YEAR IN REVIEW 5748 YEAR IN REVIEW YITZHAK SHAMIR was often an embattled prime minister this year, dealing with the Palestinian uprisings and criticism of Israeli military measures; resisting U.S. Secretary of State George Shultz's persistent efforts to achieve a Mideast breakthrough; and contending with open hostility from his Foreign Minister, and rival, Shimon Peres. SHIMON PERES spent much of the year advocating a peace plan contingent on a joint Jordanian-Palestinian delegation, only to see it crumble with the announcement by King Hussein that Jordan was severing its 40-year association with the West Bank. MENDEL KAPLAN received high marks from long-time critics of the Jewish Agency for his leadership of the troubled organization. The South African businessman has sought to professionalize the staff and programming of the organization. I BENJAMIN NETANYAHU left GENERAL ARIEL SHARON celebrated Chanukah by moving into his new home in the middle of the Moslem Quarter of Jerusalem. Some praised the Industry and Trade Minister for underscoring that Jews have a right to live anywhere in Israel; others criticized him for what they saw as a direct provocation to the Arab population. CHAIM HERZOG became Israel's first president to make an official visit to the U.S. and was praised for his diplomacy. LEGENDARY ISRAELI STATESMAN Abba Eban found his long political career seemingly at an end when he did not make the Labor Party list for the upcoming Israeli elections. his post as Israeli Ambassador to the United Nations to gain a top slot on the Likud's list for the upcoming elections. He is seen as a future leader in Israel. SIMCHA DINITZ was elected chairman of the Jewish Agency and World Zionist Organization. Favored by the Americans, he beat out the favored Israeli candidate Akiva Lewinsky. what came to be known, in Defense Minister Yit- zhak Rabin's chilling phrase, as the "iron fist" policy. At other times Israel tried curfews, tear gas, rubber bullets, arrests, deportations. But it became clear, even as trained soldiers were pressed into ser- vice as military policemen, that Jerusalem was unable to stop either the violence or the sharply negative image she was projecting. The world media was filled with photos, television footage and printed reports of soldiers beating Arab men, women and children. In Israel there was frustration and anger at the world's double standard. Politicians and statesmen pointed out that every state has a right to protect itself and its citizens from violent demonstrations and efforts to overthrow the government. But the image of Israeli soldiers confronting Arab youths lingered longer than the rhetoric of political reality. Israelis have become increasingly polarized. Some argue that the intifada proves it is time to give up territory for the chance of peace. Others, and apparently a greater number, assert that the violence underscores that the Arabs must be dealt with from strength. The upcoming national elections in November will provide an opportunity for a mandate on the critical issue of how to deal with the Palestinians. With Labor and Likud locked in an ongoing strug- gle over personality and policy, there is a strong feel- ing in Israel that a clear victory — by either party — would be far more preferable than the current locked embrace of bitterness and inertia in Jerusalem. Right-wing parties, including Rabbi Meir Kahane's Kach, seem to be gaining strength, and talk of "the transfer of Arabs," a euphemism for deportation, is now spoken of more openly. Israelis concerned about maintaining democratic ideals are fearful that if Likud wins a narrow majority, it may form a coalition with a mixture of right-wing and religiously fundamentalist parties. While the Israeli political scene remains fluid, the uprisings have underscored the differences among Jews in America over how to resolve the dispute, and even how to argue the case. The issue of whether or not American Jews have a right to protest Israeli policy — an issue that has arisen in recent years over the Lebanon war, settlements in the territories and the Pollard spy case — resumed anew in regard to land-for-peace and the beating of Arab civilians. Rabbi Alexander Schindler, president of the Union of American Hebrew Congregations, said in a letter to Israeli president Chaim Herzog that the policy adopted to quell the riots "is an offense to the Jewish spirit." He said it "violates every prin- ciple of human decency, and it betrays the Zionist dream." Rabbi Schindler was excoriated by many Jewish leaders, in Israel and America, for making his case public and in such strong terms. But President Her- zog, in his reply, chose not to join that attack. In- stead he pinpointed his nation's dilemma simply THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 119