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April 09, 1993 - Image 32

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1993-04-09

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

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the United States , which is
controlled by the Muslim
Brotherhood, and the pro-
Iranian "jihad" movements.
So far, the two streams have
engaged in an uneasy co-ex-
istence because they reasoned
that any open dispute would
only benefit those who were
hostile to Islam, whatever its
orientation.
This truce will be tested to
the limit by the New York
bombing, which has also set-
back those moderate Muslim
elements who are seeking in-
clusion in the broad Ameri-
can fabric through a variety
of conventional activities.
These range from partici-
pation in mainstream politics
to convincing businessmen in
New York to display the cres-
cent alongside the menorah
and Christmas tree. In Los
Angeles, a group is working
on "minority jurisprudence,"
which involves interpreting
Islamic texts so that Muslims
can make religious conces-
sions in order to adapt to
American cultural norms.
The effect of any clash in
the United States between
mainstream and radical Is-
lam is likely to reverberate
throughout the Middle East.
Nowhere does this clash
have more far-reaching im-
plications than Egypt, the
largest, most powerful and
most populous Arab state and
the only country in the region
to have signed a peace treaty
with Israel.
Islamic radicals have been
staging attacks on both local
and foreign targets in Egypt
for almost a year and hun-
dreds of militants and secu-
rity forces have been killed in
clashes, mostly in Upper
Egypt but increasingly in
Cairo itself.
Tourism, which brings in
$4 billion a year, the largest
single source of Egypt's for-
eign currency earnings, is re-
ported to have been virtually
shut down since a sustained
campaign was launched
against tourist targets last
August.
According to reports from
Cairo this week, Iranian lead-
ers gave the go-ahead for the
Islamic radicals to launch an
all-out assault designed to
destabilize and topple the
Egyptian regime of President
Hosni Mubarak.
The source said Iran's lead-
ers calculate that the over-
throw of the Egyptian
government will create a
domino effect, undermining
all the neighboring secular
Arab regimes, already pene-
trated by Islamic movements,
and destroying the Middle

Meanwhile, Israeli officials
hope the Clinton administra-
tion will not repeat the mis-
takes of the past and will
abandon what Martin
Kramer, associate director of
Tel Aviv University's Center
for Middle East Studies de-
scribes as "the myth that
there are good fundamental-
ists and bad fundamental-
ists."
The American-born Dr.
Kramer, an expert in Islam-
ic movements, believes U.S.
policy makers erred in as-
suming that popular Islam-
ic movements might evolve
democratically, that geo-
graphically divergent move-
ments were ideologically
diverse and that America
would be able to contain fun-
damentalist phenomena.
"We in Israel know that
movements that seem social
and philanthropic can, in
changing circumstances, be-
come dangerous," he warned
recently. ❑

Russian Oleh
Stabs His Wife

Tel Aviv (JTA) — An immi-
grant from the former Soviet
Union who had been ordered
to stay away from his wife
knifed her to death in Haifa
as their 11-year-old son tried
to stop the attack.
Anatoly Zubkov, who im-
migrated to Israel two years (
ago, had been ordered by
police to stay away from his
wife's home after a com-
plaint was filed that he was
beating her.
Despite the order, Mr.
Zubkov forced his way into
the apartment early Monday
morning. Seizing knives
from the kitchen, he stabbed
his wife, Kira, repeatedly as
she lay in bed.
Awakened by the noise,
their son tried to pull his
father away but, failing to do \
so, jumped through the
ground-floor window and
called the police.
Officers were on the spot at
the house in Kiryat Ata in
Haifa Bay within minutes.
They found Mr. Zubkov still
standing by his wife's body,
with the knives still in his
hands.
Anatoly had complained
that his wife was having an
affair with another man.
After Kira filed complaints (
against her husband some
weeks ago, a court ordered
Anatoly to remove himself
from her house and not to

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