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page 55
that if someone comes to
kill you, you must kill him
first."
Territorial compromise
does not mean wholesale
territorial surrender.
Virtually all Israelis are in
favor of keeping every part
of east Jerusalem, and an
overwhelming majority
want to hold onto at least a
substantial part of the
Golan Heights.
"I'm not worried that
Rabin is going to give up
all of the Golan," said Mr.
Zafrani, the grocery store
owner. "Even if he wanted
to, the people wouldn't let
him."
But among many of the
new breed Israelis - the
capitalists and traveling
businessmen who think
"globally," the question is
not which territory will be
returned but whether the
Arabs will have normal
relations with Israel —
free exchange of goods,
tourism, etc.
According to Mr. Pick,
the magazine publisher,
"among the industrialists
and exporters, the opinion
makers in the economy,
there's an understanding
of the business potential of
peace, so they're in favor of
speeding the negotiations
forward."
But Mr. Pick says he
doesn't talk about this
stuff with his colleagues; it
just doesn't come up. What
happens in Washington
has tremendous long-term
importance, but on a day-
to-day basis, it has a mar-
ginal place in Israelis'
lives. As Mr. Zafrani, the
grocery owner, said: "I
work all day; I have to feed
my family, and I get a half-
hour of politics at night
with the news on televi-
sion, and then I go to
sleep."
Holocaust In Europe
Could Happen Again
Washington (JTA) — A
majority of Americans be-
lieves a holocaust against
the Jews of Europe could
happen again, according to a
national survey released
this week.
The survey was commis-
sioned by a group called the
Committee of Concerned
Christians, which describes
itself as "the first all-
denominational Christian
organization whose sole
purpose is to ensure that the
Holocaust is never
forgotten."
Fifty-four percent of re-
spondents said they believed
another holocaust similar to
the Nazi Holocaust could
happen in Europe.
Thirty-two percent said it
could not happen again, and
the remainder was unsure or
did not know.
The survey, released in the
office of Richard Halverson,
the chaplain of the U.S.
Senate and a member of the
committee's advisory board,
sampled 1,022 adults bet-
ween April 30 and May 2.
Ben Friedman, founder of
and spokesman for the corn-
mittee, said in a statement
that the results show most
Americans do not believe the
Holocaust-related slogan
"Never Again" is accurate.
The slogan "is an obsolete
and ineffective warning
against another Holocaust
and should be abandoned
immediately by the Jewish
people," said Mr. Friedman,
a businessman who was de-
scribed by the Los Angeles
Times as an active member
of the Jewish community.
"Unless a full-scale pro-
gram is implemented to pre-
vent another Holocaust, a
more accurate slogan is 'It
will happen again."
The committee plans to
launch a program to educate
Americans about the Holo-
caust, including distribution
of a free videotape about the
Holocaust to 10,000 chur-
ches, and distribution of
copies of The Diary of Anne
Frank.
Mr. Friedman founded the
committee last year, in an
effort to ensure that the
Holocaust is not forgotten.
He has enlisted 1,000 min-
isters and bishops across the
country in his cause, and
they have pledged to deliver
one sermon per year about
the Holocaust.
The survey found that
older people are more likely
to believe a holocaust could
happen again.
Sixty-one percent of people
age 45 to 64 believe that an-
other holocaust could occur,
while only 48 percent of
younger respondents felt
that way.