LIFE IN ISRAEL I DETROIT'S HIGHEST RATES 12 MONTH CERTIFICATE OF DEPOSIT 9.00% Hunger strikers protest what they see as Israel's failure to protect settlers and their vehicles. Effective Annual Yield* Minimum Deposit of $500 Jewish Mothers Show Courage In Face Of Settlement Fears NECHEMIA MEYERS Special to The Jewish News 9.308°/o* 'Compounded Quarterly Rates to change without notice This is a fixed rate account that is insured to $100,000 by the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Cor- poration (FSLIC). Substantial Interest Penalty for early withdrawal from certificate accounts. FIRST SECURITY SAVINGS BANK FSB PHONE 338.7700 MAIN OFFICE 1760 Telegraph Rd. 352.7700 (Just South of Orchard Lake) L E OUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY 36 HOURS: MON.-THURS. 9:30-4:30 FRI. 9:30-6:00 FRIDAY, JANUARY 27, 1989 MEMBER FSLIC Federal Savings &Loan Insurance Corp. \bur Savings Insured to 0100,000 hatever you may think of their polit- ical views, one can- not but admire the courage and fortitude of the Jewish women who live in Judea, Samaria and the Gaza strip. They face great physical dangers day after day. Even worse — so do their children. Mothers who send their boys and girls to attend school in a nearby settlement, or to see a doctor in Netanya, do so with fear in their hearts. For despite the fact that all the buses traversing the "Tef- ritories" have military escorts, few escape stones and/or Molotov cocktails. "Israelis living elsewhere don't realize the gravity of the problem," says Nancy, a Baltimore girl who resides with her Chicago-born hus- band and six children in Shilo, near Jerusalem. She at- tributes this lack of knowledge "to biased repor- ting by the local media, which highlight the suffering of Arab children but ignore that of Jewish children!' The trouble didn't start with the intifada. Nancy points out that one of her daughters, Yisca, now 1.3, was hit by a rock in Hebron many years before the Arab upris- ing began. As a result, Yisca is loath to return to that town. But neither she nor her five brothers and sisters can avoid traveling altogether. So just as American school- children have fire drills (or, in California, earthquake And when one of her six drills), kids in Shilo have bus kids has-no alternative but to drills. They learn how to travel somewhere, she advises hunch down on the floor if him to take an aisle seat in their bus is stoned, and how the bus rather than sit next to get out quickly if a Molotov to a window. Also, she urges cocktail sets it afire. him to keep on the hood of his To keep up their spirits in jacket, because it serves to ab- these besieged buses, the sorb fragments of flying glass. youngsters who — Nancy Strange as it may sound, wistfully recalls — once en- Celia says that the intifada joyed singing London Bridge has a certain educational is Falling Down, now sing value. "It teaches the children political pep songs instead. about anti-Semitism and Nava, Nancy's 12-year-old brings home to them the daughter, sang one of them to meaning of a famous line in me: the Passover Haggada: 'In "The Holy Land is not a ball every generation our enemies To throw from hand to rise up and try to destroy us.' hand; While Nancy, Celia and We must make it clear to all their sisters are brave women, Alone we do not stand. even stoic courage has its Peace we give in return for limits. Some women (and peace, men) in the settlements — Not in return for land; angered by the Army's failure We must make it clear to all to stop the attacks on them We'll never change our and by Defense Minister Yit- stand." zhak Rabin's "defeatist" The terminology used by declaration that the intifada the media to describe injuries can't be halted by military suffered by settlers is ex- means alone — are beginning tremely misleading, Nancy to think of independent declares. When her neighbor counter measures against the was hit in the head by a large Arabs. rock, the papers said she had This is reflected in chang- been "slightly injured?' ing attitudes towards the Yet, as Nancy points out, Jewish Underground. While "the poor woman has been its attacks on Arab civilians unable to work or care for her and institutions in 1980 were children these last few once decried by most settlers, months, and I have no idea now many of them are begin- when she will be functioning niing to value what the normally again!" Underground did, even to Celia, a New Yorker living argue that its activities ac- in the Hebron area, admits tually delayed the start of the that the intifada has intifada. prompted her to cut down the Perhaps, some settlers say, number of trips she and her the time has come for Jews to children take. "No matter stop cowering in fear of the how brave you might be, you Arabs, and to make Arabs must also be responsible," start cowering. Celia explains.