says. "There's progress all the time. We're not nervous." In the "more or less normal" times before the uprising, Hebron was "the one example of Jews and Arabs living together," Domb says. "In other places they built around the Arabs. The Arabs here got used to (our presence)." According to Domb and other local Jews, the image Of Hebron and Kiryat Arba as rife with violence-prone Jews is exaggerated. The same exaggeration is true of the Arabs. "There's maybe 8 percent on either side that has nothing better to do than make a balagan,(ruckus)" Domb says. Domb says he opposes vigilantism, private militias, and the politics of Meir Kahane who, along with his followers, the Israel-born Domb points out, are all foreign imports. "Until this day I'm not Kahane. I'm not for killing 10 Arabs for breakfast. Baruch Hashem we have a country, a government and an army. We want to wake up the government and the army." Actions taken by the settlers, Domb says, "is not to make the Arabs afraid, but to get the government's attention." Domb criticizes the Israeli left for its desire to solve the Palestinian problem by re- turning the territories to Guru of Ramat Mamre I n one corner of lawyer Elyakim Haetzni's liv- ing room is displayed a silver plaque, with an etching by Marc Chagall of Moses receiving the Ibrah. The etching is accompanied by a short quotation. Below that is a little patch. "This is the education of my children," Haetzni says, ponting to the patch. "The word peace was written here and my daughter covered it up. Peace is a very misused word. Tiananamen Square (site of the recent Beijing massacre) means "the square of celestial peace." For us, peace means war." After Rabbi Moshe Levinger, Haetzni is the most outspoken and visible Israeli in Hebron-Kiryat Arba. Now living in Ramat Mamre, Haetzni "made aliyah" to Kiryat Arba in September 1972, "on the day of the Munich massacre" of Israeli Olympic atheletes by Pales- tinian terrorists. He left Nazi Germany for Palestine in December 1938. Comparisons with World War II figure prominently in Haetzni's analysis of the Arab-Israeli conflict. For Haetzni, Jews who aid or support the Palestinians are kapos and his criticism of Israeli policy often begins with "Could you imagine Churchill . . . ?" or "Could you imagine France or Germany . . . ?" He says he enjoys living in the Hebron area, with its clean air and water and good public services. "Until the intifada, we had the advantage of all-European comfort in a place just a half-hour drive from Jerusalem and in such proximity to an oriental town with all the enchant- ments of the East. Some travel to Morocco to be in such a place. Here you have it at your doorstep." GE E LEGENDARY,. BLADES A Fiskars Company Like about 30 percent of the Jewish population here, Haetzni is not religious. But he is a strong supporter of Gush Emunim, the religious settlement movement, and says that prejudices against religious settlers ironically could be considered Israeli anti-Semitism. "Gush Emunim is the Jew of the Jewish state — the ones you love to hate," Haetzni says. Haetzni has his own solution for the disposition of the territories — annexation. "But a classical annexation where Israel will pass a law of parliament where her Elyakim Haetzni has his own solution. sovereign borders are — but not apply Israeli law there." This, he says, is the opposite of the Golan Heights and Jerusalem annexations. The Knesset would then legislate autonomy for the Palestinians, "but not according to Camp David" which surrenders veto power to either Egypt, Jordan, Israel of the Palestinians. Arabs would run local affairs and no more, he says. Their national aspirations would be expressed in the country comprising three- quarters of Palestine and whose population is 70 percent Palestinian Jordan. Haetzni's plan, he says, is a reworking of United Nation Resolution 181 for the partition of Palestine, the same resolution that the Palestine Liberation Orga- nization cited when it declared its state last year. Haetzni and the PLO have very different states in mind when they quote Resolution 181. In the original plan of 1947, Haetzni says, Jews living in the Arab state would vote in the Jewish state, while Arabs living in the Jewish state would vote in the Arab state. "And nobody regarded it as South Africa." While he believes the Arabs collectively will never accept the existence of Israel, Haetzni says it is possible to coexist with Arabs individually. "Until the intifada, the Arabs were law abiding, behaving toward the Israeli government as a citizen behaves toward his government." "If this has changed, it is because of the sins and crimes of the Israeli government," he says, and names some of them: "Do you know of one university belonging to the PLO outside of Israel? We have erected seven. Do you know of a war between nations where the news- papers of the enemy are printed in your capital while the bombs fall?" Each terror organization runs its own women's organization, sports club, youth movement and kindergartens with Israeli approval, he says. All could be seen as components of a fledgling state. "We have built the superstructures ourselves," Haetzni says. BALANCE PLUS® KNIFES *NATIONAL RETAIL PRICES The Added Touch also offers a full bridal registry, gift wrapping, and lay away. MARGUERITE'S PRIMA DONNA For The Fashionable Fuller Figure NEW ARRIVALS DAILY Shop Early For The Holidays • Afternoon. Wear • Evening Wear AT "PRIMA DONNA" 355-0139 Mon.-Sat. 10-5 29555 Northwestern Hwy. Southfield, MI ❑ 355-3388 • 355-0139 THE DETROI T