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January 14, 1994 - Image 40

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1994-01-14

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

Mr. Alan's Shoes

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New York Bombs
Ignite A Debate

New York (JTA) — Two
bombs left outside the
Manhattan buildings that
house Americans for Peace
Now and the New Israel
Fund did not damage their
targets.
But they raised the specter
of Jews fighting other Jews
and ignited a debate: Have
opponents of the accord bet-
ween Israel and the
Palestine Liberation Organ-
ization gone too far in their
rhetoric?
"This is, for the first time,
crossing a red line," Israeli
Consul General Colette
Avital said.
But she criticized those
who persist in verbally at-
tacking the Israeli govern-
ment as "traitors," saying
such remarks are "not
within civility."
Speaking the night before
on CBS Television's "60
Minutes," Ms. Avital ap-
peared to draw a closer con-
nection between the bombs,
the name-calling and the
throwing of tomatoes and
eggs at representatives of
the Israeli government in
America.
Former Israeli Prime Min-
ister Yitzhak Shamir fueled
the fire last week with his
comments about the bombs,
which were discovered early
on the morning of Jan. 5.
Mr. Shamir told Israel
Radio that the damage done
to Israel by Peace Now ex-
ceeded that which would
have been caused by the
bombs, had they gone off.
He later retracted his
remark, calling the bombs
an insane act by insane peo-
ple who did not know what
they were doing and explain-
ing that his radio remarks
had come out backward.
"What he meant to say is
that he didn't see much ac-
tivity by Peace Now, since
their views are now those of
the government, so the
bombs did more damage"
than did the organization,
explained Malcolm
Hoenlein, executive vice
chairman of the Conference,
of Presidents of Major
American Jewish Organiza-
tions.
Mr. Hoenlein had called
Mr. Shamir after reports of
the remarks, since the Con-
ference of Presidents was
prepared to condemn them.
"A statement like that is
of great concern, anything
that would appear to in-
dicate in any way that this

(the bombs) was not a serious
attack, or not condemned by
everybody," said Mr.
Hoenlein.
At Peace Now, the retrac-
tion was greeted with skep-
ticism.
"It's nice he was politically
savvy enough to retract,"
said Letty Cottin Pogrebin,
the organization's chair.
But, she said, "I still can't
get away from the fact that
he said it in the first place."
Henry Siegman, executive
director of the American
Jewish Congress, was har-

4

4

Malcolm Hoenlein:
Explained Shamir's remarks.

sher in his criticism of Mr.
Shamir.
Noting as well the recent
statement by the head of the
opposition Likud party, Ben-
jamin Netanyahu, that the
Likud did not see itself
bound by the accord reached
with the PLO, Siegman said,
"One would have to conclude
that the current leadership
of Likud is thinking of alter-
natives to democratic
government for the State of
Israel."
Mr. Siegman dismissed the
significance of the bombs
themselves, saying he
believed they were planted
"by some marginal in-
dividuals."
The bombs were found
with rambling handwritten
notes, attacking the Israeli
government for being too
liberal. They were signed
Maccabee Squad and Shield
of David — groups that re-
cently claimed responsibility
for killing two Palestinians
in the West Bank, but were
hitherto unknown. ❑

4

I

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