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July 23, 1993 - Image 116

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1993-07-23

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

,

*

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Heights Controversy
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Tel Aviv (JTA) — New York
Mayor David Dinkins began
a high-profile visit here by
stating that Israel should re-
tain control over a united
Jerusalem.
Just minutes after arriv-
ing at Ben-Gurion Airport,
Mr. Dinkins told a large con-
tingent of reporters, "I have
always supported the right
of Israel to exist in secure
borders, as determined by
Israel, with Jerusalem as its
undivided capital."
The mayor, who is here at
the invitation of the Foreign
Ministry, spent most of his
first day in the country
visiting sites in Tel Aviv.
Dressed in an oversized
blue shirt with an applique
of the Big Apple, Mr.
Dinkins toured a mixed
Arab-Jewish neighborhood
in Old Jaffa and talked
about coexistence with its
residents.
He also paid a return visit
to the Hatikvah neighbor-
hood of Tel Aviv, where Iraqi
Scud missiles landed during
the Persian Gulf War. Mr.
Dinkins made his first visit
to the working-class corn-
munity in the winter of
1991, soon after the missiles
damaged homes and a com-
munity center.
Mr. Dinkins received an
especially warm welcome
from Tel Aviv Mayor Shlomo
Lahat, who stated
unabashedl
y, "Be objective:
If you want a good mayor,
vote for David Dinkins."
Though Mr. Dinkins' aides
stress that the visit was
planned months ago and is
in no way connected to the
coming election, they admit
that the mayor is seeking
strong support from New
York's Jewish voters.
Wherever he went, Mr.
Dinkins was dogged by ques-
tions about the tensions
between the Jewish and
African American com-
munities in New York, and
about his handling of the
August 1991 riots in
Brooklyn's Crown Heights
section.
Asked whether he was
frustrated that people were
asking such questions
thousands of miles from New
York, he replied, "No, I ex-
pected it."
Journalists were eager to
know his response. to an
"Open Letter to Mayor
David Dinkins" from New
York activist Rabbi Avi
Weiss that appeared the

David Dinkins:
Supports Israel.

Jerusalem Post.
In the letter, Rabbi Weiss
wrote, "The divisive wounds
of Crown Heights still fester.
The world watched as hun-
dreds of New York police
held back, allowing gangs to
`vent,' allowing Jews to be
injured, thereby creating an
atmosphere in which Yankel
Rosenbaum could be
murdered because he was a
Jew."
"The buck has to stop with
you, Mr. Mayor," the letter
said.

"In New York, I'm used to
such ads," Mr. Dinkins re-
sponded. "They run all the
time."
He then added: "The police
made tactical errors, and
they have acknowledged it. I
said a long, long time ago
that they made tactical
errors.
"I have maintained all
along, as I did in a formal
speech in Thanksgiving
1991, that I am accountable
for what goes on in my ad-
, ministration. I've said the
buck stops here." ❑

The loss of Kfar Etzion,

south of Jerusalem, was one
of the great tragedies of the
battle for independence in
1948. In April repeated Arab
attacks on the settlement
were repelled, but on May 12
several hundred Arabs
renewed the attack, killing
100 Jews. Only four surviv-
ed. Fifteen members of Kfar
Etzion were machine- gunn-
ed to death after they had
surrendered and were being
photographed by their cap-
tors.

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