I COMMENT I Let the Golden Years Resetting The Watch For Peace In Israel DAVID HOLZEL Israel Correspondent W hoever thought up the idea of "Pale- stine Time" should consider a career on Madison Avenue if he or she ever tires of the intifada. This simple -- gimmick has proved to be a most potent symbol in the war of symbols fought by Israel and the Palestinians. Several weeks ago, leaflet number umpteen issued by the uprising leadership in- structed Palestinians in the territories to move their clocks ahead one hour to observe daylight savings time. That it added an extra hour of difficulty to the sunup-to-sunset fast of Ramadan was of no concern. The point was to separate fur- ther the "State of Palestine" from the State of Israel and its administration of the ter- ritories, all of which remain- ed on standard time; lb Palestinians, that hour of difference was a source of pride and delight, - a sign of true independence. Time, it seemed, was on their side. And it needled the Israelis. "This is our state and it has its own time," said one Palestinian. _ Some Israeli soldiers ap- parently thought patrolling the West Bank was bad enough, but walking through the Twilight Zone was too much. They reportedly stop- ped random Palestinians and asked them for the time. If the Palestinian's watch was set to Palestine Time, the soldiers smashed the watch. But the intifada takes a licking and keeps on ticking. With Palestine Time, the Palestinians can claim with some evidence that they are ahead of the Israelis in all things. At least by an hour. Through the fluidity and, ultimately, indefinable medium of time, the Palesti- nians have defined their own reality in a way that the Israelis can't overturn unless they pull the plug on every last clock in the West Bank and Gaza strip. But I counsel a more positive and benign response. Let me tick off some reasons. The inventor of Palestine Time may have solved the Palestinian-Israeli conflict by pointing to the way to which both peoples, with their mutually exlusive needs, demands, myths and symbols, finally can coexist. "Two peoples, two states, . one land, ont hour apart" might be the motto of this new detente, since both na- tions would be able to exist independently in time and thus never cross paths. And what is all in good time for the Palestinians could be used by the Israelis, as well. Those who wish to scratch the itch for a Greater Israel would be able to do so. Annex Judea, Samaria and Gaza at 9 a.m. and the Palestinians at 10 a.m. would be unaffected. Perhaps the followers of Meir Kahane had this possibility in mind when they declared the Independent State of Judea a few months back and started issuing postage stamps and the like. It's like a Star Trek episode about parallel universes — reduced to a much more mundane scope, of course — each one ex- isting in the same place in multiple dimensions of time. Perhaps we'll soon have Labor and Likud time, each an hour apart, or secular and Orthodox time. The pos- sibilities are endless, if not timeless. In practical terms, Israel undid the Palestinian effort when, on April 30, the coun- try turned its clocks ahead an hour to begin the observance of daylight savings time. Now, time is no longer out of sync and the Palestinians have lost an ephemeral claim to dis- tinction. Like their State of Palestine that exists on the maps of their minds and their hearts but not on the ground, Palestine Time is an adroit way of skirting the issue. In- stead of resetting their wat- ches, better the Palestinians should have asked, "How can we come to terms with the ex- istence of Israel?" Many Israelis have done their share of watch ad- justing, mostly backwards. Like the roads the Israelis are building to skirt Palestinian towns and avoid flying stones, Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir's plan for Palestinian elections provides Israelis with some comfort without coming to terms with Palesti- nian aspirations. Israel needs to commit itself to an interim solution that will lead to a long-term solu- tion to the Israel-Palestinian conflict in particular and the Arab-Israeli conflict in general, whether the time frame leading to that solution be five years or 25 years. The Shamir plan must be more than an effort to buy time. ❑ be the Happy Years. The later years of life should be fulfilling, relaxing — free of stress and strain. You could be assured your loved one is in good care if you could always be there. But you can't. Call Progressive Care when you can't be there. Progressive Care is a professional private duty health care service dedicated to assisting your loved ones in your absence. 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