JNEditorials Editorials and Letters to the Editor are posted and archived on JN Online: www.detroitjewishnews.com Not Ready For Prime Time , demn. It is also incidents such as Palestinian First Lady Suha Arafat's recent allegations about Israel's use of "toxic gases." They were no aberration; her words reflected the views of the Palestinian "street," unchanged despite sig- nificant movement in the peace process in recent months. It is significant that no top officials in Gaza City had courage enough to condemn Mrs. Arafat's noxious remarks. We think the Republican presidential hope- ful, Senator John McCain of Arizona, was pretty much on target last week. It is not land exchanges that guarantee a lasting peace," he told an interviewer, "but the character of the regimes that enter into such agreements. Despotic, corrupt and militant regimes do not make good peace partners." When a leader jails his opponents for voic- ing on-target criticism, that's despotism. The record of PA officials pocketing aid money is well-documented corruption. And the contin- uing refusal to confront anti-Semitic hatred and incitement sure adds up to militancy. The Palestinian would-be state has miles to go before anyone should trust it to be a reli- able partner in peace. 1-1 Who's The Greedy One? T his week's report saying Swiss banks have at least 54,000 accounts that they should have returned to Holo- caust families should make it easier for the Jewish community to push for speedy and generous restitution to Shoah victims. The admirably aggressive effort by Jewish organizations such as the World Jewish Con- gress were motivated by the con- viction that the dwindling num- ber of survivors were entitled to simple justice. As evidence mounted that banks, museums and nations were still illegally holding valuables looted from European Jews, it seemed simply fair to return the property as quickly as possible. More recently, new efforts to document how German compa- nies used slave laborers, including Jews in death camps as well as Gypsies and others interned out- side the camps, made plain how many indus- tries profited from this inhuman practice. But the effort to achieve a humane and ade- quate settlement was driven by competing efforts, in some cases motivated by lawyers who seemed to be in the fray at least in part because of the contingency fees they might collect. And on a more significant level, Jewish leaders feared that the push for restitution could shadow the gentile world's view of the incomparable human tragedy of Shoah. Knowing the history of anti-Semitism and its consistent effort to link a nation's economic woes to "greedy Jews," they sensibly were reluctant to seem "too pushy" — no matter how worthy the cause of restitution. But the report of the Volcker Commission's three-year inquiry into what Swiss banks did with money deposited by Jewish account holders is pretty convincing about who was actually greedy. In 1995, the banks said they had found 775 unreturned Jewish accounts; the commission found 54,000. The banks said they acted honorably; the report found instance of banks bleeding the Jewish accounts with exces- sive fees and stonewalling when Jews asked what had happened to their money. Greed is, no doubt, a human trait. But it isn't uniquely — or predominantly — a Jewish characteristic. The new evidence about who stole from whom should fortify the resolve of Jewish leaders to demand a full and fair restitution. Among other things, it might help the looters and their successors live with their consciences. ❑ Photos by Bi ll Hansen IV hen Yasser Arafat ordered a crackdown on his opponents last week — sending a handful to jail and threatening the immunity of critical legislators — he helped remind a lot of us in the United States how far the Palestinians are from a modern democracy. We are often tempted to believe that when Israel is negotiating tough issues with the powers that be in Gaza City, it is dealing with a govern- ment that meets the usual expectations of honor- ing its laws above its leaders. But that would be wishful thinkinab as Arafat's actions show. It's not that the Palestinian Authority might not evolve over time into a more stable and trustworthy entity. We'll see more about the prospects for that after the state is recognized and, equally crucial, how it handles the com- ing question of a successor to Arafat. But the current state of internal Palestinian affairs is no source of comfort. It is not just the continuing problem of verbal incitement and anti-Semitic, anti-Israel content in the class- room and on state-sanctioned media, which we have long deplored and which the Clinton administration wrong-headedly refuses to con- IN FOCUS Hopes For Healing Above, Mary Ann Siegel, former MJAC board member, lights sage with a feather in support of Native Americans during the Michigan Jewish AIDS Coalition's Dec. 1 healing service at Adat Shalom Synagogue, held as part of World AIDS Day. Below left is West Bloomfield's Sylvia Block, who lost son Nathan to AIDS in 1996 at age 42. The MJAC board mem- ber said it's "very emotional when you light a yahrzeit candle for a child, no matter how old he or she was. That just broke me up." The Temple Beth El member also teamed with five other MJAC supporters to unveil a MJAC Family quilt panel in memory of loved ones lost to AIDS. Rabbis Sheila Goloboy and Aaron Bergman spoke; about 150 people attended. Below right are service candles and programs. Southfield- based MJAC was founded in 1991 to boost AIDS awareness, support and prevention. LETTERS All Rooms Are Safe I want to thank you for your wonderful article regarding Rabbi Moshe Polter ("An Experienced Hand," Nov. 26). However, one point was in error. A statement made as to our three moves due to fire regulations could be misinter- preted as if the rooms in Con- gregation Shaarey Zedek were unsafe. State fire requirements for an all-day school occupy- ing a building are greatly dif- ferent from other fire codes for permitted uses for assem- bly, day care or afternoon schools. The review process is 12/10 1999 39