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issue.
"But there were others that
were just ugly," he said. "I find
that tone very distressing and
very worrisome. I will contin-
ue fighting against (APN)
when I disagree with their po-
sitions. But we are a democra-
tic community. If they agree to
act in certain ways, they
should be admitted. The calls
I was getting basically said
`vote against them because
they're no good.' Is this what
we're coming to as a commu-
nity?"
Ms. Pogrebin, APN's co-chair
and one of the primary targets
of the attacks, put it in
stronger terms.
"This was a reprehensible,
often McCarthyite attack on a
pro- Israel, Zionist organiza-
tion," she said. "Who are these
people to say that the Peace
Now perspective, which repre-
sents the perspective of a good
proportion of the Israeli gov-
ernment, should be anathema
in the Jewish community?"
The crusade against Peace
Now, she said, also reflected
the difficulties of litmus-test
politics in today's changeable
political environment. "The
fact that these arguments res-
onated at all is a reflection of
the fact that during 14 years of
Likud government, there was
this climate of 'us versus them'
in the Jewish world," she said.
"We have set up all these in-
stant loyalty tests. If you say
something critical, you are a
serious threat, a danger to Is-
rael, you are not a real Jew."
Israeli citizens, she said, are
capable of understanding that
opposition to one set of policies
does not necessarily indicate
treasonous intent. American
Jews, more remote from the
day-to-day realities of Israeli
life and nervous about the im-
age of safe, secure Americans
telling Israelis what risks to
take, prefer to deal more in
moral archetypes, like the "not
one inch" policies of the former
Likud government.
When Israel lurches off in a
different political direction -
something that is inevitable,
given that country's particu-
larly brand of democracy -
American Jews, accustomed to
thinking of Israeli policies as
almost biblical command-
ments, find it difficult to make
the adjustment.
Some of that difficulty was
evident at the policy conference
of the American Israel Public
Affairs Committee, when a sig-
nificant number of participants
seemed confused and angry
about the group's swift adjust-
ment to the new political envi-
ronment in Jerusalem.
That same confusion and
anger were evident in the de-

nITor

APN'c bid tn inin

ate

American Jewish mainstream.
There was widespread agree-
ment in the Jewish world that
APN's application for mem-
bership in the Presidents Con-
ference raised some legitimate
issues having to do with the
proper relationship between
American Jewish groups and
the government in Israel, and
the most suitable mechanisms
for dissent within the Jewish
world.
But those issues were lost in
the noisy, bitter and intensely
personal
perN. o campaign against
APN.

Greenberg Golf
Chairs Are Named

Bill Hertz will be chairman
of the third annual Hank
Greenberg Memorial Golf
and Tennis Invitational
June 21. Bill Berris and
Leonard Brose were named
co-chairmen by the Michigan
Jewish Sports Hall of Fame.
The Invitational, to be
held at West Bloomfield's
Tam O'Shanter Country
Club, honors the former
Detroit Tiger who was
inducted into the Major
League Hall of Fame in
1956; the Michigan Sports
Hall of Fame in 1958; the
International Jewish Sports
Hall of Fame in 1979; and
the Michigan Jewish Sports
Hall of Fame in 1985.
Proceeds will benefit the
Hank Greenberg Memorial
Cancer Fund at Sinai
Hospital of Detroit and the
Michigan Jewish Sports Hall
of Fame.

High School
Yearbook '93

The Jewish News
will again honor acade-
mically talented Jewish
high school seniors in
our annual "yearbook"
in May.
Area high school
principals have been
asked to distribute our
form to their five
Jewish seniors with the
highest grade point
average (minimum 3.6
unweighted).
Some schools require
the students to request
the form from the prin-
cipal. If you feel you

qualify but have not
been contacted, check
with your principal.
Deadline for submis-
sion to The Jewish
News is April 22.

