"...IF All WOMEN 01181 50 RAD IEGUIAR MAMMOGRAMS, HEIR DEAM RAIL FRIPA EAST CNN WOE DROP BY A IIIIRD." — ACOG Take the first step. Call 1-800-ACS-2345 for information that can help you make an impact. tir IWId MOGRAM EVERY YEAR AFTER 50 0• A Public Service of A This Publication 10/17 1997 36 Di's Legacy And The Jews Jewish organizations are beginning to become involved in the land mine ban. JAMES D. BESSER Washington Correspondent he death of Britain's Princess Diana in a grisly car wreck in Paris was a major blow to her pet cause, the movement to ban land mines — a movement that is belated- ly winning support from Jewish groups, according to anti- land mine activists. Jerry White, founder and director of the Washington- based Landmine Survivors Network, said that "no light shone as brightly as hers in illuminating the issue. But even after her death, mine victims around the world and others are stiffening their res- olution to win an agreement to ban mines this year." That movement was hon- ored this week — and awarded $1 million — with the Nobel Peace Prize. White has a more person- al understanding of the issue than most — he was badly injured by a land mine dur- ing a camping trip in the Golan Heights in 1984, when he was a student. White played a major role in Diana's trip this summer to Bosnia to promote the land mine ban issue. "While she was there, I put her in touch with the president of the Jewish community in Sarajevo, who has been trying to win support for de-mining the Jewish cemetery in that city," he said. "The princess was very impressed with him." Israel, cautious about its own defense, has shown little interest in the drive to ban land mines, White said. But he has been working to get Israeli experts more involved in efforts to provide better care for vic- tims of these weapons. "I was injured there, and spent six months going through their [rehabili- tation] program," said White, an Irish-Catholic. "They have excellent treatment programs. I would like others to take a look at what they have to offer." White said that Jewish groups have lagged behind church organizations in fighting for a land mine ban, accident that claimed Diana's life, the Israeli media recalled an incident with singer Elton John, who charged the paparazzi hounded him out of the country. Only a few hours after arriving in the summer of 1993, John fled the country. He later issued a press release claiming he had been "harassed by aggressive photographers on motorbikes ... causing danger to other traffic." That same year, singer Sinead O'Connor broke the cameras of two pho- tographers who were snapping away as she left the Church of the Holy Sepulcher. Jewish groups have lagged behind churches. although some groups are beginning take notice. This summer, the Union of • American Hebrew Congregations and the Central Conference of American Rabbis wrote to President Bill Clinton, urging the administration to join the Ottawa process, the Canadian-led effort to forge an inter- national ban on land mines. Last month, the administration reversed course and decided to participate in that process. Meanwhile, in the wake of the supposed role of paparazzi in the auto Arnold Schwarzenegger told Israeli photographers he encountered during a July 1995 visit that he had "never seen more aggressive jour- nalists." One Israeli press photographer, Brian Hendler, told the Jerusalem Post that he sometimes finds the behavior of the Israeli press "pretty disgust- ing." They will "do anything to get a picture, paparazzi or not," he said. Increased competition between two Israeli papers, Yediot Aharonot and Ma'ariv, has only increased the aggressiveness of photographers, he noted. "This type of competition," he added, "means anything goes." 0 •