THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, February 22, 1985 15 Advertising in The Jewish News Gets Results Place Your Ad Today. Call 354-6060 LAS VEGAS NIGHT sponsored by CONGREGATION BETH ACHIM MEN'S CLUB 21100 W. 12 MILE RD., SOUTHFIELD, MICHIGAN SATURDAY, MARCH 2, 1985 8:00 P.M. - 1:00 A.M. DONATION $5.00 TICKETS AVAILABLE AT THE DOOR (MUST BE 21 OR OVER) BLACK JACK - OVER & UNDER - CRAPS - ROULETTE that she too should have to be exposed to the dangers of war. In Jerusalem, his wife can move about freely and is studying Hebrew at an ulpan. She may even decide to at- ) tend meetings of Hadassah- Israel, having received a gift membership from an aunt who is a national officer of Hadassah in America. Friedman found an "enor- mous contrast" in the means of gathering news in Beirut and Jerusalem. In Beirut, there were no trustworthy of- ficial news channels, and re- porters had difficulty in checking the authenticity of the information they received. "Here, information is hand- ed to you on a silver platter — good reliable information." In spite of the availablity of reliable information, how- ever, Friedman must conti- nue to work hard at his busi- ness of being a good and knowledgeable reporter. Dur- ing the week in which I inter- viewed him, he had traveled north to Lebanon for a first- hand look at the preparations for Israel's pull-out, as well as all the way south to Taba, and then to Beersheba twice, in his coverage of the Egypt- ian-Israeli negotiations. His being Jewish, and hav- ing positive feelings about his Jewishness, in no way affects his functioning as a corres- pondent, he maintained. Peo- ple respect him and react to him as the New York Times reporter, which is how he wants it. "My editors sent me here because they had the confi- dence that I would do the job. Quite honestly, religion real- ly doesn't play a factor." He conceded that some L )1 people tend to expect more of a Jewish correspondent in the Middle East, to a certain ex- tent. "But serious readers un- derstand., and certainly gov- ernment officials understand, that I'm a New York Times correspondent, pure and sim- ple. That's where my loyal- ,— ties and allegiance lie. "People less sophisticated and less familiar with how the press works might be more demanding on that score, but I don't take it very seriously. I do my job, and I don't mind getting angry let- ters. "Nobody elected me to this job; I'm not running for public office. My job is Israel's reali- ty, not Israel's image. Is- rael's image is the job of Is- rael Peleg, head of the Israel government press office. " Obviously, Friedman has little choice in deciding what "hard news" stories to cover. In choosing what to write about in a city overflowing with possible feature stories, however, he said he asks him- self two questions. The first "My job is Israel's reality, not Israel's image!' is whether it's something worth reporting; i.e., some- thing that he won't be blow- ing out of proportion, but is worth his attention and the attention of his readers. The second question is whether it is really a story, something he can "sell" to his editors. "Once I've answered those two, that's really the only cri- terion I have. If it reflects well on Israel, fine; if it doesn't re- flect well on Israel, also fine. "Is it correct, is it the reali- ty? Reality in every sense of the word. Not just is it real, but is it in the right propor- tion, is it part of what is im- portant about Israel today that my readers should know about — whether it's large or small. That's what I care about. "Israel is a bundle of con- tradictions, good and bad, and I think it's the job of any reporter who's trying to re- flect accurately what's going on here to do a wide range of stories. In doing a wide range of stories, you do stories that reflect more positively on Is- rael's image and some that reflect more negatively. But the reality here is both." Friedman is careful to point out that he is not a "self- hating Jew," that he has nev- er attempted to hide his Jew- ishness, that he has no psy- chological hangups about it. "I'm an American of the Jewish faith and I'm very proud to be Jewish. I'm a firm believer in the Jewish state, and the right of the Jewish people to have a state. "No one can ever say I made my career or got where I did by hiding who I was. I don't believe in that and I never have." Actually, Friedman's being Jewish may even have helped his becoming chief of the Je- rusalem bureau in particular. Friedman said that the Times' executive editor, A.M. Rosen- thal had long wanted a Jew in the Jerusalem position and had appointed David Shipler, Friedman's predecessor, mis- takenly believing that Shipler was Jewish. Although Friedman char- acteristically made no effort to hide his Jewishness in Bei- rut, it was completely irrele- vant to his function as the Times correspondent there. In a city whose population he described as comprising a "mosaic of religious frag- ments," the question of his religion never came up. At times, he would find himself sitting down to talk with a rabid Arab nationalist who was anxious to tell his story to the New York Times correspondent. "My approach has always been that people respond to you on the basis of what you yourself project and give," he said. "If you approach people like the representative of the United Jewish Appeal, they will respond to you as the representative of the United Jewish Appeal. 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