Crown Heights And Beyond Is the tension between blacks and Jews in Brooklyn the harbinger of a national crisis? JAMES BESSER WASHINGTON CORRESPONDENT THE DE TROI T JEWISH NEWS C 24 rown Heights: the very words have taken on an ominous tone for Jews around the country in the wake of the 1991 spasm of anti-Semitic vio- lence that even some moderate Jewish leaders now regard as the first genuine pogrom on American soil. In some ways, the continuing drama in Brooklyn is a distinctly local phe- nomenon, pitting some 25,000 Chasidic Jews against about 100,000 blacks in a city infamous for its urban incivility. But the tensions in Crown Heights also threaten black-Jewish relations elsewhere, calling attention to an inse- curity among Jews that may be grow- ing as ethnic politics in America's cities take on a nastier edge. "Crown Heights is the fruition of Jews' worst fears — murder, death and a sense that one cannot depend on the powers- that-be to maintain law and order," said Abraham Foxman, executive director of the Anti-Defamation League. "The fear that the police are not able to prevent the violence is very traumatic for the Jewish community." Summer Violence The bare facts in the Crown Heights affair are well established. In August, 1991, Gavin Cato, a 7-year old black child, died after he was struck by a car driven by an official of the cen- tral organization of the Lubavitch Cha- sidim. That tragic event sparked three nights of black rioting that featured overt anti-Semitism, most tragically the stabbing death of a 29-year-old rab- binical student from Australia, Yankel Rosenbaum, by a gang of blacks who chanted "get the Jew." In retrospect, almost everybody agrees that New York authorities, under the the city's first black mayor, David Dink- ins, were slow to protect the embattled Jewish community. The tensions were rekindled two months ago when Lemrick Nelson Jr., Mr. Rosenbaum's accused assailant, was acquitted by a mostly black and Lati- no jury. After the decision, Mr. Nelson celebrated his victory with the jurors who decided his fate, a slap in the face of the anguished Jewish community. A few weeks ago, the crisis escalat- ed another few notches when a home- less black man — a burglar, according to Chasidic spokesmen — was allegedly beaten by a group of Chasidic men, an action that was characterized as a bias- related crime by the police and Mayor Dinkins, who has become the focus of anger in the Chasidic community. New York's first black mayor, Mr. Dinkins received much support from the Jewish community when he was elect- ed in 1989 by a narrow margin. Long considered an outspoken friend of Israel and sympathetic to Jewish causes, Mr. Dinkins has expressed hurt feelings over the fact that many Jews now feel that he was responsi- ble for the Crown Heights ri- ots lasting four days and for allegedly having a double stan- dard by favoring other mi- norities over Jews. The mayor confronted some of his critics in a private meet- ing with Lubavitch and other Orthodox leaders in Crown Heights as part of an effort to ease tensions. 'The anger was getting out of control," said Rabbi Shea Hecht, Lubavitch spokesman, Adding to the problem is the fact that 1993 is an election year and critics and supporters of Mr. Dinkins are already citing Crown Heights as a key issue regarding the mayor's chances for re-election. Election Year Jewish critics are saying that the mayor has cast his political hopes on the black population. But if Jews mobilize in force against the mayor in the up- coming election, the results could include a strong backlash from a black commu- nity for whom Mr. Dinkins has become a powerful symbol of political empow- erment. Benjamin Hooks, the longtime exec- utive director of the NAACP, passion- ately defends Mayor Dinkins against charges that his actions were motivated by anti-Semitism, or by a political pref- erence for the black community. Like many African-American leaders, he warns that a concerted Jewish campaign against the embattled mayor could turn what is essentially a local dispute into a new crisis for the black and Jewish communities on a national level. "Right now, I don't view this as a na- tional issue," he said. "But it could be- come one. A reaction against Dinkins could trigger this kind of national im- pact." A black-Jewish confrontation over the upcoming mayoralty contest, he said, could exacerbate the problem of black anti-Semitism. "For Dinkins to be sin-