MEDIA MONITOR The convent that makes Jews angry. Press Slams Polish Cardinal NO MATTER WHAT YOUR FITNESS NEED, LIVINGWELL • CASH PRICE $250 • $50 DOWN • $9.66 PAYMENT, BASED ON 24 MO. NON - RENEWABLE MEMBERSHIP • 18 YEARS & OLDER • 14.68 A.P.R. • SUBJECT TO FINANCIAL APPROVAL • LIMITS YOU TO THE CLUB YOU ENROLL CAN HELP YOU IN REDUCING GAINING, OR JUST GENERAL FITNESS CONDITIONING. LIVINGWELL HAS A PROGRAM, AND FACILITIES FOR YOU! MODERN EXCERSISE EQUIPMENT, AEROBICS, AND MUCH. MUCH MORE! Livinglffell Lat Fitness Center • • • • • • • • SPA - AEROBICS CLASSES PARAMOUNT WEIGHT ROOM PRIVATE SHOWERS & LOCKERS SAUNA NUTRITIONAL GUIDANCE WHIRLPOOL SWIMMING POOL LIFECYCLES a II I I Ir IrlITIllrie• PIMIL. /I /UPI Ih7 I- I I IVLIJ*7 rcw MI OAK PARK 25900 GREENFIELD 967-0000 ---- Sanibel Sling WE SHIP FURNITURE 4 Chairs, 48" Tempered Glass Table g Role Reg. $1090 sale '599 855.5822 Samsonite® Body Glove Sling 4 Chairs & 48" Glass Table FURNITURE Open Air Self-Adjusted Chaise Lounge '559 '129 reg. 4050 7 o off Samsonite Furniture In Stock $258 Free Immediate Delivery Sitting Pretty Evergreen Plaza 19747 W. 12 Mile, Southfield HRS: Mon.-Sat. 10-6, Thurs. 10-7 32 FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1989 6453 FARMINGTON ROAD W. BLOOMFIELD 552.8850 THANK YOU I appreciate your good wishes for my speedy recovery. DOTTIE LUSKY , ARTHUR J. MAGIDA Special to The Jewish News T he breach of the Catholic-Jewish agree- ment to relocate the convent at Auschwitz by last February - and the in- temperate words of the Ar- chbishop of Poland have been condemned in several newspapers around the country. An editorial in the New York Times called remarks by Jozef Cardinal Glemp "insen- sitive," "untimely" and "blundering." The cardinal, said the Times, with his thin- ly veiled anti-Semitism, "had no warrant to echo ancient prejudices." Referring to Jewish protests that the con- vent be taken from Auschwitz, Cardinal Glemp had advised Jews not to talk "from the position of a people raised above all others." He added what the Times called "the gratuitous warning" to Jews not to "spread anti- Polish feeling" by using their "power" in mass media "that are easily at your disposal." "World War II," observed the Times,."was catastrophic for Poland, and for the Jews of Europe . . . [The archbishop's remarks] will do little to bring two suffering peoples together — and could well drive them apart!' But the Times found some light in the situation. Car- dinal Glemp's comments were censured by the Solidarity newspaper in Poland, Catholics in "many coun- tries" were "dismayed by the remarks, and New York's Car- dinal O'Conner tagged Car- dinal Glemp's words "shock- ing" and urged the Polish church "to get on" with im- plementing its agreement about the convent. "That," said the Times, "is a welcome, constructive response. Surely it is time, a half-century after World War II began; for all these victims to calm the rancors it still in- cites!' In the Baltimore Sun, col- umnist Ernest B. Furguson used the Cardinal Glemp in- cident as evidence that the racial and religious animosities that lay beneath World War II still exist, although driven "underground," making them "impolite in public discourse!' Cardinal Glemp, said Furguson, "knows his consti- tuency: long before Hitler, anti-Semitism was deep- rooted in Poland and the Baltic states. It has not disap- peared, even after the shared sufferings of war." Perhaps the most outraged voice against the Auschwitz convent came from Leon Wieseltier, literary editor of the New Republic. In an op-ed essay in the New. York Times, Wieseltier noted that what now "greets the vistor to the greatest charnel house in Jewish history is a cross, more than 20 feet high . . Its shadow, with all due respect, is sickening!' The nuns who prayed in penance for the souls lost at Auschwitz com- mitted "no offense" to Jews, insisted Wieseltier, "because Catholic penance at Auschwitz is appropriate .. . The Jews of Europe were almost completely exter- minated by Christians who called themselves Chris- tians." But all, Jews and Chris- tians, who have been calling Auschwitz "a sacred place" are mistaken, wrote Wieseltier.