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M•A•T•R•I•X SO 0 11,S Full Salon Services Available • Call Today For Your FREE CONSULTATION 5799 W. Maple, West Bloomfield • 810 855 8845 - - Two Extremists Draw The Line ERIC SILVER SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS or Eliakim Haetzni, a 69- year-old lawyer who settled on the edge of Hebron in 1972, the Israeli-Palestin- ian peace agreement signed in the White House last week is "an Israeli Munich," a betrayal of all he and more than 100,000 fellow West Bank settlers believe in and have fought for. For Ibrahim Yazuri, a Gaza pharmaCist in his mid-fifties, it means "the liquidation of the Palestinian struggle." . The two men, among the founders respectively of the ex- pansionist Greater Israel move- ment and the Islamic fundamentalist Hamas, are unit- ed in their conviction that land matters more than a compromise peace — and that the decisive battle is just beginning. "We are here and we shall re- main here," pledged Eliakim Haetzni, a former right-wing •Tehiya Knesset member, his eyes 'bulging behind his thick lenses. "There will be no relinquishing of the Land of Israel. `The land where our prophets and kings prophesied and ruled, where the Bible was played out, is not Tel Aviv. It is Hebron, the city of our patriarchs; it is Beth- El, where Jacob dreamed of an- gels going up and down a ladder; it is Shechem (Nablus), the first place Abraham bought when he entered the land; it is Shilo, where the Ark of the Covenant rested for 400 years; it is Bethle- hem, where David was born and our mother Rachel is buried. "All these are on the West Bank. These are the places we dreamed and strove and bled and hoped and prayed for, not Tel Aviv. We did not create a Jewish state in order to forget the Jew- ish land and give it to the enemy." Haetzni, father of four, grand- father of five, predicted a latter- day Armageddon, a war of Jew against Arab, and eventually of Jew against Jew. "Here in Hebron," he said, "every Arab lad who now throws stones will have a gun. Seething with hatred, he will fire at me from the houses opposite. The whole population, on both sides, will have arms. They will shoot. Jews will shoot back. There will be casualties on both sides. "This will endanger the so- called peace. So the Israeli army will have to suppress the Jews. This may be the beginning of a fratricidal war between Jews and Jews. A large part of the army Eric Silver is a freelance writer in Jerusalem. will not obey orders. Others will stand aside. It will be the begin- ning of the decomposition of the Jewish state." At the other pole, Ibrahim Yazuri protested bitterly that the leader of the Palestine Liberation Organization, Yassir Arafat, "has given up the struggle and ac- cepted the division of Palestine." For Hamas, all of Palestine, "from the river to the sea," is holy Muslim ground. The Jewish state, however shrunken, is an aberration. Asked what Hamas proposed to do about the agreement, Yazuri, who has seen the inside of Israeli jails and Palestinian po- lice stations, stroked his bushy grey beard and smiled: "Ask the movement." Like other Hamas activists, the pharmacist has become ul- tra-cautious. In the still-occupied West Bank, where Israel cracked down on Hamas after the Jerusalem bus bombing in late August, no one is talking to the press. In Gaza, where Arafat's secret police have followed suit and much of the Islamic leadership is "Every Arab lad will have a gun." — Eliakim Haetzni behind bars, Yazuri is one of the few to stick his head above the parapet. But he chooses his words with care. He criticizes the Taba agreement, but makes no threats: "Taba will lead to the isolation of the West Bank Palestinian cities in cantons that will stay un- der Israeli rule. The division of Hebron between Palestinians and Israelis is not a solution. He- bron will explode at any moment. "Only 30 per cent of West Bank land will be under Pales- tinian administration. The rest will stay in Israeli hands. The wa- ter problem has not been solved. Above all, the problem of Jerusalem has not been solved." Another leader of the Muslim opposition in Gaza, Sheikh Nafeth Azzam, of the more fa- natical Islamic Jihad, said his movement's position was un- changed. It rejected the 1993 Oslo accord, and it rejected the 1995 Taba accord. The Palestinian dai- ly paper, Al Nahar, interpreted this as a continued commitment to jihad, holy war. The road to peace, it seems, is paved with bad intentions. ❑