Editor's Notebook Community Views Defining Justice Is No Easy Task Criticism Of Israel A Double Standard 1ERL FALBAUM SPEC AL TO THE JEW SH NEWS Conservative Jews in the Unit- ed States — those who for more than a decade have identified with the Likud and its policies — are facing a serious dilemma. noral and m'- ".. ---* --T1-ut the years, when Wert. :hamir led the Is- ',-tpent, American Yeli dkudniks' =everely criticized le liberal Jewish community this country who blamed Is- lel for being too intransigent. 8. conservatives argued Amer: ,:ans (and other Jews the world) had no right to crit- , cize Israel because: 1) Such --'4 ;cism was indirectly giving ipPort to Israel's enemies; 2) Those not living under the dai- y threat of war had no right to pressure Israel in its negotia- Tions with the Arabs. cloth arguments were legiti- ' Y.- Obviously, criticism oils- _ - 'gave the Arab states an -Yortunity to cite these Jewish ;J:ics in defense of their own rael into adopting policies which threatened its security and it came at a time when Israel was being attacked "by everyone." He argues that Israel's policies now seem acceptable to most; thus he feels morally justified in taking Israel to task. Mr. Podhoretz's rationaliza- tion is just that — rationaliza- tion. If the democratically elected Rabin government be- lieves its policies are appropri- ate to assure the long-term security of Israel, it is not for Mr. Podhoretz to question it — any more than it was proper for lib- erals to castigate Begin and Shamir years ago. The editor of Commentary is trying to find justification for his change of position and is about or-wrong loyalists." There is another distinction between Mr. Safire and Mr. Podhoretz: Mr. Safire is a writer who generally happens to be pro-Israel and never dis- avowed criticism of Israel. Mr. Podhoretz is one who is staunchly pro-Israel and hap- pens to be a writer who claimed criticizing Israel was wrong. As much as it may pain Mr. Podhoretz (and it does this writer as well), he has no choice: He has made his political bed and he must sleep in it. Indeed, Mr. Podhoretz's en- tire passionate support for Is- rael appears on tenuous ground because in a recent interview with the Jerusalem Post on this very issue, he said he supports - - 'n addition, it is somewhat ,amptuous to tell Israel !aat it must do for its own se- while living thousands of miles from the threat in the United States. But things have changed and ow the political shoe, so to p-eak, is on the other foot. The Rabin government is gore liberal, has made some oncessions and, overall, ap- I tears to be more flexible than he two former administrations. The liberals in the country generally quiet — presum- i,oly also supportive and appre- . _native — but the conservatives eel consternation. Not only do they disapprove ,f Rabin and his policies, but "ley also face the major ques- •ns: Must they be sha still in lit of their former position? Would criticism of Israel now i mply a double standard? Would suggest a "short memory" and olitical opportunism? The unequivocal answers are yes" to all the questions, no aatter how politically painful. Norman Podhoretz, edite,r of Commentary and one of in- tellectual leaders of neo- r. • - servatives who blasted lib during the Likud years, re ly did an about-face, wri that criticizing Israel now is di Ferent than in previous yea~ He rationalized the pr- ;riticism came when V- A States was trying • , 3erl Falbaum is a t .mince )riter and a frequent con- ributor to Community Views. Our hope should be to congratulate Prime Minister Rabin. as effective as a politician who, rather than admit that consis- tency is not his forte, tries des- perately to articulate distinctions which don't exist. To his credit, William Safire, New York Times columnist, who also is what might be called a hardliner, maintains his con- sistency in criticizing the Left and the Right. Although he leans toward conservatism, he was not re- luctant to criticize the Right when he believed it necessary. Thus, he has no trouble taking on the Left now. He recently wrote: "In this corner, no problem (with criti- cizing Israel). Even when Likudniks with whom U.S. hardliners identify were in pow- er, I was pro-divisive. When the U.S. president delivers his in- ugural address, I grade it; 1-1.en the pope sends an en- . -lical, I write an answer, when Israeli hawk fails to priva- 2,e a socialist economy, should I fail to give him a pop? Of course not; support of Israel should be thoughtful, not knee- jerk; no democracy needs right- Israel but would not like to live there. Many a Podhoretz follower must have been amazed for him to express his view in such terms. It may be uncomfortable but the argument remains the same, and it is just as logical