I OPINION A Newspaper Advertisement Is A Serious Responsibility PHIL JACOBS Managing Editor N ext time, let's just take a full-page black swastika and print it on the backside of a news- paper. Then, let's wrap ourselves up in the Ameri- can flag and talk about First Amendment rights. You think that is preposterous? Check out last Thursday's Michigan Daily. They did it. They just used words instead of symbols. In case you didn't get an oppor- tunity to see it, this "prestigious" college news- paper ran a paid ad that claims Nazis didn't gas the Jews. In fact, the showers they used were to delouse the Jews. Why were the Jews emaciated? The adver- tisers believe the Germans, in a war-time economy, simply were concerned about feeding the rest of their population first. Someone at the Michigan Daily made a terrible error, but don't even dignify it by calling it poor judgement. It was in effect no-judgement. I don't want to talk about that anymore. Instead, I want those, including the editor of the Michigan Daily, to try and feel the pain of the Holo- caust. Let's snap a photograph here. Two little children, one is 3 years old, the other 5. Three-year-olds, whether they are in a day care center because both parents work, or they are in their backyard on the swings, should be do- ing a fair amount of laughing, and playing with toy figures such as Big Bird or Bert and Ernie. But let's get back to our photograph. There's our 3- year-old boy with a jacket covering his naked chest, a pair of ripped shorts and only one shoe. He's not cry- ing, he's howling. He wants his mommy. He doesn't want his mommy because he's cut his finger or because some- one won't share. His mommy has been forced away at gunpoint. He's on the street alone. Who is hugging this child? His 5-year-old sister. His 5-year-old sister! See their faces. Look in their eyes and look at their starving bodies and look at the way they are traumatiz- ed. There's no one to play with now. Nobody is tucking them in bed anymore. Do the words "tucking them in" or "Big Bird" stay out of your aperceptive mind? Wake up. People use these words every day. The face of a child of the Holocaust can keep you awake at night, once you've seen it . . . that is if you are really in touch with what human rights really are. Nobody in the Germany of the late 1930s protected this child's First Amendment rights. By printing what it did, and wrapping itself in the First Amendment, the Michigan Daily is justifying the absence of rights of mill- ions of Holocaust victims. Does keeping this ad out of the newspaper slap the First Amendment in the face? I think not. Because the First Amendment and the other great freedoms of this coun- try aren't something you fool around with. You are not Does keeping this ad out of the newspaper slap the First Amendment in the face? mischievous with them. If you want to talk about the six million who died in the Holocaust, do it in a respon- sible way. Bring in people who have tatooed numbers on their arms. Let them debate the doubters. Cover community forums based on the issues, the hard issues. But don't stop pointing fingers and hiding. You are pointing instead at yourselves. Would you run an ad that says there are no such thing as homeless people? Why not, it's a free country isn't it? Would you run an ad de- nying that Afro-Americans came here in shackles amid such squalor that many didn't make it alive out of the excrement around them in the holds of transport ships? The First Amendment guarantees the freedom of the press — to print what it wishes. It does not guar- antee a public outlet for the revisionists in someone else's newspaper. The pro- tection, and the responsibili- ty, lie squarely on the shoulders of the editors and the publishers of the Mich- igan Daily. If there's anything at all positive about all of this, at least people are talking about it. At least the com- munity, not just the Jewish community but the entire community, expressed their anger. That's been a positive. Lord knows there are plen- ty of other issues to debate and discover. There were times when I would come home late from playing ice hockey at a rink near the in- ner city of Baltimore. At 1 in the morning I'd be driving past subsidized high-rise buildings in the middle of winter, when no one else was around. Time and time again I would see tiny toddlers walking hand-in- hand with a teen-age mother on the street. All three of them were children, and all three should have been in warm rooms, sound asleep. Let's face the real issues as people, as journalists. There are still abused children dy- ing of hunger in this coun- try, in this world. There are so many areas we could