EDITORIAL Making Choices U ndercurrents concerning Jewish movement into West Bloomfield have been swirling since the Jewish Community Center relocated in the mid- 1970s. Concerns expressed then by long-time residents about the new facility's tax-exempt status continue to be heard as other Jewish institutions follow their constituents to the township. (See Close-Up, Page 24) _ West Bloomfield is concerned about development. Rapid growth has over- taxed roads, schools and township services. Community leaders have tried to slow development and retain the bedroom community atmosphere by nearly halting construction projects that are not single-family residential. But even bedroom communities need support services nearby — shops and stores, parks and schools, synagogues and churches. West Bloomfield residents must decide if their leaders' approach is correct and if their township has reach- ed the saturation level for support institutions. If West Bloomfield Township residents agree, they will give their elected of- ficials a vote of confidence in this year's elections. If they don't agree, they must speak out, become involved in the political process, work to change minds or work to change the leadership. The Double Standard N ewspaper coverage this week of the annual State Department human rights report focused on criticism of Israel's activities in the West Bank and Gaza, accusing Israeli soldiers of causing unnecessary Palestinian deaths and the government of violating international law. It should be noted at the outset that Israel is no doubt guilty of some human rights violations — as is every other nation in the world. But in terms of balance, the State Department report, and the manner in which it is reported in the American press, is a case study in the double stan- dard that applies to Israel. The Israeli government criticized the State Department report, saying that it failed to make clear that the army's actions were in response to Palestinian violence. "Everything we are doing arises from Arab violence," said Moshe Raviv of the Foreign Ministry. He and others noted that there is no mention in the report that nearly one- third of the Palestinians killed last year in the West Bank and Gaza were murdered by fellow Palestinians. In the name of hunting down collaborators, these Palestine Liberation Organization-approved gangs tortured and killed "political rivals, moderates, criminals and women they consider prom- iscuous," noted Steven Emerson in a Wall Street Journal article entitled, "The Intifada You Don't See On TV." The State Department report devotes 13 pages to Israeli human rights abuses, and four paragraphs to Palestinian human rights abuses. Why this imbalance? Because, as is often heard, Israel should be, and wants to be, judged by Western standards. That is why American newspapers make only the briefest mention of the human rights report criticisms of Mideast neighbors like Syria, Iran and Iraq. But the missing factor here is that Israel should be judged by the standards of a Western nation at war, as she has been since the day she declared statehood. And as Charles Krauthammer wrote in a Time essay this week, "By the standard of democracies facing similar disorders, Israel's behavior has been measured and restrained." One need only think of National Guard response to black riots in Watts and Detroit or student protests at Kent State — situations when there was no threat to the government, where protestors were not calling for the dismantling of the state. "The conscious deployment of a double standard directed at the Jewish state and at no other state in the world," continued Krauthammer, "the willingness systematically to condemn the Jewish state for things others are not condemned for — this is not a higher standard. It is a discriminatory standard. And discrim- ination against Jews has a name, too. The word for it is anti-Semitism." The Jewish community too often cries wolf over media coverage of Israel. But when it is warranted, and in this case complicated by the State Depart- ment's over-emphasis on Israeli human rights violations, it is imperative that we call attention to and condemn the double standard in action. 6 FRIDAY, MARCH 2, 1990 LETTERS Why No Anger About AIDS 'Joke'? Not having seen the documentary Roger and Me and never having been a Bob Eubanks fan, it's understan- dable that I don't know the joke to which Michael Elkin refers ("Bob Eubanks Apologizes To Jewish Corn- munity," Feb. 16). Apparent- ly Eubanks' remark regar- ding "Jewish men, Jewish women and AIDS" has right- ly angered quite a few people with the resulting charges of anti-Semitism. But, Mr. Elkin, are none of those same people concerned also about the reference to AIDS? You made no mention. Why do we not jump with the same fervor to the defense of the memory of the thousands of women, men and children (many of them Jewish) who have died with AIDS, and the perhaps millions, including families and friends, of those now liv- ing with AIDS/HIV? It is frustrating that so many in the Jewish corn- munity still will not respond but to ask how AIDS is a Jewish issue. Eubanks some- how made a , connection. Either he knows something we don't, or maybe the joke really is on us. Peter Cooper Detroit Ziomecki Not Pessimistic The talk given by Mariusz Ziomecki on Polish-Jewish relations ("Jewish-Polish Links Strained," Feb. 3) was the most inspiring commen- tary on the subject since the dramatic article of Blonski. I am astonished that reporter Susan Grant perceived it as pessimistic. I left the lecture pleased by the positive changes which have taken place in the Polish attitude toward Jews. Ziomecki conveyed the feeling that the post-war generation of Poles is eager to learn about Jews and is ashamed of Poland's anti-Semitic past. Ziomecki did say relations between Jewish and Polish communities "are dreadfully bad." However, this was said with regret, and it was evi- dent that he had the expecta- tion of friendship. Ms. Grant writes, "In polite Polish com- pany, people do not make anti-Semitic remarks, he said. Otherwise, they may not be invited to future parties." This comment may be literal- ly true, but it fails to convey the message made em- phatically by Ziomecki that anti-Semitic comments are no longer tolerated by the ma- jority of his generation. Ziomecki spoke with a true empathy for Jewish feelings. The recognition that the past was gloomy and the distress about the absence of mean- ingful dialogue in the present were very encouraging. Did Ms. Grant and I attend the same lecture? DE Emanuel Tanay Detroit What Do Secular Jews Observe? In the Feb. 26 issue you ran a letter "Are Only Orthodox Jews Observant?" by Irvine Kaplan taking issue with the fact that you referred to new Jewish Welfare Federation President Mark Schlussel as "observant," then labeled him "Orthodox," inferring that only Orthodox Jews can be observant. A little background. I was Continued on Page 14