itorials Editorials and Letters to the Editor are posted and archived on JN Online: vvww.cletroitjewishnews.com IN FOCUS Rescue Without Politics L ate Sunday night, an Israeli rescue crew expert at finding people in collapsed buildings pulled a 3-year-old child out of the rubble in Cinarcik, Turkey. The child didn't know about politics. And the Israeli crew that performed the near-miraculous event didn't care if the child's family was Islamic funda- mentalist, secular or anything else. Such efforts in the aftermath of Turkey's devastating earthquake are reminiscent of ones Israelis performed in Kenya a year ago, which followed the bomb attack on that country's U.S. embassy. The State of Israel, to be certain, gains politi- cally in the eyes of the world through such mis- sions. But for the rescue workers and the people they have helped in recent years — in Managua, Armenia, Mexico City, Buenos Aires, Rwanda, Nairobi, Kosovo, Albania and now Turkey, that's irrelevant. What they care about is that compe- tent, willing professionals have come to provide relief, rescue and comfort following natural or manmade disasters. This help is an application of the Jewish values of which we are proud. And it graphically shows that maintaining peaceful rela- tions — Israel and Turkey have a growing mili- tary and economic relationship — can bring ben- efits in unexpected ways. We wonder: If a similar tragedy struck Syria, would Israeli crews be D allowed to help? The Middle East, of which Turkey has always been a hulking giant on the periphery, is, to be certain, a powder keg of emotions, ethnicity and conflict. Yet, the events of this past week show that such characteristics need not define the region. As the Mid-east peace talks progress, we hope the leaders in Syria, Lebanon and elsewhere again see that Israelis are far from being land- obsessed ogres, a stereotype often promoted in their countries state-run media. Israel, a perma- nent citizen of the Middle East region, is dedicat- ed to using its democratic framework to address significant regional problems. Even in a world numbingly accepting of mas- sacre and disaster, the devastation of Turkey's earthquake is excruciating in its depth. Reports said that more than 40,000 people ultimately could be found dead and another 200,000 made homeless by the disaster. Turkey's millions of families will live with this tragedy until the end of their days. We offer our prayers and assistance. The American Jewish World Service and Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit are two of many agencies coordinating relief supplies and funds. We urge synagogues and other Jewish agencies to do likewise. Li Shaping Mideast Diplomacy ear Richard Holbrooke: Congratulations on your confir- mation as our country's new United Nations ambassador. You bring to the job years of diplomatic experience and a proven talent for solving difficult international conflicts. We hope you will use those skills to press for a change in the anti-Israel bias that has kept the United Nations from playing a con- structive role in the quest for Mideast peace. That bias includes a long and discouraging history of U.N. resolutions that seek to delegit- imize Israel — resolutions so one-sided that most dovish American Jews vehemently reject the international body's involvement in the region. Mr. Holbrooke, there is simply no excuse for Israel's continued exclusion from the regional groups that do much critical U.N. business. Because Israel cannot win admission to the Western Europe and Others Group (WEOG), it is denied a rotating slot on the Security Council and other important U.N. bodies. Shamefully, Iraq, which even today is being bombed by U.S.-led forces because of its violation of terms of the Gulf War cease-fire, is eligible for that Security Council seat honor, as a member of the Asian regional group. A new government in Israel is pressing for- ward with the peace process; now would be an appropriate time to change Israel's indefensible exclusion. Mr. Holbrooke, you are no doubt aware that settlements are a controversial subject among American Jews. But the blatant unfair- ness of the U.N. action — this is a body that is loathe to condemn Palestinian terrorism, but routinely uses its various forums to casti- gate Israel — points to the need for a funda- mental realignment in the way the United Nations looks at the Arab-Israeli conflict. The bias extends even to simple respect for the Jewish people. U.N. bodies refuse to schedule important sessions on Christian and Moslem holidays. Jews get no such considera- don; the General Assembly is holding the opening session of this year's debate on Yom Kippur, the holiest day on the Jewish calendar. American Jews are internationalists; our community has long supported the goals of the United Nations. And Jewish groups have been among the few that supported appropria- tions to pay this country's U.N. arrears. But we also have become discouraged by decades' worth of overt hostility to Israel and a long succession of U.N. policies, statements and actions that only make peace in the region harder to attain. Mr. Holbrooke, you defied the experts and brokered a successful cease-fire in Bosnia. We sincerely hope you will have the same success in undoing 50 years of misguided and coun- terproductive U.N. Mideast policy. [_I JARC Wave Rider Supporters raised money for the Southfield-based Jewish Associa- tion for Residential Care on Aug. 14-15 at The Wave Auto Spa in. Commerce Township. JARC offers community-based residen- tial services for adults with developmental disabilities. Auto spa owners Marc and Karen Rosenzweig, left, of Wolverine Lake donated more than $4,000 in proceeds to JARC's Harris Chil- dren and Family Division for assisting families with a special- needs child. Hawking food on JARC's behalf were Joey Hodges,• 12, of West Bloomfield and his cousin, Austin Hodges, right. LETTERS Museum Of Unity Thank you for your Commu- nity Views column, "Holo- caust Museum Visit: A Trip of Remembrance" (July 30). • Like Stephanie Citron, I, too, had the opportunity to visit the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum while in Washington, D.C. I was both educated and persohally moved by my experience there. I was especially interest- ed in all the photos I saw — pictures of men, women and children, ordinary families, who were discriminated against simply because they were Jewish. I thought that as I studied their faces, they could be my family, my ancestors. What a wonderful place this is-for all people to learn about hatred, love and hope. I urge everyone to visit and support the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum as well as the Holocaust Memorial Cen- ter in West Bl000mfield. As one survivor said, we have to teach the world not to hate, but to get along. Sharon Fishman Bloomfield Hills Arab Relations Are Strong Your article on Richard Nodel's visit to Israel and his ADL background ("Taking Peace Personally," Aug. 20) was very interesting and infor- mative. However, his visit with Yasser Arafat could have had better results if he had only been better informed LETTERS ON PAGE 40 8/27 1999 Detroit Jewish New 37