EDITORIAL Man Of Peace T he recent announcement that the Dalai Lama, the spiritual and political head of the Tibetan people, had received the Nobel Peace Prize came on the heels of an extraordinary meeting between him and a small group of rabbis and Jewish authors and scholars. The meeting was initiated by the Dalai Lama, who was curious about Judaism and, especially, about Jews' survival during their long years in exile. The Jews' encounter with the Dalai Lama also epitomized the value of inter-religious dialogue unblemished by defensiveness of triumphialism. Unlike Christian-Jewish dialogue that often occurs against the backdrop of Christian claims of Jesus' messianism or of Jewish claims of chosenness and, invariably, against the trauma of the Holocaust, the Tibetan-Jewish exchange was entirely fresh. It was a theological tabula rosa, with both sides eager to explain and teach and understand and neither attempting to persuade. As an encounter between a people who want peace and a man who represents peace, it deserves the hope that the lessons of dialogue that it illuminated will inform and inspirit future dialogues between all religions, not just Buddhism and Judaism. ing, but the psychological cost is even higher. The 22-acre center in mid-Manhattan was built about 50 years ago. America was just then beginning to emerge from the devastating Depression, and New York was still considered to be the center of all that was glam- orous, sophisticated — and profitable — in the world. The city was the hub of so many worlds — social, financial, artistic, political — that it was almost a planet unto itself. And Rockefeller Center, with its splendid shops and restaurants and skating rink and soar- ing, graceful skyscrapers, symbolized New York at its most cosmopolitan and worldly. But that was another time and another New York. The city is no longer on the urbane cutting edge it once was, and America is no longer the economic giant of the past. It seems that America is for sale to the highest bidder and, for now, the bidding is usually made in yen. In a totally free-market economy that encircles the globe, this may be appropriate and in- evitable. But the type of assets recently sold to the Japanese also carries an archetypal memory — an American memory — that de- serves to have remained in American hands. Yen And Now T he Japanese are coming; the Japanese are coming! There's nothing new about that. It's beginning to seem that almost since V-J Day, the Japanese have been coming to these shores; their weapons this time, economic and not military. First came those cheap toys and generally useless gadgets of the late 1940s and early 1950s, then a couple of tran- sistor radios that, on a good day, could pick up more than two stations, and finally, Hondas, Toyotas and Datsuns and Sonys, Toshibas and Panasonics. The Japanese were not great innovators, but they were the best of imitators, a trait that eventually gave them clout in the world marketplace and immeasurable pride back home. Now comes one of the harshest blows of all: A Tokyo real estate developer has purchased the controlling interest in New York's Rockefeller Center. The financial tab — $846 million — is numb- LETTERS Misguided Meeting With Dalai Lama The Jewish participants in the encounter with the Dalai Lama (Oct. 20) showed a great lack of critical thinking, whether due to their enamor- ment with the leader or their overwhelming desire to dialogue. The fact that the Tibetan Buddhists have never persecuted the Jewish people does not make their religion closer to ours than are Chris- tianity and Islam. (The latter have definite roots in Judaism even if rejecting Judaism's basic principles.) The Dalai Lama and the monks painfully fudged the question of monotheism; it was never made clear in the article whether their many gods are messengers of a supreme force or some sort of 6 FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1989 committee. If the Buddhists are idol worshippers, then "the divinity with which they are in touch" can not be the same as that with which we are, contrary to Arthur Green's assertion. The participants praised the Dalai Lama's spirituality, though at least one — Laurence Kushner — admit- ted his suspicions of the religion's mishigas. It must be stated that even if the theology doesn't appeal to our western, monotheistic way of thinking, and even if the way of life is contrary to ours, it is this spirituality that is attrac- ting Jewish souls. As long as any clergyman who purports to be a rabbi leads a congregation who are prey to misconceptions such as believing "only in this cur- rent life and not in the hereafter" (as Kushner states many contemporary Jews do believe) and does not set them straight, searching Jews will look for an ultimate meaning in life in greener, if not showier, pastures. Fayge Young Oak Park Yeshiva Clarifies Land Problem I would like to make a clarification in the article of Oct. 27, regarding the Oak Park school board, Gotham Tower and the Yeshiva Gedolah. Whereas, Gotham Tower continues to hold a land con- tract with the school board on the entire parcel at 24600 Greenfield, Yeshiva Gedolah some years ago purchased from Gotham and paid in full for the part of that parcel that contains the building and some adjacent land. The deed for that parcel is recorded in the Yeshiva Gedolah's name. It is correct that this pur- chase would be contingent on Gotham continuing to fulfill its land contract obligations, but as stated in your article, we are confident that these obligations will be met. Rabbi Peretz Rushnawitz Yeshiva Gedolah of Greater Detroit The Pollard Conspiracies Ruth Mason's interview with Anne Pollard, as reported in The Jewish News (Oct. 23), is revealing in what is and is not stated. Had Jonathan and Anne Pollard admitted spying for Russia, or some friendly Arab country, it is likely that their punishments would not have been as severe. Though the Pollards did cooperate with the government, revealing details of their amateurish operation of supplying classified information illegal- ly to Israel, they apparently did not cooperate enough. They failed to name names, to provide their eager in- quisitors with evidence of a Jewish conspiracy to help Israel illegally. Hence, the harsh prison sentences. Anti-Semites have always been enamored with the con- cept of a "Jewish conspiracy." This concept appeals to an ir- rational mind, serving as justification to inflict cruelty on a human being. Anti- Semitism has always been a powerful and intimidating force, picking and choosing its victims. In the face of this force, the Continued on Page 10