Time to Inspect Seeking The Genesis Of The Seeds Of Hate Replace Old, Cracked & Foggy Window Panes JANNETTE EDMONDS SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS N obel Laureate Elie Wiesel, Boston University pro- fessor, author of more than 30 books and a hu- man rights spokesman, was in- terviewed recently on the occasion of the release of his lat- est book, All Rivers Run To the Sea. See Spring and Summer Through Clear Windows Complete Window & Doorwall Repair Service For Your Free Estimate or Consultation Call Our Custom Experts at: 353-5770 REID A: Mr. Wiesel: The only way is to educate the public not to ac- cept these speeches. You cannot stop hate speeches because they will continue hating and they will continue speaking, if not in public then in private. The only way is to create an atmosphere, an ambience that would reject hate and then they would, in a way, be shamed into silence. Q: How would you educate against hate? And Visit Our Southfield Showroom at: A Clear Reflection of Quality A: I would begin in kindergarten 22223 Telegraph Road • Southfield Since 1964 (South of 9 Mile Road) Irminsmantentetnt- •• • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • you'll and go up to university. We should have imaginative pro- grams. Why not create a day or a week, once a year, where [stu- dents] study nothing else in schools but fanaticism? This should be the focus. I have pressed for this (education) everywhere I have been for the last many years. I organized conferences on the anatomy of hate. I want to understand what is the texture of hate, what is the origin, what is the genesis, what is the price? What is the mask of hate? Q: Do you believe there is a growing awareness of the dangers of hatred or is the world regressing into more intolerance? Unique and unusual gifts 30% off* A: I think that both are true. Complimentary Gift Wrapping most mfrs. 6644 Orchard Lake at Maple Road West Bloomfield • 810 855-1600 Mon-Thor-Fri 10-9 Tue-Wed-Sat 10-6 Sun 12-5 ••• • ••••••••••• ••••••• ••••••••••• Q: In all the areas of the world where you have been involved as a human rights spokesman, which area have you been most encouraged by in terms of progress? Q: There is a battle in Cana- da right now over how to protect freedom of speech from freedom of hate speech. How would you approach this issue? GLASS 810 write all my books long hand! I am from another century. There is a growing intolerance. Fanaticism is growing in every field. There is a religious fa- naticism, an ethnic fanaticism, political fanaticism going to the extreme right or the extreme left. However, the awareness among people that something must be done to stop that is also growing. Q: How do you address the issue of racism on the Inter- net? A: I don't know anything about that because I don't know any- thing about computers. I still Elie Wiese! A: I was involved in the dilem- ma of Soviet Jewry back in 1965. It was a topic that no one wanted to hear about. But that changed! Also, South Africa is a miracle. [Nelson] Mandela came out to one of our conferences a few months after he got out from jail. We also invited the minis- ter of the apartheid government at that time, Leon Wessels. And at one point Wessels, who had never met Mandela turned to him and said, 'Nelson, I grew up in apartheid. Now my fervent wish is to attend its funeral.' That was so beautiful, so poet- ic. That is encouraging. Q: What area are you most discouraged by? A: Where there is hatred. It is dangerous; it has power; it is mortal. And in too many states, too many countries, hate has power. There are too many fa- natics. Look at Iran. Saddam Hussein is still in Iraq, Assad in Syria, Qaddaffi [in Lybia]. And then there are the dangers in Russia with the next election. In those areas we have not made any progress. Q: How do you retain hope in the face of reversals and dis- appointments? A: I will reverse the question.