern to Continued on. Page 12