past weeks, popular backing for the llamas and Islamic Jihad has burgeoned in Gaza. And the rea- son, in the words of Ha'aretz an- alyst Danny Rubinstein, is "not that the masses of Palestinians have suddenly discovered the gospel of Islam. What they've dis- covered is the success of terror at- tacks by Muslim fanatics, which causes Israel pain." Along with Israeli pain and fury is the growing suspicion that what the Palestinians want is both to enjoy self-rule and con- tinue to lash out against Israel. Right or wrong, that perception on the Israeli side left Mr. Rabin on the horns of a dilemma. "Choosing between peace with Israel or peace with llamas" was the way he put it. Specifically, Mr. Rabin was faced with the choice of halting the negotiations until Mr. Arafat cracked down convincingly on the Islamic op- position or accelerating the talks as a way of according Mr. Arafat the credit he needs to win back public support. Mr. Rabin opted for the latter, though not with en- thusiasm. "We don't have to run amok in the talks with the Pales- , tinians," he told his ministers. It may not be made of gold but wearing it will make you feel priceless. Rabin's dilemma: Choosing between peace with Israel or peace with Hamas. The problem is that the talks on the interim solution are the most complex and sensitive stage of the Israeli-Palestinian negoti- ating process. And in using these talks as the arena for shoring up Mr. Arafat's position, Israel must pick its way through a field strewn with political land mines. How fast, for example, will the coming round of negotiations have to proceed in order to stanch the hemorrhaging support for the PNA so that one minority gov- ernment is negotiating with an- other? How far will Israeli concessions have to go on the West Bank in order to quench the Palestinian thirst for freedom from foreign control? And above all, especially if the wave of Is- lamic terrorism continues, how will the Rabin government be able to reconcile its concessions with the need to ensure the safe- ty of the 130,000 Israeli settlers on the West Bank? Perhaps the greatest danger at this sensitive juncture is that all the lessons acknowledged over the past months — from the sim- ple fact that Israelis and Pales- tinians are fated to share this land to the need for patience and goodwill to make a tolerable part- nership work — will be swept away in a tide of anger. What will be left behind is the kind of wreckage fanatics thrive on best: despair. El Admittedly, the J.D bracelets at Huron Valley As part of The Detroit Medical Center, affiliat- Hospital are no different from those at any other ed with Wayne State University, we offer resources hospital. But the care you receive while wearing much greater than that of a single hospital. Like - one of ours is something quite out of the ordinary. a staff of specialists who are recognized through- As a smaller hospital, we're able to see out the world for their accomplishments. our patients as more than just x-rays or lab results. In short, whenyou wear our Huron Volley Hospital 1601 E Commerce Rd. Commerce Twp. Which means you're always treated with care that's plain ordinary bracelet, you'll always feel like one-of-a-kind. onumte Rd. uncommonly personal. To meet with a Hu ronValley stpan, call (810)360-3450. Yet in another sense, we're actually quite large. Wayne St DMC Huron Valley Hospital