Asomosommosamiumwspommuswomeni ISRAEL THE 10TH ANNIVERSARY DINNER DANCE OF THE FRIENDS OF THE ISRAEL CANCER ASSOCIATION, MICHIGAN BRANCH AND THE HANOAR CHAPTER DR. ARTHUR FEUER HONORING Sunday, September 10, 1989 BETH ACHIM SYNAGOGUE 21100 W. 12 Mile Rd., Southfield GUEST SPEAKER: MAX SOSIN MUSIC BY ERIC ROSENOW AND HIS CONTINENTALS Couvert: $60.00 Cocktails: 5:30 P.M. per person Dinner Following Black Tie Optional Ticket Committee Alex Greenberger 646-0983 Mary Papo 967-4414 Judy Eisenberg 661-2435 AGI RUBIN HANOAR CHAPTER PRESIDENT: LIZ LAKRITZ DINNER CHAIRPERSON: JUDY EISENBERG DINNER CO-CHAIRPERSONS: ANNA GREENBERGER JUDY GRINBAUM MICH. 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In The Regency Plaza Farmington Hills 4 71-72 73 S Open Monday-Friday 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. Saturday 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. March of Dimes BIRTH DEFECTS FOUNDATION •. , PACE. ,,,s110TrO !•• F.•E Contemporary Women's Fashions FABULOUS FALL FASHIONS Arriving Daily 855-4464 Hunters Square • Farmington Hills Neighbors Continued from preceding page Arab rule. Echoing another local Jew who called this position xenophobic, Domb says: "I think I know the Arabs better than Yossi Sarid (a left-wing politician). He wants just [a country of] the Jews. He's against the Arabs more than I am. He wants to just sit in rIbl Aviv and not see the Arabs. Arab neighbors don't bother me." Should the Israeli left prevail in a democratic contest and reach territorial compromise with the Arabs, something Domb is skeptical will occur, he is willing to follow the directive of his government. "If there is a decision to leave Hebron, I'll demon- strate, but I'll leave Hebron," he says. "Because democracy is more important." • Shlomo when Once, Kupinsky was driving home to Ramat Mamre from Jerusalem, he saw some boys picking up stones by the roadside. Kupinsky figured he'd be pelted as he drove by. "I stopped the car and I just looked at them," Kupinsky says. "The kids put the stones down. Face to face, they didn't know if I had a gun or not. Now I could be a threat to them." It's the speeding cars and busses that attract the hails of stones, says his wife, Bracha. "I think it's different one on one. If he has to see me as a person, I don't think he would a throw a stone at me." The Kupinskys, former Detroiters who have lived in Kiryat Arba and Ramat Mamre for seven years, have been hit by stones several times. While potentially dangerous, such incidents also provoke amusement. Says Bracha: "We've had rocks thrown at us while in the car, and we'd duck. Imagine that. Two intelligent people in a closed car and ducking." Bracha, an English teacher at Kiryat Arba's Ulpana religious high school for girls, and Shlomo, a demographer, are two of the 5,000 Jews living in Kiryat Arba and Ramat Mamre. The two settlements, each bearing a biblical name for Hebron, are surrounded by fences and approachable through gates. Perched on hilltops about two miles apart, they are connected by a road that passes through the fields and vineyards of Palestinian farmers. Every Shabbat, the Kupinsky's traverse the road without fear of attack. The two towns were built on empty tracts and once were isolated from Hebron, residents say. "When Kiryat Arba was built, there were no Arab homes around," Bracha says. Growth in the Arab population has pushed their settlement up to the edge of Kiryat Arba's outer ring road. As in Hebron, Jews and Arabs again are next door neighbors. If Hebron is seen by the faithful as the very heart of the land of Israel, Kiryat Arba is often seen by others as the Jewish state's heart of darkness — a town swirling with religious fanaticism, poised to set off civil war. The Kupinskys and their friends insist their town has received a bad rap. Kiryat Arba, they say is a place where kids run freely and residents don't have to lock their doors. It is the town where, despite the intifada, Palestinians con- tinue to come to work and where no Arab has ever been attacked. According to the Kupin- skys, recounting events involving settlers, Palestin- ians and the army seems to be a matter of individual interpretation. What one might view as an innocent act might be seen as a provocation by another. One night, when Shlomo was on guard duty, a burning tire was thrown into Kiryat Arba's industrial zone. Some of the Israelis threw it back over the fence where it rolled down a hill, landing at the site of a mosque under construction. The Arabs were convinced that the Israelis wanted to burn down the mosque, Shlomo says. The army arrived and the Arabs withdrew. "As soon as the army left, the Arabs came back," Shlomo says. "They aren't afraid of the army. But I think they know that if they throw rocks the settlers v - shoot." "You think the settlers would shoot?" Bracha asks. "Yes," Shlomo says. • Azriel Jacobowitz is 13 years old and knows how to end the intifada and the Palestinian problem: drive air conditioned busses up to the Arabs' homes and invite them for a ride out of the country. "We would say, 'You have three months to leave. If you don't, we will force you." What if the Palestinians want to remain and live in peace with Israel? Azriel is skeptical. "Just try it," he says. "You can't force the Arabs to leave," says Azriel's father, Nachman Jacobowitz, execu-