EDITORIAL C_J Center Offers A Bridge On, Sunday, Aug. 30, Congregation Shaarey Zedek will unveil its Eugene and Marcia Applebaum Beth Hayeled Building and Jewish Parenting Center to the com- munity. With its opening, Congregation Shaarey Zedek is demonstrating a concern it has for the 1990s Jewish family. Many area con- gregations have highly committed pro- grams dedicated to the solidification of the Jewish family. Here, Shaarey Zedek is seizing a unique opportunity. Its facility will offer a bridge between its synagogue, and its nursery school. That bridge is the Parenting Center. With full recognition that parents of the 1990s might be missing the resources the extended Jewish family of the past once offered, programs that range from learning Hebrew to effective parenting to grand- parenting will be offered. Busy parents who don't know how to observe the Sabbath or the real significance behind a child's bar or bat mitzvah, will be able to learn. The Center will even make kosher Sabbath meals available. There are perhaps a million and one negative reasons why this community needs such a facility, from the staggering rate of intermarriage to generations lost to assimilation. But the mood of the Shaarey Zedek staff is to accentuate the positive, the learning that can take a family to their next most comfortable level of Jewish growth. And it's this positive approach to Jewish life that the entire community looks for- ward to for generations to come. AIPAC As Big Brother The American Israel Public Affairs Committee has a mandate to lobby on Capitol Hill for pro-Israel legislation and to strengthen U.S.-Israel ties. When it does its job well, as it often does, that makes us proud. But when AIPAC involves itself with the internal workings of the Jewish community — specifically the Jewish press — that makes us apprehensive. The issue at hand, as reported in these pages several weeks ago, concerns a top AIPAC official's role in seeking to change the editorial point of view of the Washing- ton Jewish Week, which he deemed to be too liberal. Briefly, Andrew Silow Carroll, the then managing editor of the newspaper, spoke at a picnic sponsored by a coalition of Washington-area "progressive" or "alternative" Jewish groups in May 1991. A former AIPAC intern was there and wrote up a memo, which he submitted to AIPAC, describing Mr. Carroll's comments as sympathetic with the views of his au- dience. That memo was later shared by Steve Rosen, AIPAC's policy director, with mem- bers of the board of the Washington Jewish Week. Soon after, Mr. Carroll was demoted and subsequently resigned this past June. The publisher of the Washington Jewish Week said his decision had nothing to do with the memo; Mr. Carroll's supporters maintain that the editor was the victim of a Jewish smear campaign. Whether or not the memo was responsi- ble directly for Mr. Carroll's leaving is not our main concern. Rather, it is Mr. Rosen's admitted interest in changing the policy of the Washington Jewish Week, which he felt had become "the captive of an ideological faction that was to the left of the Jewish mainstream." That is why he said he shared the 13-line, unsubstantiated memo with members of the board of the news- paper. Mr. Rosen said that his intent was to change the newspaper's editorial policy, not its personnel. "Keeping the paper in the hands of the 'alternative' crowd was unhealthy," he said. We find such thinking disturbing and far removed from the purview of AIPAC, which, ironically, has been criticized by Israeli government officials in recent days for having aligned itself too closely in re- cent years with the policies of the right-of- center Likud government of Yitzhak Shamir. Now, to keep pace with the new govern- ment in Jerusalem, AIPAC is scrambling back toward the center. All of which is fine in a system that reflects democracy and di- versity. That is precisely why AIPAC should respect the independence and diver- sity of the Jewish press. It's one thing for the organization to keep files on people and organizations; the key question is what it does with such files. Mr. Rosen's actions in the Andrew Carroll episode, at least, were out of line. Dry Bones wec.L., HE DIt>101- 171 \ TO GET krrA rOGCeL) WANT PRES' Dl AL CAM PAIGK) / 6 FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 1992 ORDERED A HAIM , „ ma To aitc•i% NONE, Or 114EM WOULD wpm - TO 13E, AN- REGWERED REPUBLICANS, WouLD THEY ?' SEn*LEMEtitZ, f3DT I'VE STILL GOT ItOPLE TO NOM.. LETTERS Jews Must Speak Against Genocide I am writing in response to the editorial by Elizabeth Ap- plebaum, "Spare Me Com- parisons." (Aug. 21). There can be no question that the Holocaust was a uni- que event, and to equate other acts of brutality — even when they involve genocide — with the Holocaust is to trivialize that terrible period of history. However, I have nowhere seen a statement that the atrocities in Bosnia- Herzegovina are equated with those of the Holocuast, except in Ms. Applebaum's column. As Jews, we bear particular responsibility to stop genocide wherever it occurs, even if we are not (this time) the ones in the camps and even if the number of people killed does not add up to 6 million. Ms. Applebaum's editorial equates genocide and systematic extermination with the use of gas chambers. Unfortunately, mankind has developed many techniques for mass murder, gas chambers being only one of them. The absence of gas chambers in the Serbian camps certainly should not lead one to conclude that systematic extermination of Muslims and Croats could not take place there. I feel compelled to point out an historical inaccuracy in the above-mentioned editorial, in which was writ- ten "there was no history of German-Jewish conflict when World War II broke out." Ger- man anti-Semitism existed long before World War II. Are the camps, the "ethnic cleansing" of territory, the torture and the killing to be equated with the Holocaust? No. Is systematic extermina- J tion of ethnic groups (read: genocide) occurring? It would appear so. So why is it possi- ble to count on one hand the individuals in the Detroi Jewish community who have_ forcefully spoken out on thig issue? Is it because this time we are not the ones behind the barbed wire? David A. Loeffler Southfield CHAIM Condemn - 'Ethnic Cleansing' C.H.A.I.M., Children of Holocaust-Survivors ASSOCiE.;,-- tion In Michigan, strongly condemns the persecution; and the atrocities reportedly being committed by Serbia , against the Muslim and Croa- tian peoples of Bosnia and Herzegovina. The brutal,- policy of "ethnic cleansing" now taking place evokes in uEJ memories of the Nazi policy of genocide against the Jewisi people during the Holocaust. Fifty years ago, the world stood silent as Nazi death camps operated. Had nations vigorously protested and not-, been silent about the atrocities being committed by Nazi Germany, perhaps 6 million civilian Jews would not have lost their lives. As a matter of conscience, we protest and we urge others to protest the horrors now taking place in 1992. We an, peal to our nation's leaders to take appropriate actions to do whatever is possible to pre- vent the further losses of life We urge international inspec- tions of Serbian prison campsr- and continued support for ef- forts to supply humanitaridii aid to the refugees. Charles Silow President C.H.A.I.M. Farmington Hills