EDITORIAL Third World Answer? Ze'ev Chafets, The Jewish News' Israel cor- respondent, certainly raised hackles in his old hometown last weekend when an excerpt from his new book accused Detroit of being a Third World city. Detroit boosters are quick to attack any na- tional criticism of our fair city. It didn't help our tarnished image to have Chafets' dissec- tion featured in the New York Times Maga- zine, so the voices of outraged defenders of Detroit were heard quickly and loudly. Unfortunately, voices alone can do little to change a national image. Debating every segment of Chafets' assessment will do little to change the image or, more important, help the city improve its declining economy, ser- vices, tax and educational base. Debating the image must not become a substitute for con- structive efforts to reverse the decline. After the riots of 1967, Detroiters and suburbanites united in an extraordinary effort to attack the causes of the simmering unrest. New Detroit Inc., Detroit Renaissance and other newly-created organ- izations quickly stepped forward to try to make a real difference. The late Henry Ford II and Max Fisher put their money behind the effort to revitalize the downtown business district. Ford's Renaissance Center has had a rollercoaster economic impact, but it has also spurred development in the area. But has it been enough? Obviously not. The city needs a re-infusion of the spirit of coop- eration and concern that followed the '67 riots. Suburbanites must be involved in all areas because "Detroit" extends far beyond Eight Mile Road. An undereducated work force affects every area business. High unemployment in Detroit draws state tax dollars and services from other areas. Declin- ing neighborhoods and shopping districts force "Detroit problems" into the suburbs. And when someone living in Bloomfield Hills, Southfield, Oak Park or Farmington Hills travels the country, the answer to "Where are you from?" is, "I'm from Detroit" with the linkage to all of the city's good points and bad. Judging Judge Souter Much of the debate over Judge David H. Souter, President Bush's nominee for the United States Supreme Court, deals with where he may stand on one issue. There is little talk about whether the judge is a strict or a loose constitutional constructionist or where he stands on civil liberties or civil rights. This time, the ultimate litmus test is one that never stalked a previous candidate: abortion. It is not difficult to see why one senator called this "the most divisive issue since slavery." True or not, there is little denying the strong emotions that abortion elicits. But for an appointment to the highest court in the land to hinge on whether the nominee is pro- or anti-abortion gives short shrift to the full spectrum of legal issues that the high court will face. It not only does an injustice to the court and the Constitution, but also to Judge Souter, who should be confirmed or rejected on the merits of his past record, his intellect, character and judicial and legal philosophy rather than on how he may vote on abortion. The Real Purpose A welcome measure of the success of the Holocaust Memorial Center appeared in area newspapers this week. A Probate Court magistrate and a Southfield judge sentenced two young vandals to do research on the Holocaust at the four-year-old HMC and to write reports on the Nazi crimes. The primary purpose of the Holocaust Center is education. The building was not in- tended to be a monument, but a learning ex- perience for thousands of children and adults. It is evident that it is beginning to fulfill that role. The additional publicity for the privately funded museum may serve as a small deter- rent for biased vandals and to remind school officials and the public of the HMC's availability and important message. And the HMC may help to educate an 18-year-old man and a 15-year-old girl about the viciousness and end result of hatred. COMMENT Rabbi's Meditation On 'Right To Die' RABBI DAVID M. FELDMAN Special to The Jewish Neths T he recent use of the "suicide machine" in Michigan has highlighted the "right to die" debate — more than the Cruzan case just decided by the Supreme Court and more 6 FRIDAY, AUGUST 3, 1990 than theatrical dramatiza- tions under such titles as "Whose Life Is It, Anyway?" Of course, the answer to the latter question, from the perspective of Judaism, is not the one implied by the sardonic "anyway." Life is not the patient's to take, because suicide is as forbidden as homicide. Hence, hastening death, ac- tively or passively, is re- jected in principle. Neither is life the family's to take, because members of the family are always prejudic- ed, either in favor or against. Either they care too much for the patient and want the doctor to "try everything," actually to prolong the dying rather than the living; or they would hasten death out of genuine compassion for the patient. Conversely, the family could care too little, consciously or unconscious- ly, for the patient and too much for ulterior considera- tions, material, emotional, or otherwise. Nor is life the doctor's to take, as his mandate is to heal and yields to the physi- cian's judgment only when he offers a medical opinion about health or life or death, never when he offers a per- sonal opinion about whether that life is worth saving. Hence, even advocates of euthanasia have opposed the idea of physician assistance, until now. This would violate the physician-patient relationship of trust, as well as his mandate to heal. For this reason, the American Medical Association has declined to allow its mem- bers to administer lethal in- jections in criminal execu- tions. The case of Dr. Jack Kevorkian and Janet Adkins is especially objec- tionable because he took no time to acquaint himself with her real situation, di- agnosis or prognosis. The injunction against suicide/homicide is not suspended because of the ex- istence of pain, or poor quali- ty of life, or poor prospects for the future. Incidentally, a Hebrew form of the word euthanasia was "coined" in the Talmud long before the Greek roots were used by Sir Thomas More to form the compound English term. Even the convicted criminal, Rabbi Nachman taught, de- serves compassion. If he must be executed, give him a narcotic so he will not suffer pain as he dies. This is in fulfillment of "Love thy neighbor as thyself," which includes, the Talmudic sage taught, "Choose for him a good death ." Compassion in the relief of pain is indeed the ethical imperative. Yet the Hastings Institute, a pioneer agency for the study of medical ethics, now makes the point that advances in pain-relief technology have radically reduced the number of instances in which pain might justify the thought of euthanasia. The Institute was happy to hear that, from the standpoint of Halachah pain relief is essen- tial; that, while hastening death remains forbidden as either an active or passive intentional act, rabbinic au- thorities are virtually unanimous in permitting the administration of analgesics for the purpose of relieving pain, even if doing so knowingly shortens life. The intent is mercy for life, not for killing. My Catholic colleagues point out that we are more liberal than they on abor- tion, they more liberal than we on euthanasia. I am pro- ud of this Jewish reverence for life, and confidently urge it on those who must face difficult decisions of this kind. Some criticize the ap- proach as "vitalist," a kind of mindless respect for life of even the least quality; but the point is a profounder sanctification of life. It issues from an abhorrence of murder: Remarkably, murder of the innocent is a cardinal sin that requires martyrdom instead. This means, at least in theory, that I must surrender my life to protect the principle of not taking life! In the face of human violence and natural disasters that seem to cheapen life, we are bidden to hold it sacred and in- violate. Aside from the high moral ground, there are eminently practical concerns. When the Continued on Page 12