PEACE page 137 and Jewish groups (it is more common for newcomers and old- timers, irrespective of nationali- ty, to find themselves in opposing groups), the most critical point in the Jewish and Palestinian inter- group relations was during the Gulf War, when Neve Shalom split along Arab-Jewish lines. Jews were motivated by their fear of the Scud missiles, Mr. Na- jjar says, while Palestinians re- fused to accept that the goal of American intervention was to re- store human rights in Kuwait. "For two weeks we were talk- ing on very different levels," Mr. Najjar says. "Each side thought the other was supporting vio- lence." Mr. Najjar himself be- lieves the victors of the War were Saddam Hussein and the Amer- icans, the losers the Kuwaiti and Iraqi peoples. He goes on to ex- plain that Israeli-Arabs (but not those in Neve Shalom) were cheering on the Scud missiles be- cause they were suffering for their Palestinian brothers in the administered territories: "Final- ly, someone was hitting Israel." When Neve Shalom started, the original plan was to create a community with a strong agri- cultural and industrial base. However, conditions on which the land was leased from the La- trun monastery were too strin- gent, and all attempts to purchase government land and receive subsidies to establish an infrastructure were turned down. The community survives through revenue it receives from the guest house and youth hostel, as well as the seminars and study pro- grams organized by the School for Peace. The educational activities and the community's development THE DE TRO IT J EWISH NE WS WISHING OUR CUSTOMERS & FRIENDS A HAPPY AND HEALTHY PASSOVER! /via l( min cenTeR CAN In The West Bloomfield Plaza • Orchard Lake Road At Maple 810-626-5511 REG. HOURS M-SAT. 9-5:30 810-626-1173 TUES. & THURS. 9-8:30 are mainly funded by donations from foundations and Neve Shalom associations abroad. Right now, about 150 families would like to live in Neve Shalom, (there is room for sev- eral more, and a long waiting list). Potential residents must be economically independent and have an "ability to live with di- versity," Mr. Najjar says. Mixed marriages are not en- couraged at Neve Shalom, and right now there is one such union, between a Palestinian Muslim and an Austrian Jew. `This really is the last place for a mixed marriage," says Mr. Na- jjar, "because in this community national and religious identities become clearer and more en- hanced. As they grow up the kids constantly ask questions about what it means to be a Jew or a Palestinian. Here, the differences are brought home to the kids ear- ly on, and the problem with chil- dren from a mixed marriage is that they're often not strong enough to say they are both." Mr. Najjar describes the com- munity as flourishing. `There is nowhere else like this in Israel," he says. "After all, we are committed to this world. It's not like the mixed communities ofJaffa or Ramie where they did not choose to live together." He believes the School for Peace may be Neve Shalom's single most im- portant component, as 1,500 men and women annually take part in its activities, and through this pass on their experiences to oth- ers in their communities. a. 4 sit in Navel Stasi, call 02- Palestinians Play The Violence Card ERIC SILVER ISRAEL CORRESPONDENT I f Israel's intelligence chiefs know what they are talking about, Yassir Arafat has taught Binyamin Netanyahu a cruel, Machiavellian lesson. The suicide bombing that killed three young women in a Tel Aviv cafe demonstrated that the safe- ty of Israelis depends to an un- comfortable degree of cooperation between Palestinian and Israeli security services. Further, it showed that the Palestinian leader can-turn the faucet on or off to achieve his political ends. Israel's prime minister's charges that Arafat gave the Hamas Islamic militants a "green light" to resume terror in Israeli cities was no knee-jerk reaction to evade responsibility. Israeli intel- ligence officers had detected a re- laxation of Mr. Arafat's war on ter- ror before the carnage. They had passed it on as a warning to their political leaders and to their me- dia friends. Arafat has again played the trump card of violence. Four days before Mussa Rani- mat blew himself up in the Apro- pos cafe, Ron Ben-Ishai reported in the mass-circulation Yediot Aharonot newspaper: "In a secret meeting with opposition leaders VIOLENCE CARD page 140