and morally sound as when the conservatives were in power. Those in the United States who believe Mr. Rabin is wrong, now have the same obligation that the professed liberals ig- nored years ago. The hope is that Mr. Rabin is right in his policies. The hope is that negotiations will work. The hope is that if more con- cessions are made and some land surrendered in exchange for Arab promises of peace, then the risk proved to be,worth the price. The goal of Jews in the Unit- ed States should be to hope and pray that they will be able to congratulate the prime minis- ter of Israel — whatever the po- litical persuasion of whoever is in office — for achieving peace after half a century of war. El PHIL JACOBS EDITOR In recent days, the word "justice" has been thrown around like a Frisbee at the park. Was there jus- tice for Malice Green? Is there social justice for young, Afro-American men? Comments over the conviction of two of Malice Green's as- sailants indicate that there might not be. It's something to discuss. Twenty-five years ago, I can remember putting rubber bands on the copies of the now defunct Baltimore News American shortly after the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. I was 15, and I was sitting just outside a Phillips 66 service sta- tion taking care of my bundle of papers. It was 5:30 on a Sunday morning. The National Guard was driving troop carriers and jeeps in front of me in convoy to help control a downtown riot. My father, who usually would be there to help me deliver the Sunday morning load, wasn't available. He had spent the night downtown guarding his furniture store. The day before, neighborhood youths helped themselves to every television and bedroom set they could car- ry. These were little kids, teen- agers and even young adults. The word "justice" comes to mind. Across the street from my home lived the owner of an in- ner-city clothing store. His store was burned to the ground. Be- hind us, my best friend's father owned a corner grocery store. Everything was taken or de strayed. My friend's father had to put a pop machine in the door- way to act as a door. He later bragged that his father had left packages of hamburger with rat poison in them just in case any- one else broke in. There's got to be some "justice somewhere," my friend said. Nobody who took these busi- nesses and destroyed them was ever brought to trial. Yet, inner- city thinking believed it vindi- cated the brutal death of one of history's greatest men through actions he abhorred. In Los Angeles, Rodney King is beaten by police. A city burns, and white police officers are brought to trial and given jus- tice. Afro-American youths pull a white trucker from his vehicle and just about kill him. They were seeking "justice." After hearing the verdicts handed down Monday in Detroit, a young man says, "Justice was served. We (meaning young black males) are all Malice Greens in a sense. That could have been me they killed." It's difficult for a Jew sitting in the suburbs with little or no inner-city contact to cast any opinion on what happens. It's dif- ficult for anyone who hasn't ex- perienced racial prejudice to pass any judgment. Prejudice isn't bound by city lines. Indeed, stories have sur- faced in recent years about high- ly educated Afro-Americans being watched extra carefully by retail establishments as possi- ble criminals. Even here in the 1990s, Afro-Americans are some- times still denied credit, apart- ment rentals or the same benefits of life that whites enjoy, simply because of skin color. There is, however, good news. It was only a short time ago that blacks seemed limited in their achievement to two basic areas, sports and entertainment. A University of Maryland Afro- Parents are role models and heroes, because they are succeeding. And this is the greatest form of justice. That Afro-Americans are succeeding in a system that enslaved them only 130 years ago is justice. American studies professor pub- lished a study in the 1970s in Philadelphia. As part of a test, he asked 100 black schoolchild- ren to name a famous black doc- tor. Almost all of the children listed "Dr. J" (basketball player Julius Erving) as their top choice. This has changed. More and more hard-working Afro-Amer- ican families are quietly work- ing and living alongside everyone else in this society. Parents are role models and heroes, because they are suc- ceeding. And this is the great- est form of justice. That Afro-Americans are succeeding in a system that enslaved them only 130 years ago is justice. That racists are vilified, this is justice. That we can work hard- er for racial harmony and con- structively co-exist, this is justice. It's not about throwing a rock through a window. It's not about being content to destroy. ❑