Year In Review Tragic Lessons Unlearned Refugees from Haiti seeking asylum and reports of 'ethnic cleansing' in Bosnia stir painful memories. linost 50 years after the grand dragon, ran a sanitized white end of World War II, supremacist campaign in his bid for the there were disturbing governorship of Louisiana. Only when, echoes of the Holocaust toward the end of the campaign, there this year. From the po- seemed a real chance that he might win, litical anti-Semitism of was there an outcry against his views David Duke in Louisiana to the callous and tactics. decision in Washington to refuse asy- The genocide in. Bosnia, where Serbs lum to Haitian refugees to reports of were rounding up Muslims and "ethnic cleansing" in the former Yu- Catholics as political prisoners, startled goslavia, the world seemed to have for- the world — particularly the photos of gotten the tragic lessons of the Nazi era. painfully thin men staring blankly David Duke, the former Ku Klux Klan through barbed wire fences. There were those in the Jewish com- munity who debated the comparison to the Holocaust, but many looked beyond the semantics to seek to redress these crimes against humanity. American Jewish groups were among the first, and most outspoken, to urge the free world to step in and put an end to the brutal- ization of innocents. And tiny Israel, despite its own enormous financial bur- dens, sent supplies of food and medicine. Closer to home, Jewish groups spoke out against Washington's decision to turn away refugees fleeing Haiti by boat in search of political asylum. National Jewish organizations noted that Jewish tradition insists on showing compassion toward others, and Jewish history teach- es only too well that to forcibly return people to a nation ruled by despots all too often condemns them to unspeak- able horrors. Holocaust survivors, including Nobel Peace laureate Elie Wiesel, called on the United States to learn that passivity and inaction are immoral responses in the