Reporter's it No Clinton and Barak play games, stay up late and eat well. Washington Clinton's Plaything' President Bill Clinton set off a storm of protest among Israeli com- mentators when he told Democratic donors on the eve of Ehud Barak's visit that he was as happy as "a kid with a new toy" as he awaited the prime minister's visit. Israeli media reported what they termed a "patronizing" remark and at the first news conference of Barak's visit, an Israeli journalist asked Clinton, "What kind of game do you want to play with Mr. Barak?" After offering an answer that clearly indicated the president did not understand the question, CNN's Wolf Blitzer stepped in to explain the flap to Clinton who explained to the media, If I were taking a trip to Hawaii, I might say, 'I am excited as a kid with a new toy:' it doesn't mean I think Hawaii is a plaything." Clinton thanked Blitzer for helping "me make peace with the press and the people of Israel," Later in the news conference, when answering a question on whether he would meet with Syrian President Hafez Assad, Barak said, "It takes two to tango" and turning to Clinton said, "Maybe the danc- ing instructor is ready." Clinton jumped in to make sure that the media understood that Barak's comment was not a "patronizing remark toward President Assad as the prime minis- ter's dancing partner." - Doves Or Night Birds? Barak became only the third for- eign leader that Clinton has taken to Camp David during his presi- dency, joining the prime ministers of Britain and Brazil in the exclu- sive club. The two night birds met until 1:45 a.m. after viewing President Jimmy Carter's handwritten notes 7/23 1999 24 Detroit Jewish News The Endless Struggle Religious-secular strife awaits Barak when he comes back home. DAVID LANDAU Jewish. Telegraphic Agency Mr Jerusalem bile Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak was busily engaged in high-profile diplomacy in the United States, religious-secular disputes brewing back home may force him to use his diplomatic skills on his own coalition partners. Barak said in New York last week- end that synagogue-and-state issues in Israel would be kept off center stage while he focuses on the resumed peace process. Barak called for unity among the Jewish people, adding that he wanted to be seen as the premier of all Jews, regardless of past political disputes or diverse religious or ideological affilia- tions. Controversial religious questions in Israel would be frozen, he said, committing himself for the time being b b to maintaining b the religious status quo, which gives the Orthodox Chief Rabbinate control over reli- gious affairs in the Jewish state. As he spoke, however, his coalition partners and the heterogeneous sec- tors of the community that they rep- resent were making it clear that they have their own plans — and that syn- agogue-and-state issues, far from being shunted to the side, will be front and center. Shabbat observance, an endlessly fertile source of strife, served as a cat- alyst for the resumption of long- standing hostilities on two battle- fields. At Kibbutz Gan Shmuel, Druze inspectors dispatched by the Ministry of Labor and Social Affairs handed out tickets and fines last Saturday to shop owners and salespeople at one of the numerous mini-malls around the country operating on kibbutz land and doing their best business on the Sabbath. In Jerusalem on the same day, members of the fervently Orthodox, or haredi, community held the latest in a series of demonstrations against allowing traffic through their Jerusalem neighborhood on the Sabbath. Nine protesters were arrest- ed for assaulting police and throwing rocks. The protests were held even though an arrangement, endorsed by the High Court of Justice, has already Palestinian Freed After Six Years Jerusalem (JT A) — Israel's High Court of Justice ordered the release of Osama Barham, a Palestinian who had been held nearly six years without trial. He was arrested in 1993 for member- ship in the militant Islamic Jihad organi- zation but charges and evidence against him have been kept classified for security Osama Barham is hugged by his mother, Wagiha Barham, following his release from an Israeli prison Sunday reasons. Under the terms for his release, Barham, 35, promised not to use violence against Israel. A day later, Israel's new justice minister said he would restrict the practice of jailing Arab prisoners without bringing charges against them. Administrative detentions, which have been denounced by human rights groups, should be used "only in cases of real danger" to the Jewish state, Yossi Beilin told Israel Army Radio. been reached under which Bar-Ilan Street, a major artery in the north of the capital, is shut to traffic during Sabbath services and opened at other times. Along with the Sabbath-related disputes, another source of long- sim- mering tensions surfaced when an Orthodox member of Barak's coali- tion wrote legislation that would give the Orthodox Chief Rabbinate com- plete control over conversions. Moshe Gafni, a member of the United Torah Judaism bloc, has craft- ed a bill stating that "legal standing will not be given to a conversion per- formed inside or outside of Israel unless approved by the Chief Rabbinate." The issue of conversions, which until now focused only on those per- formed in Israel, has been a major source of contention among Reform and Conservative Jews. While the bill may never come to a Knesset vote and may reflect inter- nal squabbling within UTJ, it nonetheless underscores the fact that Barak may be unable to keep reli- gious questions off his agenda in the months ahead. While the Gan Shmuel raid MISSION from page 23 don of a pro-Israel initiative is once again changing. A series of initiatives critical of the Palestinians are making their way through Congress. The U.S. House of Representative voted Monday to try to force the United States to seek Palestinian compensation for American victims of terrorism. The measure is part of legislation, expected to pass the full Congress - later this week, that also requires the State Department to report to Congress every six months on the status of U.S. efforts to extradite Palestinian terrorists suspected of involvement in attacks since 1993 that killed American citizens. And already, some groups opposed to Israeli territorial concessions on the Golan Heights have begun to drum up congressional opposition to American participation if a peacekeep- ing force is parr of an agreement. At the meeting with 30 of the 34 _Jewish lawmakers, Barak asked them