PURELY COMMENTARY TIVO BEAUTIFUL, 159 FOR A LIMITED TIME, PURCHASE TWO 100% CASHMERE TUNIC SWEATERS FOR ONLY $159. OR CHOOSE ONE TUNIC FOR ONLY $99, REGULARLY $145. COMFORT- ABLE. CAREFREE. AND WITH A SLIMMING EFFECT THAT POSITIVELY FLATTERS. IN A VARIETY OF LUSCIOUS COLORS. WHILE QUANTITIES LAST. OFFER ENDS NOVEMBER 30TH. LIVONIA ■ LAUREL PARK PLACE SIX MILE & NEWBURGH, E. OF 1-275 40 FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1991 ■ 462-6126 Many Lasting Signals To Bilateral Conferees PHILIP SLOMOVITZ Editor Emeritus B ilateral sessions for the continuing Middle East peace negotia- tions are on the agenda with the encouragements emanating from Madrid. There is a readiness to ac- cede to the inevitability of patience mingled with the hope that the roads are now being cleared for historic ac- tions to create amity among the nations. The handshakes between antagonists justified the re- joicing. The quest for op- timism takes us back 12 years to Camp David with gratitude for the initial road paving in the first accord toward peace between Egypt and Israel. That act in peace- treaty writing remains a credit to Anwar el-Sadat who went to Jerusalem to address the Knesset at the invitation of Menahem Begin with added impetus from Jimmy Carter. The messages of these three leaders on that historic day, March 26, 1979, remain memorable and retain en- couragement for continuing action to this day. It was at that commence- ment of peace making that Mr. Begin pronounced his motto for an important ear with these words: I have come from the land of Israel, the land of Zion and Jerusalem and here I am in humility and with pride as a son of the Jewish people, as one of the generation of the Holocaust and the redemption. The ancient Jewish people gave the world a vision of eternal peace, of universal disarmament, of abolishing the teaching and the learning of war. Two prophets, Yeshayahu Ben Amoz and Micah Hamorashti, having fore- seen the spiritual unity of man under God, with these words coming forth from Jerusalem, gave the nations of the world the following vision: "And they shall beat their swords into plowshares, and their spears into pruning hooks. Nation shall not lift up sword against nation. neither shall they learn war anymore." Despite the tragedies and disappointments of the past, we must never forsake that vision, that human dream, that un- shakable faith. Peace is the beauty of life. It is sunshine. It is the smile of a child, the love of a mother, the joy of a father, the togetherness of a family. It is the ad- vancement of man, the victory of a just cause, the triumph of truth. Peace is all of these and more. Anwar el-Sadat added to the significance of the event with his speech at Camp David by declaring: This is certainly one of the happiest moments of my life. It is a historic tur- ning point of great significance for all peace- loving nations. Those among us who are en- dowed with vision cannot fail to comprehend the dimension of our sacred mission ... In all the steps I took I was not performing a per- sonal mission. I was mere- ly expressing the will of a nation. I am proud of my people and of belonging to them. Today a new dawn is emerging out of the darkness of the past. A new chapter is being opened in the history of coexistence among nations, one that is wor- thy of our spiritual values and civilization. Never before have men en- countered such a complex dispute which is highly charged with emotions. Never before did men need that much courage and imagination to con- front a single challenge. Never before had any cause generated that much interest in all four corners of the globe. It was the spiritually motivated message of Presi- dent Carter that indicated the leadership he inspired for that Camp David achiev- ement. President Carter's address was both an invita- tion to amity for all in the Middle east as well as a warning against war mak- ing. It is as if he envisioned in 1979 the road paving to peace in Madrid in 1991. President Carter declared: I am convinced that other Arab people need and want peace. But some of their leaders are not yet willing to honor these needs and desires for peace. We must now dem- onstrate the advantages of peace and expand its benefits to encompass all those who have suffered so much in the Middle East. Obviously, time and understanding will be necessary for people, hitherto enemies, to become neighbors in the best sense of the word. Just because a paper is signed, all the problems will not automatically go away. Future days will require the best from us to give reality to these lofty aspirations. Let those who would shatter peace, who would callously spill more blood, be aware that we three and all others who may "Our religious doctrines — all religious doctrines give us hope . ." join us will vigorously wage peace. So let history record that deep and an- cient antagonisms can be settled without bloodshed and without staggering waste of precious lives, without rapacious destruction of the land .. . It is true that we cannot enforce trust and coop- eration between nations, but we can use all our strength to see that nations do not again go to war. Our religious doc- trines all religious doc- trines give us hope ... So let us now lay aside war; let us now reward all the children of Abraham who hunger for a com- prehensive peace in the Middle East. Let us now enjoy the adventure of becoming fully human, fully neighbors, even brothers and sisters. We are dealing with a remarkable continuation of Camp David proposals, their formulas, the outline for an autonomy which was stated in this column last week. We can and we must now treat the road to amity as a reality. That which is view- ed as bilateral in the plann- ing for peace-formulating can become more than a dream. It is approaching fulfillment. May it become so. El