I LIFE IN ISRAEL I 01) 0 44- ' Specializing In IF YOU WANT • Custom Bedrooms V Competitive Rates • Wall Units v Tax Advantages • Dining Rooms v Complete Safety 48x18x27 $195 00 SOFA TABLE 24x22x22 $145 (1° END TABLE 36x36x16 i175 0 0 BUY U.S. SAVINGS BONDS Where you bank. DESIGN IT INC. Protests Continued from preceding page Keith Schare Designer COCKTAIL TABLE 471-3222.) SALE "all the good stuff is on sale!!" *rads into build a strong foundation with good prenatal care maple & lahser 646-4475 THIS SPACE CONTRIBUTED BY THE PUBLISHER Herzog: "Is it wise to jeopardize?" prime minister's advisor on Arab Affairs, held out an ar- ray of carrots: "An enormous effort will be dedicated to sup- porting the moderate majori- ty," he said. "This means devoting resources and funds to promote their integration into Israeli society and en- hancing their identification as Israelis!' The belief that better schools, roads and communi- ty centers for Arab towns and villages will defuse Arab anger and lead to inter- communal harmony is not, however, shared by all Israeli experts in the field. Professor Moshe Sharon, a specialist in Islamic History at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and a former ad- visor on Arab affairs to Prime Minister Menachem Begin and President Yitzhak Navon, is not nearly so sanguine. He regards the notion that improved quality of life equals improved coexistence as "a dream" based on a misconception of the real roots of the Arab-Israeli conflict. "I'm not saying that Israeli Arabs should not have better schools and facilities," he says. "Indeed, I recommended these things to Begin when I was his advisor on Arab affairs. "But I did so not because I believed that such im- provements would defuse Arab frustration but because that is the nature of Israel. We want to see all our citizens living decent, free, equal lives. "But it is not going to solve any problems. Indeed, it will simply strengthen Arab feel- ings of dissatisfaction and create the desire to translate these social and semipolitical achievements into real Pales- tinian national achievements. "Israeli Arabs have certain- ly not given up the dream of helping to create a Palestin- ian state — not only in the West Bank and Gaza, but also in Israel." Indeed, says Sharon, the fundamental point is that "there are two people — two histories — fighting over the same small piece of land. That is no small thing." The single, central stum- bling block to coexistence, he believes, is the inability of Israel's Arabs — any Arabs — to submit to Jewish rule: "For a Muslim to be ruled by a Jew is unthinkable, and 40 years of Israeli citizenship have not changed that. "If anything, that feeling is more intense today than it was in the past because of the rise of Islamic fundamen- talism, which, first and fore- most, recalls glorious na- tional memories of Islamic empire. "Ultimately, whatever ac- tion Israel does or does not take will make no difference. The truth is, I don't see a solu- tion — this is a problem without a solution." NEWS I 50%-70% OFF Italy Undergoes Upsurge In Anti-Semitism ALL NAME BRANDS • Vertical Blinds • Levolor Blinds • Pleated Shades • Wood Blinds 21728 W. Eleven Mile Rd. Harvard Row Mall Southfield, Ml 48076 Free Professional Measure at No Obligation Free in Home Design Consulting 38 FRIDAY, JANUARY 15, 1988 Hours: Mon.-Sat. 10-5 Thursday 10-8 352-8622 New Rochester Hills 651-5009 Rome (JTA) — The chief rab- bi of Rome, Elio lbaff, last Sunday criticized Pope John Paul II for failing to speak out against anti-Semitism at a time when anti-Semitic threats, graffiti and, in a few cases, violence are spreading here and in other major Italian cities. lbaff, whose remarks ap- peared in the newspaper La Repubblica, also lashed out against the Italian news media for their coverage of Israeli soldiers battling Palestinian rioters in the West Bank and Gaza Strip. He claimed it was biased against Israel and largely responsible for inflaming anti-Semitic passions in Italy in recent weeks. Tbaff said he himself has received hate mail. "We hoped that the pope would have said a word to restore peace and justice, but it didn't happen," the chief rabbi said. A resurgence of anti-Jewish sentiment has alarmed the Jewish community. Graffiti