I CONTENTS I--- OPINION CLOSE-UP Empty Symbol LILA ORBACH Managua's synagogue and Nicaragua's people share a common fate. 42 ANN ARBOR One-Sided Poetry ANDY WEINE A "dialogue event" takes on an anti-Israel flavor. CI) 46 SPORTS co 0 0 Bursting The Bubble A demonstrator was arrested during a Peace Now protest of the Israeli government's handling of the Palestinian unrest in Gaza and the territories. Moving Beyond Riot Coverage MIKE ROSENBAUM A recreation building will replace the JCC's fallen tennis bubble. 50 . A Leader's Concern The End Result THEODORE ELLENOFF A CARL ALPERT n open letter to the people of Israel: I am addressing this letter to you directly, not out of the presumption that, as president of the American Jewish Committee, I have any special standing with you, but because American Jewry — at least that portion on whose behalf I am empowered to speak — feels an intense and personal affinity for you. Like many other American Jewish organizations, my organization com- municates directly with your government both publicly and privately, and we will continue to do so. But it is important for you, the Israeli people, to know what our organization feels and believes about the current situation, for not only are we im- portant to one another, but we also depend on one another. Two major Jewish com- munities, both intensely democratic, link- ed by values and by a common history, ought to speak directly and precisely to each other. Rest assured that the events of the past six weeks have not divided us. We stand with you, profoundly sympathetic to the dilemma which you and your government face in confronting the upsurge of violence in the territories. We know -that Israel never sought to be an occupier; that the mainstream of Zionism always sought cooperation and coexistence; that at every juncture the Jewish leadership in Man- datory Palestine and the State of Israel recognized and accepted the presence and rights of Palestinian Arabs. From the Peel Commission in 1937 to group of Arab women and children went out for a peaceful walk one morning, when they were brutally attacked by a gang of pistol-toting Israeli soldiers. Some of the Arabs had limbs and ribs broken as they ran screaming from the scene, helpless before the Jewish ruffians. A few were shot in the back as they fled. Word spread in the neighborhood, and in- dignant groups of Arab teenagers gathered to defend their families. Some threw stones in the direction of the murderous assailants, but were repulsed with tear gas and shots fired into the mass of bodies. A few who tripped and fell were lined up in a courtyard and administered a thorough beating with clubs and rifle butts, until they were carried off in stretchers. If the above does not ring true, there are pictures to "prove" it. There is another scenario. A gang of hundreds of Arab boys waylay a patrol of young Israeli soldiers, surround them and begin hurling rocks at them. The soldiers warn them off, but the gang closes in threateningly. The soldiers fire warning shots in the air and then, as the hail of stones comes closer and closer, lob tear gas at the crowd. Ten boys isolate a soldier, grab his gun, knock him down and begin to kick him. Other soldiers come to his rescue and in the ensuing battle an Arab is killed, nearby children suffer from tear gas, and several limbs are broken. The pictures, taken only at the very end of the fray, give a distorted view of what happened. Israel's greatest failure in the street riots in the administered territories has Continued on Page 10 Continued on Page 10 Ellenoff's letter appeared in the Jerusalem Post and Davar on Feb. 2, Carl Alpert writes a widely-syndicated column from Haifa, Israel. A PEOPLE Speaker Of Chelm Corinne Stavish weaves fascinating tales for her Detroit audiences. 55 ENTERTAINMENT Fiddlin' Around SUSAN TAUBER-HYKE Max Leib's name goes beyond the violin at the Fisher and Birmingham. 65 ARTS Jewish Humor JOSEPH AARON The author of "Jewish Wry" sees the bright side in tragedy. INSIGHT Knowing Religion Means More Than One 75 ARI L. GOLDMAN An observant Jew's beliefs are tested at Harvard Divinity School. DEPARTMENTS 32 36 68 74 Inside Washington Synagogues Seniors Business 80 86 88 112 CANDLELIGHTING February 19, 1988 5:52 p.m. Engagements Births Single Life Obituaries