EDITORIAL Repairing Shards Rep. Tom Lantos of California issued a challenge to his fellow Jews on Sunday. In effect, he said it was up to the Jewish people to insure that the post-Holocaust slogan "Never Again" is more than rhetoric. Lantos stirred the large crowd attending the Holocaust Memorial Center dinner downtown, admonishing Jews to take an active role in human rights efforts on behalf of all people throughout the world. In this way, he explained, Jews can prevent a future Holocaust. Holocaust survivor Lantos may have seen the reports out of Chicago last week. The smashing of windows at Chicago synagogues and Jewish stores on the anniversary of Kristallnacht in Nazi Ger- many served, if nothing else, to bring the era of hate close to home again. The fact that one of those arrested in Chicago has ties to Detroit's own neo-Nazis — the SS Action Group — should make Detroiters a bit more wary. Educational efforts at all levels are important to combat hatred. The efforts of the HMC, the new Holocaust curriculum of the Center for the Study of the Child, the year-long World of Difference effort of the Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith help to increase understanding and reduce prejudice. But we must continue to be vigilant to ensure that Kristallnacht 1987 was an aberration, and not the norm of Kristallnacht 1938. Do the results add up to a growing, if belated and grudging, ac- ceptance by the Arabs of the Jewish state in their neighborhood? Or could this new-found unity, with Egypt as the engine, propel the Arabs into another military confrontation with Israel? Hopefully Egypt will act as a conduit for peace, rather than war. Positive Pressure In a recent speech before a Jewish charitable organization, former President Gerald Ford urged the U.S. Jewish community to be wary of exerting too much pressure on the Soviets during Mikhail Gor- bachev's upcoming visit to the United States. There is little doubt that the Soviets respond to public pressure. Gorbachev seems very much aware of the positive results of projec- ting a good image. It therefore seems incumbent upon us to rise up and descend upon Washington en masse two weeks from now, in as forceful and deliberate a show of unified support for Soviet Jewry as we can possibly muster. Gorbachev can hardly overlook the event. HERE'S OUR UNDA: ifJ 'CIE MIDDLE EAST, RAC? WAR, t t t/#11.1 14 E AND How cAN WE 131.4M iT ALL ON ISFVEL WHo WANTS To BEGIN ? ?-- j Summit Summary What is one to make of the Arab League Summit which concluded this week in Amman, Jordan? The "moderate" camp, led by Jordan's King Hussein managed to control the meeting's agenda and its outcome. For the first time, Israel was not named as the greatest "threat" to the Arabs; that honor went to Iran. Also, Israel's arch-enemy, the Palestine Liberation Organization, was pushed to the sidelines. And while not officially welcoming Egypt — banished from the Arab League for making peace with Israel — back into the fold, the summit opened the way for member states to honorably renew rela- tions with their most powerful sister. Practically all of them did this week, indicating that making peace with Israel no longer automatically makes an Arab a leper. LETTERS Why Side With Leftists? ... While it was generally known, that Arza and Mercaz came into being primarily to espouse the concept of religious pluralism in Israel, one wonders whether their Reform and Conservative con- stituency — representing a centrist, political orientation — had envisaged their elected representatives making a deal with Mapam, the most leftist of Israel's political par- ties, in order to make a political statement . ." By joining a leftist, anti- Likud coalition, Arza and Mercaz are apt to alienate a major segment of the Israeli electorate supportive of religious freedom, but equal- ly supportive of the Likud's political line .. . 6 FRIDAY, NOV. 20, 1987 Clearly, this is not the way to advance religious freedom. Why Arza and Mercaz did not seek ways to coalesce with more compatible Zionist organizations that share their commitment to religious freedom and are more in tune with the views and concerns of their respective constituen- cies, is not clear. Surely, those who were per- suaded to vote for their slates to the World Zionist Congress deserve an explanation. Ezekiel Leikin Southfield No Clash At Seminar From her opening remarks in "Traditional, Modern Views Clash Over Reproduc- tion" (Nov. 6), I wondered if Lisa Jacknow Ellias attended the same discussion that I did. That there were going to be differences of opinion was a given in the very planning of the panel. Ms. Ellias missed the point entirely by not recognizing that our diverse community was able to come together to express those differences in an open forum, and without chastizing each other in the process. In fact, several times I noted speakers drawing on common points, and when backgrounds or beliefs differ- red they politely stated so. Hardly the "clash" inferred. I would like to clarify a point made by Rabbi Silberberg who stated, that in ". . the wasting of the seminal seed . . . homosex- uality is a capital offense." True, certain homosexual acts, as well as certain heterosexual acts, are con- demned in scripture, but not the condition of being homosexual .. . Peter A. Cooper Southfield Pay Cuts Hurt Education Regarding "Shaarey Zedek Cuts Teacher Pay" (Oct 30), prior to our recent pay cut of ten percent, and prior to the recent salary increases of four percent given to the teachers of United Hebrew Schools, Shaarey Zedek Hebrew teachers earned 16-22 percent less than our United Hebrew School counterparts .. . We teachers at Shaarey Zedek are all professionals and very dedicated to retain- ing the high quality of educa- tion at our school, but such lowering of salaries can only weaken the professionalism in Jewish education. This reduction to salary levels of a decade ago has had a devastating effect on the morale of our religious school staff. If indeed the president of Cong. Shaarey Zedek can state that he is "proud of his teachers," why then are we treated in such a fashion . . .? Hebrew Teachers Association of Cong. Shaarey Zedek Let Us Know The Jewish News welcomes concise, typewritten, double- spaced letters. Cor- respondence must be signed and include the writer's daytime phone number. Our address: 20300 Civic Center Dr. Ste. 240 Southfield, MI 48076