CC Tans, the world over, haven't yet begun to flex our power or influence. You'll never know where we'll pop up from. We're represented in every strata of society, and our ranks are increasing ten-fold every day of every year. "For some people, these grotesque murders and shootings are inspiring," Potok said. "They are seen as a great way of bringing new people into the revolu- tionary Aryan fold, and in fact it may be that some people are inspired to the point that they, too, pick up the gun." In the wake of last week's shooting, Jewish officials have been exploring possible responses to protect against future anti-Semitic attacks. At a satellite conference for approx- imately 55 Jewish federations around the country, leaders from the United Jewish Communities and Anti- Defamation League urged Jewish insti- tutions to review their security proce- dures — but not to go overboard. "We need awareness, rather than armed bunkers or fortresses," said Abraham Foxman, national director of the ADL. Foxman said he is troubled by the fact that some Jews around the coun- try are discussing whether to wear skullcaps in public or let their children ride school buses bearing names of Jewish institutions. Some concede that there may be, in fact, little that can be done to prevent an attack. "When you're talking about terror- ism, as we all know from experience with Israel, if you have a person or people who have an ideology they're devoted to and have the training and the wherewithal to carry it out, it's going to be virtually impossible to stop every attack," said Rabbi Cooper of the Wiesenthal Center. But some now argue that it may be time to give law enforcement greater authority to track hate groups and root out terrorists before they strike. In a guest column published in the New York Times last week that drew praise from many Jewish leaders, Foxman argued that the Justice Department and the FBI are "so ham- strung" by fear of lawsuits from the American Civil Liberties Union and by complaints by conservative lawmakers about overstepping their bounds that "they can't act aggressively." e n n o ings lately, and I'm kind of worried," he said. "It's way dif- ferent than the situation in Europe before World War II, with so much government involvement, but it still reminds you of the things of the past. He said the incidents were caused by "sick-minded peo- ple," with some loose con- nection to each other. They "probably like what the Nazis did to us, and would like to do it again." 3K, a IN t s Lq *nag: is OnCh:, After Granada Hills, Jews counted the risks to themselves and their children, savoured the support of the majority community — and decided not to be imprisoned by fear. Waking Up To What Buford O'Neal Furrow Jr. shot up the Los Angeles Jewish center as "a wake- up call to America to kill all the Jews, says Jo Hershkowitz, a health care con- sultant from Lawrenceville, Ga. "Well, the more you publicize that ... you're communicating his message for him." Hershkowitz's complaint was one of the mixed messages being sent by Atlanta-area Jews as they tried to corn- prehend the meaning of this summer's seemingly unending violence. "The city too busy to hate" has been particularly hard hit by hate-driven vio- lence: a teenage gunman opened fire at 3) Heritage High School in nearby Conyers, Ga., last May wounding six; Mark Barton slaughtered a dozen indi- viduals at day trading offices in the heart of Buckhead, the city's most upscale neighborhood. Three Jews were among the dead and wounded. Watching a Sunday softball game in suburban Alpharetta, Hershkowitz seemed worlds away from the virulence. But she and her friends insisted every- one is at risk these days, not just Jews. Even if Jewish institutions decided to beef up security, they said, it would still be impossible to guarantee safety. FEAR AND COMFORT on page 10 Photo by AP /Los Angeles Times, Paul Mo rse same city. Meeting Sunday over dinner ira Berman has a built-in at E.G. Nicks in West Bloomfield to barometer. As a survivor celebrate their 50th anniversary of of the Holocaust, she arriving in Detroit, their conversations knows when to worry, covered a host of everyday subjects. and she's worried now. But the shootings at the North The shootings in Los Angeles, the Valley Jewish Community Center in shootings in Chicago and the syna- Los Angeles was on their minds and, gogue burnings in Sacramento are not isolated incidents, she says, and even if while they never made it a focal point for the evening, in private conversation they are, they are something to be very they shared their sense of foreboding. concerned about. William Weiss, 74, who said he Before World War II, the Nazis feels he was born after were knocking out his liberation from windows, killing one Dachau on April 29, Jew here one Jew Opposite page: 1945, said he's worried there, and take a Shikela Jackson, right, not just about hate comforts Olivia Cohen-Cutler, look at what hap- groups, but the lone center, as Cutler's son Donald pened," she said. looks on during a unity rally wolf copycat. She worries a lot on Sunday in the aftermath of "They want to because "it gets quiet the Jewish Community Center become heroes," he said. for a short time then shootings in Los Angeles. Mira's sister, Rena it starts up again. Berman, said the You read the news recent violence against and see what's going Jews has been bothering her a lot. on. It's horrible." "We have strong memories about Berman is one of a group of 10 it," she said. "I think we're more sensi- Holocaust survivors who have met reg- tive than anybody else. People who ularly in Detroit over the last half cen- tury, since their liberation at the end of didn't go through it don't understand." Joe Berman, 83, Rena's husband World War II. Some were brothers and who worked in a labor camp, said he sisters who survived, and others were isn't as worried, but is still concerned. friends, but they all came to America "I start thinking of the new happen- on the same boat and settled in the "This is too timid an approach given the current rhetoric of these groups and its ability to inflame their more unsta- ble adherents," Foxman wrote. "The Constitution provides for the civil liberties of citizens, but it is not a prescription for suicide; it should enable us to protect our civil liberties against those who have no respect for the nation or would destroy it." Kenneth Stern, an American Jewish Committee specialist on anti-Semitism and extremism, said Congress must do more to address hate violence and its core causes. "These (extremists) are people who are saying we're going to make America more American by killing Los Angeles police officer Kelly Artz paints over a swastika that was spray- painted on a wall at Temple Knesset Israel in Los Angeles last weekend. minorities, and we still haven't had a national discussion and congres- sional hearings on this, even after the Oklahoma City bombing," Stern said. President Bill Clinton, for his part, has appealed to Congress to pass common-sense" laws tightening gun control and expanding the federal hate crimes statute. But in a private meeting with Jewish leaders last week, he acknowl- edged the uphill battle gun control legislation faces. The National Rifle Association "runs the House and nearly runs the Senate on this issue," Clinton was quoted as saying. ❑ " 8/20 1999 Detroit Jewish News 7