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Welcome To The Club We wel- BOAZ DVIR STAFF WRITER any Jordanians feel that countryman Ragi Saaid crossed the fine line between heroism and insanity recently when he named his new-born son Yitzhak Rabin. "I feel sorry for the [4-month- old] baby," one Jordanian told Yediot Aharonot. "His father is M majnun [crazy]." To show their discontent with the homage he paid the fallen Is- raeli warrior-turned-peacemak- er, Jordanians have beaten up the 40-year-old Mr. Saaid, fired him from his job, refused for awhile to register his son's name and forced his family to move three times, Yediot Aharonot re- ports. address you've been looking for. The Apartments At Franklin Club Choose the apartment home that suits your lifestyle. Several corn- yours to pick from at Franklin Club. Bridgepoint At Franklin Club Easy living apartment homes for lo 6A come you to learn more about the good times, good friends and good living awaiting you at Franklin Club. For a free bro- chure, or to arrange a personal tour, call 353-2810. Muslim Attends Jewish School - FRANKLIN CLUB At I P 0 4 Where You Choose Your Lifestyle 28301 Franklin Road Southfield, MI 48034 810/353-2810 Yitzhak Rabin Studio in Harvard Row Mall by Fopular Demand &pu t The Cover-Up is now carrying BOYS SUITS & SPORT COATS for Bar Mitzvahs and Other Occasions The SPOT Orchard Lake Road, North of Maple ORCHARD MALL 50%-70% OFF ALL NAME BRANDS ti ti ti • Vertical Blinds • Pleated Shades • Levolor Blinds • Wood Blinds 21728 W. Eleven Mile Rd. Harvard Row Mall Southfield, MI 48076 70 THE BEST OF KNITTING Hours: Mon.-Sat. 10-5 New Rochester Hills _' 651 5009 ia..• . e" C - •7.410444.- 1444144.74. Z ti ti Southfield, MI 48034 ti (810) 355-1400 - iris* Zif Z.,.....,11444 47 ti ti 29791 Northwestern Hwy. ti . 44, I ti Anny Blatt • Tahki • Prism • Classic Elite ■ ;+ Trendsetter • Annabel Fox • Katie • Unique Kolours ti ti Dyed In The Wool • Rowan & More! im•in nit 352-8622 Free Professional Measure at No Obligation Free in Home Design Consulting (810)855-4585 , • ti 4 m• so . . . . Z. It • not even written him a note. Is- raeli embassy employees in Am- man have not offered to help him, according to Yediot Aharonot. This is in sharp contrast to the Likud government, which in 1982 invited an Egyptian who named his son Menachem Begin to Jerusalem and gave the baby a huge, colorful teddy-bear. Mr. Saaid has only received grief. In fact, Israeli newspapers treat him not as a trailblazer but a grandstander. Yediot Aharonot, for instance, accused him of nam- ing his son Rabin to seek public- ity and win rewards from the Israeli government and people. But nothing deters Mr. Saaid. "For me, as a proud Jordanian, Rabin managed to break a psy- chological barrier," he said. "I re- spect him particularly because of his military background. He knew to show force in war, and knew to go for peace at the right time." Z 411 But Mr. Saaid — who lives in hiding with his wife, Maraym, and baby boy — resists all at- tempts to force him to change the name of his son, a cute, quiet baby with big dark eyes, accord- ing to Yediot Aharonot. "I fear only Allah," said Mr. Saaid, a Muslim Palestinian- Jor- danian injured by Israeli soldiers years ago when he was a PLO fighter. "I hope my story will raise a positive response in Israel ... I would want to see at least one Is- raeli family show the same courage and name their baby af- ter our peace hero. No one would be happier than me to hear that ... an Israeli couple named their baby after King Hussein." Mr. Saaid may be sane, but he is a dreamer. Israelis have not only failed to follow his footsteps but have ignored him. The Labor government has never acknowl- edged his struggle. It has not in- vited him to Jerusalem — it has Z,AZ474.74,41.114.14 S a ZIAS.Z•441144•44444174444149 Like Mr. Saaid, 14-year-old Azahar Salimah is a trailblazer. But the disapproval she faces from her fellow Arabs is not near- ly as harsh. Azahar is the first Muslim to attend Northern Israel's presti- gious Kaduri agricultural board- ing school, a 65-year-old institution that educated some of the top Zionist pioneers, includ- ing Yitzhak Rabin, according to Laisha magazine. Many of Azahar's friends and neighbors in the Galilee Arab vil- lage where her parents and eight brothers and sisters live have crit- icized her. But their discontent is not so much political as it is reli- gious. They do not like to hear that a Muslim girl is going out disco dancing late at night, hang- ing around with boys and wear- ing Western clothes, Laisha reports. "In the Arab sector, the woman is weak and the man lets her go wherever he chooses. She is not allowed [to decide on her own]," Azahar's father, Ishmael Musha, told Laisha. 'With me, it's not like that." Mr. Salimah, who waves the Israeli flag on Independence Day, also allowed one ofhis sons to join a combat unit in the Israel De- fense Forces. Azahar, a popular students at Kaduri with many friends, has not decided whether she will also join the IDF, but she knows she RABIN page 72 111.164•1.41.4144P4/4314,- .4. 4 X