UP FRONT Packing Their Bags JAMES D. BESSER Washington Correspondent F or Jews around the country, David Duke has cast an ominous shadow across the American political landscape. But for many of Louisiana's 25,000 Jews, Mr. Duke represents a more immediate kind of trauma. Even if he loses the Nov. 16 election, Mr. Duke's sur- prisingly strong support from the white middle class has left many Jews in the state feeling estranged from neighbors and colleagues, fearful about their futures. Suddenly, some are think- ing about fleeing if the reconstituted Nazi and Ku Klux Klan leader succeeds in his bid for the Louisiana statehouse. Dr. Kurt Gitter, a promi- nent ophthalmologist in New Orleans whose family fled Adolf Hitler when he was one year old, feels so strongly that he has notified patients that he will close his practice and leave the state if there is a Duke vic- tory. "I wrote a letter to my en- tire patient list — about 10,000," he said in an inter- view last week. "I've never done anything like this before. But this is something I feel strongly about. In ad- dition to being a Nazi and a racist, Duke is a psychopath." Dr. Gitter, whose family was decimated by the Holocaust that Mr. Duke has denied, watched with mounting frustration and anger as Mr. Duke fought a surprisingly close race for the U.S. Senate with "It's definitely made me reassess friendships. I feel like more of a Jew than I did before." Walt Handelsman incumbent Bennett Johnston last year, and when the former hate group leader ran a strong second in the recent open guber- natorial primary, easily defeating incumbent Gov. Buddy Roemer, another Republican. "I've had about as much as I can take of Mr. Duke," he said. Some of Dr. Gitter's pa- tients responded to his letter with words of support. But others have spewed anti- Semitic and anti-black epithets at the doctor, a John Hopkins graduate and former member of the Hopkins board of trustees. "There's a real fear in both the Jewish and the non- Jew- ish communities among those who understand what this man is like," he said. "It's very traumatic for us. I think there really will be an exodus if this man is elect- ed." Already, the Duke phenomenon has left scars on the Jewish community in Louisiana. Many Jews have been profoundly shocked at the ease with which their non-Jewish neighbors and colleagues have accepted Mr. Duke's candidacy. "People are very depress- ed," said Walt Handelsman, a political cartoonist for the New Orleans Times- Picayune who has crystalliz- ed anti-Duke sentiment in hard-hitting cartoons. "At parties, I've stopped asking people who they're voting for because I've found out that people I've known Photo By Andrew Lichtenstein. Some Jews in Louisiana say they'll move if David Duke is elected governor of their state Saturday. Framed by the flag: David Duke campaigning in Morgan City, La. from various places are voting for Duke," he said. "I'm personally insulted. Forget about what he says: If you're my friend, you shouldn't vote for him be- cause it makes me feel you don't care about Jews." The rise of David Duke has opened new gulfs between Jews and their neighbors, he said. The intense emotions swirling around the current campaign have also forced many to view their Jewish identities in a new and un- comfortable light. "When I get into an argu- ment about Duke, I'm always surprised that it lasts more than ten seconds," said Mr. Handelsman. "He was a Nazi; he was the head of the Klan; that's it, as far as I'm concerned. It's definitely made me reassess some of my friendships. And I feel like more of a Jew than I did before." Mr. Handelsman's car- toons have generated anti- Semitic and anti-black letters and calls, part of the climate of fear that many Jews expect will flourish in Louisiana if Mr. Duke wins. "I do get calls, almost on a daily basis, about my Duke cartoons," he said. "I don't know if it's because I'm Jew- ish. But many of the letters are anti-Semitic. People have called and said, 'we're Can You Predict This Article? First, turn on some spooky music. Then get dry ice (billows of smoke being necessary for atmosphere). Now wait until midnight and maybe, just maybe, you'll be able to predict this story before you read an- other word. What material owned by Houdini recently sold at an auction for more than $7,700? For those with no contacts in the other world, here's the answer: correspondence and reference material about spiritualism the magician used as sources for his writings. Houdini, born Erich Weiss, spent countless hours exposing fake mediums and those claiming to communicate with the dead. The material was auction- ed by Swann Galleries in New York. Smoking Is Focus Of RCA Paper The RCA Roundtable, the halachic think tank of the Rabbinical Council of America, recently issued the first of a series of 10 annual responses to contemporary halachic questions. The first paper addresses the issue of smoking, finding it forbidden "both due to the damage to the health of the smoker as well as to inno- cent bystanders." The Roundtable, chaired by Rabbis J. Simcha Cohen of Los Angeles and Reuven Bulka of Ottawa, calls on rabbis throughout the world to ban smoking in syn- agogue buildings and areas under their jurisdiction. Future issues on which the Roundtable expects to issue papers include policy toward the intermarried and child abuse. Compiled by Elizabeth Applebaum ROUND UP Museum Of Art Hosts Yiddish Films The National Center for Jewish Film, located on the campus of Brandeis Univer- sity, is working with the New York Museum of Modern Art's Department of Film to organize a new ex- hibit called "Yiddish Film Between Two Worlds." The exhibit opens this week at the Museum of Modern Art. The exhibit, which will run through Jan. 14., in- cludes films like Tevye, Yid- dle With His Fiddle, Green Fields and The Dybbuk. Many of these are available on video through the Na- tional Center for Jewish Film. Tevye, made in 1939, re- cently was added to the Library of Congress' Na- tional Film Registry for movies that are "culturally, historically or aesthetically significant." Adapted by Maurice Schwartz from a A scene from "Tevye." story by Sholom Aleichem, Tevye was filmed on Long Island. For information, contact the National Center for Jew- ish Film, at (617) 899-7044. Soviets Plan Rehabilitation New York — In a meeting with the World Jewish Con- gress, the Soviet Union's chief prosecutor, Nikolai Trubin, said he is anxious to begin rehabilitating some of the country's most noted former political prisoners. Among those he specifically cited were former refuseniks Natan Sharansky, Ida Nudel and Yosef Begun. Ms. Nudel and Mr. Begun were imprisoned for teaching Hebrew. Mr. Trubin told the WJC that rehabilitation would involve authorities issuing a formal apology and possibly compensation for their unlawful imprisonment. The Soviet prosecutor also said his country is prepared to open the ministry's files on the case of Raoul Wallenberg, the Swedish diplomat who rescued thousands of Hungarian Jews from the Nazis and later disappeared in the Soviet Union. "He believed that it would not be a long time until we got to the bottom of the Wallenberg mystery," said Irwin Cotler, WJC Canadian chairman who attended the meeting with Mr. Trubin. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 11