I NOTEBOOK 5 Great Reasons for coming to Sherwood's 309/0 OFF Upholstery Sale... CENTURY • FLAIR • NICOLETTI DIRECTIONAL • SWAIM GARY ROSENBLATT Editor IN STOCK & SPECIAL ORDERS • Free In-Store Design Service Sale ends 7/31/89 gerwaDd Auclo8 Professional Interior Designers Tel-Twelve Mall • 12 Mile & Telegraph • Southfield Daily 10-9 Sunday 12-5 354-9060 Watch for the Grand Opening of another Sherwood in West Bloomfield caiere Person a Servke is a given) „ 00 4 000 m Northwestern Hwy. • Southfield Barry's Let's Rent It PARTIES EXCLUSIVELY • Tents • Tables • Chairs • China • Paper Goods 4393 ORCHARD LAKE RD. N. OF LONE PINE IN CROSSWINDS lOLTR NEW LOCATION) 855-0480 FOR YOUR CAMPER: FUN STUFF NO FOOD. NO CANDY. JUST FUN TREs SWEET (3 1 3) 626-3435 24 FRIDAY, JULY 21, 1989 , All Disputes Are Not Created Equal ! 181 S. Woodward Ave. Birmingham, MI 48011 642-1690 There is a major fallacy in many discussions of the Mideast di- lemma, one that even fervent ad- vocates of Is- / rael's cause like me sometimes fail to recognize. And that is in the attempt to see a balanced equation between Palestinian and Israeli grievances. It's all too easy to make that mistake. Human nature dictates that there is a measure of equality between disputants, and reporting on the Mideast has stressed that message, explicitly and implicitly. Most recently, in the wake of the terrorist incident on the Tel Aviv to Jerusalem bus, which killed 14 innocent peo- ple, we read that the man responsible for the tragedy reportedly acted out of anger over the fact that his relatives in Gaza had been beaten by Israeli troops. True, his was a dastardly deed but hadn't he been provoked? one might ask. In dealing with the in- tifada, we acknowledge that Palestinian men, women and children are throwing rocks, and worse, against Israeli soldiers. But some American Jews wonder whether the years of frustration these peo- ple feel over living in such squalid conditions is not justification for their actions. And on the diplomatic level, the focus is on the Palesti- nians curtailing the intifada and Israel, in turn, making concessions of its own. But the Mideast dilemma is not a symmetrical dispute, pitting the Palestinians against the Israelis. What about the more than 20 Arab states in the region, all of whom, with the notable ex- ception of Egypt, continue to advocate the destruction of the state of Israel? Two million Jews seeking to live in peace in a democratic state of their own vs. hundreds of millions of Arabs fervently dedicated to preventing that reality. Indeed, the Arab- Israeli dispute may very well be the most assymetrical dispute in history. The Arab states' response to Israel's declaration of statehood in 1948 was a declaration of war, and 41 years later the violence and bloodshed con- tinues. Where is the sym- metry in an equation that has countless Israelis over the last four decades struggling to formulate peace proposals and Anwar Sadat the only Arab leader ever to sit down and negotiate? For all the fervent debate in Israel over how best to make peace and how much territory to give up, are there any groups in all the Arab world urging their leaders to negotiate with the Jewish state? On the contrary, any Palestinian in Gaza or the West Bank even willing to consider talking with Israel is murdered by his brethren. There is no pressure on Syria, Saudi Arabia or even Jordan to end their state of war against Israel; the man- tle of leadership has fallen on Yassir Arafat, a longtime ter- rorist dedicated to destroying the Jewish state. So is it not reasonable if Israelis are skeptical of Arafat's protesta- tions that he only desires a state of his own, given that the PLO leader is responsible for the deaths of hundreds of Israelis over the last two decades and remains commit- ted to a PLO charter calling for the destruction of Israel? It is important for us to appreciate that Israel's conflict is not only with the PLO and the Palestinians. Decades of hatred, violence and bloodshed cannot be eras- ed by the recitation of a few phrases — particularly when the PLO leadership continues to assert in the Arab press that any PLO state would be but the first phase in an effort to take over all of Israel. What we have have been seeing in recent years is an attempt to isolate the Palestinian-Israeli confronta- tion at the expense of the larger issue of the Arab- Israeli dilemma. U.S. officials acknowledge that this is so, asserting that there is a bet- ter chance for progress on the Palestinian-Israel front. They are hoping that a breakthrough regarding West Bank elections could lead to dialogue between the Arab states and Israel. But even the most optimistic State