This High Holiday Season, the best way to wish Mends and family a good year is to give them a GREAT year. A one year subscription to The Jewish News. The High Holidays are a time of reflection and renewal, of families and friends coming together to share past traditions and future dreams. It is a time to wish those nearest and dearest to you sweetness, health and happiness. And what better way to express your thoughts than with a gift that chronicles Jewish life. This High Holiday season, share your family tradition. Give a friend or family member a gift they'll enjoy receiving every week of the year. A Jewish News gift subscription. THE JEWISH NEWS, THE ONE GIFT THAT SAYS IT ALL. Order one gift subscription for $37. Additional gifts only $29.60 each, a 20% savings! IN STATE ONLY. OUT OF STATE ADD '12.00. NEW SUBSCRIBERS ONLY. Call 313- -5620 to order your subscriptionTODAY scri MONDAY - FRIDAY 8:30AM - 5:00PM THE JEWISH NEWS BOSNIA page 10 and Treblinka? When we said, "Never again," did we mean nev- er again another Jewish Holo- caust or never again a genocide, that we would stand as defend- ers and combatants with Native Americans, Armenians, Roma (Gypsies), and now the Bosnian Muslims against the possibility of any people being destroyed. As Rabbi Wolkoff implies at times, there are not enough of us to defend ourselves alone. We need allies. The only way to achieve stable peace cannot be by cynically training Guatemalan death squads as a favor to the United States, or by smuggling arms to South Africa's apartheid state. When times get tough, these allies will abandon us as cynically as they befriend us while we do their dirty work and sully ourselves. It cannot come through deny- ing to the Palestinian people what we claim as our inherent right: self-determination and statehood. Is this how we pay back the memory of the Right- eous Gentiles, the individuals, the villages and the entire nation of Denmark? Now, when we have a state and weapons of our own, what will we be able to demand of them next time, if this time we stand idly by? (The statements of Elie Wiesel and the participa- tion of Jewish women and men in feminist-organized demon- strations against the policy of rape in the service of national- ism are admirable, but not suf- ficient.) Righteousness is not easy. But it is commanded in Deuterono- my and elsewhere that we pur- sue such a path. Conveniently, it is also the surest way of as- suring the long-term survival of the Jewish community. Michael Sasson Detroit Letters Policy Letters must be typewritten, double-spaced, and include the name, home address, daytime phone number and signature of the writer. Brief letters (less than a page), arriving by noon Tues- day, will be given prefer- ence. Peace Opponents Stage A Rally Jerusalem (JTA) — Some 50,000 Israelis opposed to a peace accord with the Pales- tinians poured into Jerusalem, clogging road- ways and bringing parts of the city to a virtual stand- still. More than 2,500 police were on hand to maintain order at the demonstration, which had been planned by right-wing opposition groups and had been heralded with much advance publicity. The demonstration, which was held near the offices of Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin, followed a rally on the weekend in Tel Aviv for supporters of the proposed peace agreement. According to the police, some 40,000 Israelis had at- tended the previous demon- stration, although estimates on both rallies varied wide- ly, with some sources repor- ting up to 200,000 at each. The agreement, which was endorsed last week by Israel's Cabinet, calls for Pa- lestinian self-rule in Gaza and Jericho as a first step toward extending Palestin- ian authority to the ad- ministered territories. It was reached after mon- ths of secret meetings by high-level Israeli and Palestine Liberation Organ- ization officials. While a helicopter pa- trolled from above, police made several arrests during the latest rally. They also confiscated tires, gasoline and firecrackers that had been hidden by the demon- strators, apparently to be set afire during the demonstra- tion. Hours before the rally began, police began closing off several major roads around the city. Others were jammed with buses bringing settlers from the territories. Among those arrested, ac- cording to police officials, were several activists with the militant Kach move- ment who had threatened to provoke civil unrest. "Is there anyone among us who believes Yassir Arafat?" asked Likud chief Benjamin Netanyahu, one of the headline speakers at the rally, referring to the leader of the PLO. 0