\.4 • orials Marvelous Melvindale Most Detroit-area Jews don't know where Melvindale is, nor have they ever been through that fair Downriver city. But the implications of its school board meeting this week have far- reaching consequences for all of us, whether we live in Walled Lake or Grosse Pointe — or Melvindale. A group of Melvindale parents that includes the president of the school board and two Christian pastors requested that Melvindale Public Schools include the study of creation- ism in the district's biology curriculum. The school board discussed the issue Monday night, but took no action and did not decide when it would revive the subject again. Did the issue die? Hardly. It would be nice to think that public discus- sion of creationism — the belief shared by many religious groups, including Judaism, that a supreme being created the universe — would lead to education of the public about the U.S. constitutional rights of all citizens. But numer- ous court decisions have not dissuaded Christian groups throughout the country to mount challenges to local school boards and insist that creationism be taught alongside the theory of evolution in our public schools. As we have asked on these pages in the past, whose version of creationism should be taught? Will Melvindale parents accept a Jewish ver- sion of the Book of Genesis? Or the Koran? Or is the Buddhist story of the beginning of the world acceptable? Put in those terms, the answer is obvious: The only acceptable version is my version, or our version, and we don't care about anyone else's version. It seems that we are prematurely getting into the December Dilemma of Christmas vs. Chanukah, and December is still several weeks away. And that's the point — religious free- dom needs year-round vigilance. Jews and other minorities attending American public schools have been well pro- tected in the last three decades from the "will of the majority." That hasn't stopped the reli- gious right from continuing its attempts to impose its views on a society that it sees as des- perately in need of its direction. Unfortunately, that direction is not as homogenized as fundamentalists of any persua- sion would have us believe. ❑ Oakland County Loses A Friend Larry Pernick's death last week is a tragedy for the citizens of Oakland County and the Jewish community. Mr. Pernick was one of our most approach- able public figures. His ready smile and warm personality disarmed his political foes on the 1997 2 Oakland County Commission and won the trust of a bipartisan constituency which eas- ily elected him to the commission for 28 years. One of our favorite recollections of Mr. Pernick was his door- to-door campaigns dur- ing the biennial August Larry Pernick primary elections. His northern Southfield and Lathrup Village neighbors could see their county commission- er on weekends, walking the streets of their subdivisions to distribute his campaign litera- ture. He considered it a bonus when old friends and new acquaintances stopped to talk. When the Democrats controlled the com- mission, he served as chairman. With Republican control, he headed the Democratic Caucus, lending his experience and openness to anyone willing to listen. Larry Pernick's pleasant nature and concern for his fellow citizens will be sorely missed. ❑ A Friend Of Freedom Sir Isaiah Berlin once said, "I find death a nui- sance. I object to it. I'd rather it didn't happen." But happen it did last week when Sir Isaiah — a revered philosopher, scholar, staunch advocate of pluralism, bon vivant, conversa- tionalist, music lover, ardent Zionist, and friend of some of the century's most famous individuals — such as Sigmund Freud, Chaim Weizmann, Virginia Woolf and Felix Frankfurter — succumbed to a fatal heart attack in Oxford, England. He was 88. Although not a household name, Sir Isaiah left behind a highly influential body of work that explores the essence of liberty, the inher- ent failings of totalitarianism, the journey to discover a perfect society, and the human longing for a homeland. Among Sir Isaiah's best-known works is the 1953 essay "The Hedgehog and the Fox," a study of Tolstoy's War and Peace that explores different aspects of human nature. His subse- quent essay "Two Concepts of Liberty," which is considered a major contribution to political theory, argues that both liberty with and with- out state interference is essential for a just society. Of his commitment to the concept of a Jewish state, Sir Isaiah once said, "Assimilation might be a quite good thing, but it never worked ... There isn't a Jew in the world known to me who somewhere inside him does not have a tiny drop of uneasiness vis-a-vis them, the majority among whom they live." _7 Photo by AP/ Kok tN-A, Alan Goodman, an Israeli with U.S. citizenship who was serving a life sentence for killing two Palestinians, was _freed after agreeing to spend the next eight years in the U.S. LITTERS Exhibit Attack Was Unfair As a member of the commit- tee of "Jewish Detroit in the 1920s and '30s: Revisiting Our Past," I am aghast at the attack made on our event chairman Stephen Rosman by Professor Sidney Bolkosky of U-M Dearborn in the Oct. 31 issue ("Historical Truths Fairly Shown?") Let me set the record straight. It was not Stephen Rosman alone, but a com- mittee of 15, comprised of a cross section of our Jewish community in age and reli- gious belief, all with a keen interest in history and genealogy. Our committee detests revisionism and with that strong stance, the inclu- sion of the Purple Gang in the exhibit became a contro- versy that received national attention. With over 9,000 people visiting the exhibit during October and with a sold-out attendance at its opening night, this event was a corn,: plete success. We achieved 0 our goal of bringing quality programming to the commu- nity in spite of the many threats and closed doors from community organiza- tions, and our efforts stimu- lated people to visit the JCC. The photo exhibition was the first of the kind to focus on Detroit in the 1920s and '30s. The goal was to present an overview of the times, not to create a jumble of histori- cal dates. Forgive us if a date may have been wrong on a caption or a favorite photo didn't make the final cut. ATTACK on page 30