FOCUS Most Dangerous Politician? Continued from preceding page Rabbi Robert Loewy of Metairie, Louisiana, says his congregants are deeply worried about the prospect of a Duke election. David Duke appearing on a televised debate with a black leader in Atlanta. 164 ethnic groups and Jews should get New York? His response is that the source was an article someone else wrote in the NAAWP News, and that he was not re- sponsible for it. Yes, he sold Nazi books out of his of- fice, he concedes, but his book store was like a general book store and it also con- tained Communist books. The Holocaust? "I've been misquoted. I never said the Holocaust didn't hap- pen," he says. "I've argued against the numbers and I've argued in the past that FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1990 a constant recital of the Holocaust kind of kept us from dealing with some of the issues of the Palestinians. Sure, the Ho- locaust happened and there were terrible atrocities against the Jewish people in Europe." Mr. Duke has also been accused of minimizing the number of Jews killed in the Holocaust. Did six million die? "I don't know the numbers," he parries. "I just read an article from the Jewish Mu- seum in Israel contesting some of the [ac- cepted] numbers. I leave it to the historians. Human life is human life and those kinds of politics and programs that happened were wrong and worthy of con- demnation, but I don't know all the aspects of the Holocaust." Crunching on some ice cubes from a Diet Coke, Rep. Duke says he is certain he will attract Jewish votes. "There are a lot of good conservative Jewish people," he says. "As a group I think we all ac- knowledge the Jews tend to vote liberal but there's a lot of Jews I have a lot of admiration for, whom I really support and who would support me." Rep. Duke also denies he's anti-black, asserting he has "no hatred in my heart toward blacks." Rather, he says, he wants blacks "to become part of the mainstream of America." He blames lib- eral social welfare policies and programs for preventing this by encouraging people not to work. "I think it's held blacks back, not helped them." As state repre- sentative, he has introduced bills against affirmative action programs. Rep. Duke almost begs an interviewer to judge him for what he is today, to for- give him his past. Even his most fervid critics concede that he has toned down his public anti-Semitism, if not his rac- ism. The only anti-Jewish reference in re- cent issues of the NAAWP newsletter has been to the "minority-controlled me- dia" in an ad for membership. (The news- letter does tend to portray Israel in an unfavorable light, with stories emphasiz- ing the extent of American aid to that country). The newsletter also tends to advocate the white race rather than make overtly negative statements about blacks. "The more I read, the more I'm convinced he's modeling himself after Hitler." Rabbi Robert Loewy But Jewish leaders in Louisiana are less than sanguine about "the new Duke." "I think he is very dangerous," says Rabbi Loewy. "He's a liar and he manipu- lates truth." He notes that Mr. Duke re- sponds to questions about his past "as if he were a bad boy as a teen-ager but now he's changed." But the rabbi notes that those "bad years" were as recent as 1988. "I don't see him as a changed person. I see him as an opportunist." Alarmed by the Duke threat, the Baton Rouge Jewish community held a city- wide meeting recently and raised $25,000 to defeat him. Many Jews around the state have joined and are the principal fi- nancial backers of The Louisiana Coali- tion Against Racism and Nazism, a polit- ical action committee organized earlier this year by people who opposed Mr. Duke when he ran for the House of Rep- resentatives. The coalition, which claims 2,000 "contacts and contributors," in- cluding 17 campus groups throughout the state, is bipartisan and multi-racial. Executive Director Lance Hill asserts that the question is not whether Mr. Duke will win the Senate race but wheth- er he will finish strongly enough to gain increased legitimacy. Interviewed in his downtown New Orleans office, Mr. Hill says Mr. Duke is seeking to build "a mass-based racist and anti-Semitic movement politically, and this is simply a device in a long-term strategy. "If he pulls anywhere near 35-40 per- cent of the white vote, he's broken through and would be perceived by a ma- jority of whites as a solution to the [ra- cial] problem," Mr. Hill says. 1