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Friday, February 6, 1987

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Avi Chayon is treated by medics after he and his brother Shalom
were stabbed in Jerusalem's Old City on Jan. 17.

Jerusalem Edgy After
Wave Of Stabbings

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THE 23 SHOPPING DAYS
OF MIRAGE

GIL SEDAN

Special to The Jewish News

F

or the first time since
Jerusalem was
reunified more than 19
years ago, Israelis walk
through the crowded, narrow
alleys of the Old City minding
their backs.
The stroll past the colorful
shops and stands, the pleasant
encounter with the sights,
noises and smells of a true
oriental bazaar, have given
way to fear of a knife plunged
in one's back.
On Saturday evening, Jan.
17, two Jewish brothers walk-
ing in the Moslem Quarter
with a girl friend were stabbed
by unidentified assailants.
This was the sixth case of stab-
bing in the same area in the
past 16 months. David
Lifschitz was stabbed in De-
cember, after Friday night
prayers. Yeshiva student
Eliahu Amedi, 22, was stabbed
to death on Nov. 15. A year ago,
three other Jews were stabbed.
Except for the murderers of
Amedi, who were caught
shortly after the attack, all
other attackers are at large.
"I no longer feel safe," said
Zvi Hershko, 27, a student. "I
used to walk down to the Old
City just for the fun of it. No
more — now I only go there if I
have to."
The truth is, nobody really
has to go there. Most Israeli
Jews visiting the Old City are
either from out of town, and
consider the bazaar and Arab
cuisine part of the fun of a visit
to Jerusalem, or residents who
get up on Saturday in need of
cigarettes, or what have you,
with all the Jewish stores shut
because of Shabbat.
The change that has taken
place in the past few weeks is
twofold: more and more Is-
raelis maintain a distance

from the Moslem Quarter, and
more and more Israelis are get-
ting fed up that they cannot
walk in peace in an area they
consider to be the heart of
Eretz Yisrael.
"Hell, it is ours, isn't it,?"
said Dror Eliaz, 20, a soldier.
"So why can't we walk there
freely?"
The sense of frustration is
successfully exploited by
Jewish extremists. Shortly
after the latest stabbings,
Jewish hotheads attacked in-
nocent Arabs for revenge. They
were not acting in a social vac-
uum.
Activists of Rabbi Meir
Kahane's Kach movement use

Israelis maintain a
distance

every opportunity of Jews at-
tacked by Arabs to spread their
anti-Arab messages. They
make a point of visiting the
families of the victims, paying
their condolences, cheering up
spirits and spreading the word
that the status quo is a result of
the "lenient official policy
toward the Arabs."
Recently, Kahane was
quoted as saying that he hoped
"a new Jewish underground
existed." When he was ques-
tioned by police on suspicion of
incitement, he tried to smooth
his statement, but the strong
anti-Arab message picks up
momentum every time a Jew is
attacked.
The latest victims, brothers
Avi and Shalom Chayon, were
residents of the Jewish
neighborhood of Musrara,
across the street from the walls
of the Old City. Shortly after
the attack, riot police were sent
to the neighborhood to prevent
revenge attacks.
Eyeing a column of border
policemen, David Swissa, 17, a