get into, so many stories to tell. An ad in a leading college newspaper denying that 1 million children, a multitude, a_ generation, never died at the hands of Hitler, does not belong in any newspaper that believes in First Amendment rights. If you believe it does, you are encouraging in your own way the undermining of something you should hold very near and dear — your own First Amendment rights. ADVERTISEMENT ADVERTISEMENT ADVERTISEMENT ADVERTISEMENT THE HOLOCAUST CONTROVERSY: The Case For Open Debate By Bradley R. Smith nu, cammonoftuiv mut city go IL 161... w>a astkan ...1 pathk. . .. rad I....U. I... 114 • at ..w ma. a.... 6 la tha Mir .f IRRY. 7..1 • W 11. L. the the aisk MW ..1 TIE I 11,10/11.11. MISR esa. altle rdliLrr a4 tla Cy. 144.4 St... ay tla .1 a .1.6. to *kg the thithotYlf..... D.Y. w Sy. Y. Y.. J. the Sol.. • wee then ow .4.s. et ~ erelrbk L. Way .1.1 et ktalt tth anetrir 4 U., Lia. ...I 41.. a at. Y. Seat Tat sr leet. C.... 11, ts. 11.7 11. A. ...the oft the .bat 4.4 6.1... 11.. 6 kat La less. 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Oa .61 A mad nose tie .tik e.a krt . eri. as at Toe atio b4 W the • la a.vas.., la Ye 4.6. waw tla k. 71. Jot th. to ea et. pretia. thailaa et a wt r art r Ural rl rtl. PC .spay They Oa Anse ta LW.* Yee. ia the nal shrarr. end Ora I.. ....a thai. Rataart pr. par.. a• 4100> .44 Lo is.. J... • dere. Y. Teo rpirb b¢ Ca. a.. Wk.* talag AY is .. la v... osl to. kat ...41 aesi 66.6. Yast R. asit of W... Y. ot o 9Pm wLw a.. aka... WS. 0.• 000311 *h. ea. • al.. Lay then la • Y. Rot .1.61.1. go... 1.1..tto. mat. 1.4167 The ad in the Michigan Daily. The brother and the sister on the sidewalk had no rights. They had no food. They had no life. There were plenty of newspaper ads back then that made sure of it. Runn- ing an ad disputing the Holocaust should cause pain in all of us. The memories alone should serve as enough of a reminder. We don't need anyone to update the pain. On the flip side, those that actually believe in the so- called "myth of the six mill- ion" can point to an ad in a credible student newspaper and use this ad for credibili- ty. It might not mean much by itself now. But in the col- lective, when we read about men like David Duke becom- ing political powers, blacks using anti-Semitic epithets in the streets of Crown Heights and now an adver- tisement in a respected uni- versity's student newspaper disputing our darkest hour, it's time for Jews to pay at- tention and for everyone to work hard to keep all of this from getting worse. In a world where life is becoming cheaper, terrorism and hate don't need adver- tisements. They're doing quite well without them. ❑ Fanning Farrakhan's Flame GARY ROSENBLATT Editor I've got a great idea here but you're going to get upset. So I'll just come out and say it and then explain. Let's have Jew- ish organizations, and especially the B'nai B'rith Hillel movement, sponsor a national speaking tour on col- lege campuses for the Rev. Louis Farrakhan, Al Sharp- ton, Kwame Ture (formerly Stokely Carmichael), David Duke and a variety of neo- Nazis. See, I knew you'd be upset. But think about it logical- ly. Given that Jewish organ- izations are desperate to counter the assimilation trend in this country, par- ticularly among young peo- ple, and given that the big- gest turn-on for Jewish kids on college campuses is to protest the appearance of anti-Jewish speakers like the Rev. Farrakhan, why not have him, and others like him, speak on as many cam- puses as possible? I guar- antee that large numbers of Jewish students will voice their protests with pickets, rallies and debates. What better way to inspire Jewish students than to challenge their complacent attitudes toward Jewish survival and have them con- front, face to face, those who would have us powerless, if not worse. The facts are that it's effective. While most students do not attend Sabbath services at Hillel or come out to hear an address from an Israeli represent- ative discussing the merits of Zionism, tell them that Louis Farrakhan is coming to preach his anti-Jewish venom and they'll be lining up to organize against him. This is not only true of col- lege students. Too many of us identify Jewishly out of negative, rather than positive, emotions. Offer us a chance to go to synagogue and we'll pass. But call us a "dirty Jew," or worse, and we'll be overflowing with Jewish pride. This speaks to a flaw in the American JeWish psyche, reflected in the fact that we respond best to crisis and threats and to defining ourselves as victims. Take Israel, for example. Most of us recognize our Continued on Page 22 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 7