[-HIGH HOLY DAYS Confronting Morality Continued from proceding page A VERY HAPPY NEW YEAR From EVERYONE at KOSINS CUMIN Kosins Uptown • Lathrup Village, Southfield at 11 1/2 Mile • Phone 559-3900 Big & Tall • Lathrup Village, Southfield at 10 1/2 Mile • Phone 569-6930 From Everyone At HERALD WHOLESALE Janice and Jerry Katz Michael and Lori Marcie and Eric Lipsitt and Our Entire Staff tin Buber who, glowing in- wardly from some mystical experiences, sat and talked with him. The man conse- quently came to a decision that led to his death. Reflec- ting afterward, Buber realiz- ed he had been amiable but by being so focused on his own experiences he had not been totally present to the needs of his caller. He had failed to res- pond to the serious need for counsel; he had not offered the guidance that could have turned the young man's deci- sion in a different direction. Sometimes people hear the signals but hesitate to act. Many a night I have reflected on a similar experience. At a reception, I met a friend whom I had not seen for a while. He was passing through town for a week. In the conversation I detected a certain disturbance, perhaps even a bit of despair, so I tried to cheer him up. Dodging my efforts, he mocked me a bit. Several times during the week I reached for the phone to ask him to lunch, to talk things over and to follow up on a nagging feeling of con- cern. But I was busy and felt a bit embarrassed at pushing, since in the past he had pooh- poohed my attention or at- tempts to humor him. The days sped by; he left town. Two months later a caller told me that the friend had died. In that moment I knew with crystal clarity what had happened. A thousand times since then I have felt moral revulsion at my self- indulgence that I had been too busy and had not taken my friend's needs seriously enough. I knew that my ra- tionalizations at the time were true, but I know that ■ Ilm ■ mmE Maimonides' words were also true—I had not taken them seriously enough. No act is too trivial. The Talmud lists acts "for which there is no measure," no minimum or maximum. Cen- tral among these are "acts of loving-kindness." Sometimes an encouraging smile at the right time can change another person's life. The decision to resist evil by only one pastor in a southern French town led to an entire village's hiding and thereby saving hundreds of Jews from the Nazi Holocaust. Con- versely, the shortsighted, political taking-the-easy-way- out of a Von Papen in 1933 or Hindenburg in 1934 paved the way for the total domina- tion of Germany and Europe by a monstrously evil man. The sound of the shofar dur- ing the High Holy Days is meant to cut through the web of routine, rationalization, and indulgence; to wake up people and get them to take 1 themselves and their actions as seriously as they deserve. One more cigarette—what dif- ference does it make? Buckl- ing a seat belt for a short trip—why bother? In the Talmud, Rabbi Eliezer sug- gests that people should live every day with the same moral intensity as they would if it were their last. Rosh Hashanah-Yom Kippur teach that we should perform every act as if our life depended on it because, in fact, it does. ❑ From the upcoming book, The Jewish Way: Living The Holidays, by Rabbi Irving Greenberg, to be published in October, 1988 by Sum- mit Books, New York, New York. Reprinted with permission of the Charlotte Sheedy Literary Agency Inc. ©copyright 1988, Irving Greenberg. l MEDIA MONITOR I ■ IMENIIIIMII=111111 The PLO Prefers The Politics Of Likud tk • v-t-ok Our wish for a year filled with happiness, health and prosperity 110 FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1988 ARTHUR J. MAGIDA Special to The Jewish News W hen Jordan's King Hussein essentially handed the West Bank over to the PLO, he put both the PLO and Israel on a new footing. Most observers maintain that Israeli's more hard-line Likud Party will bear the political fruits of Hussein's move. Even the PLO, according to the Israeli newspaper, Ha'aretz, reports that the PLO is rooting for a Likud victory in the upcom- ing Israeli elections. The PLO, writes Ha'aretz reporter Ze'ev Schiff, believes that a Likud triumph will "acutely polarize" Israeli society and generate "inter- nal bickering [which] will create rifts within Israeli society which the Jews will have trouble overcoming." The PLO also anticipates that the policies a right-wing coalition will be forced to make will increasingly isolate Israel internationally, especially with Europe. The Palestinian leadership is also betting, says Schiff, that the Israeli left-wing would not oppose a political settlement engineered bet- ween Likud and the PLO, just as it did not fight the Israeli- K- 1