Following The Leader ADL's Abe Foxman looks back at 13 years as agency chief. J.J. GOLDBERG Special to the Jewish News New York N of long after he took over as national director of the Anti-Defamation League, Abraham Foxman was asked to fly to Geneva to head off an international cri- sis. It set the tone for what's come since. It was June 1990. Nelson Mandela, newly released after 27 years in a South African prison, was headed to New York for an expected hero's welcome. A group of Jewish militants planned a rally, protesting Mandela's links to Muammar Qaddafi of Libya and Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat. Fearing a black-Jewish flare-up, civil rights leaders convinced a Jewish delegation to meet Mandela en route and hear him out. Some Jews warned, though, that the mission wouldn't help, as it consisted entirely of stock liberals. Just before takeoff, Abe Foxman agreed to join the mission. A veteran ADL staffer, he had a repu- tation as a staunch opponent of racial pandering and as an Israeli security hard-liner. If he found Mandela "kosher," the opposition would dissolve. Indeed, Mandela went on to a triumphal American reception that helped cement South Africa's peaceful transformation. A decade later, it's hard to imagine the episode repeating itself in the same way. Not that Foxman no longer would shake hands with former foes. No, he's accepted apologies from political leaders Pat Robertson and Jesse Jackson, singer Michael Jackson (for an antisemitic song lyric) and Texas Governor George W. Bush (for saying Jews can't enter heaven). Along the way, Foxman all but lost his hard-liner reputation. Lately he is displaying his conciliatory side more and more. Foxman is still a hard-liner by tempera- ment, particularly around Israel. But he seems increasingly concerned with, not just how others treat Jews, but how Jews appear to treat others. "If you want people to change their minds and hearts," he says, "you have to be ready to accept it when they do change." Last month, he raised hackles by opposing the isolation of Austria, after Joerg Haider's far-right Freedom Party entered the government. "Three- quarters of the Austrian people didn't vote for him," Foxman says. [By isolating Austria] "what are we telling them?" Last year Foxman caused shock waves by speaking out against what he saw as an overemphasis on Holocaust restitution. If things continued, he said, "the last Holocaust sound bite of the 20th century could be about money." J.J. Goldberg is the author of "Jewish Power:" He can be reached via e-mail at jjg@compuserve.com Abraham Foxman Attitudes like that infuriate Foxman's onetime admirers on the right. One militant group has a Web site called "Foxman's Follies," detailing the treasons of "Dishonest Abe." Supporters of Jonathan Pollard repeatedly attack Foxman, the American Jew imprisoned for spying for Israel. Foxrnan refuses to lobby for Pollard's release, insisting there's "no evi- dence that antisemitism played a role" in Pollard's draconian life sentence. Some critics say Foxman has been "bought by the CIA." Foxman says he's used to being attacked. Louis Farrakhan, David Duke and "pontifex" Matthew Hale of the World Church of the Creator routinely single out Foxman as their Public Enemy No. 1. Militia Web sites and chat groups brim with curses and threats. "I guess you can measure the seriousness and effectiveness of ADL by how much we're attacked," he says. Attacks by fellow Jews are something else. "They hurt," Foxman says. "I would like to think we're a little different, but I guess we're not." After Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin's assas- sination in 1995, Foxman helped push for a code of civility among Jewish groups. It was adopted in 1996 by the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations. So far the code has been invoked once — against Foxman. He had lashed out in 1998 against a rightist who was accus- ing the ADL of softness on Israel. Foxman was forced to apologize. Born in Warsaw in 1940, Foxman was taken by his nanny and baptized at age 1, after his parents were sent to Auschwitz, the German killing center in Poland. Foxman's parents, leaders in Vladimir Jabotinsky's Zionist Revisionist movement, survived the war and retrieved him afterward by court order. In 1950, they moved to New York, where Abe attended a series of Orthodox day schools and joined a series of Zionist youth groups — the right-wing Betar, then the left-wing Habonim, then the apoliti- cal Young Judaea. "I wasn't bothered by the severities of the ideology," he recalls. Foxman went to work for ADL in 1965, after receiving a law degree from New York University. His first case was suing Aramco, the Arab-American Oil Company. The plaintiff was a Jewish job appli- cant who'd been warned by the job interviewer that he wouldn't fit in at Aramco. Ironically, Foxman recalls, the interviewer "was trying to be nice to him. But the young man felt it was discriminatory and came to ADL." Blunt-speaking and unreflective, Foxrnan rarely tries to articulate a seamless philosophy. There are common threads, though. They start with support for Israel and opposition to antisemitism. They're framed by a rare pragmatism. He's always ready for a fight. He's usually ready to patch things up. This month Foxman was quick to reject Pope John Paul II's "apology" for church sins, saying it should have mentioned the Holocaust. Later he reminded reporters that the pope had an "unparal- leled" record on Catholic-Jewish relations. Foxman is a firm supporter of the Israeli-Palestinian peace process, reversing ADL's staunchly pro-Likud policies during the 1980s. Yet he defends Israel's West Bank settlements against Arab-American efforts at eco- nomic boycott. Consistent or not, his formulas have vast appeal. In 13 years as ADL's national director, he's turned the league, traditionally the biggest Jewish defense_ agency, into a colossus dwarfing every other Jewish advocacy group. Its $50 million budget is bigger than the bud- gets of AIPAC (American Israel Public Affairs Committee), the American Jewish Congress, the World Jewish Congress and the Simon Wiesenthal Center combined. ADL runs diversity training for the CIA and the German government. ADL's intelligence on extremists often rivals that of the FBI. Foxman himself has emerged as one of the only fig- ures who can speak authoritatively for American Jewry and be sure that others — Jewish and non-Jewish — are listening. He's one of just a handful of Jewish lead- ers recognizable outside their own office suites. That unique stature was thrown into sharp relief last week when the ADL honored Foxman with an unusual fund-raising dinner. It featured Henry Kissinger as master of ceremonies and an all-star speakers list, including CIA director George Tenet and sex guru Dr. Ruth Westheimer. Celebrities aren't unusual at fancy Jewish dinners, of course. What's almost unheard of is a Jewish organization throwing a fancy dinner to honor one of its own employees. "I'm a product of the worst and the best," Foxman says. "The worst being antisemitism at its nadir, which killed people, and the best being a woman who risked her life to save me. How do you blend the two?" ❑ 3/31 2000 20