CHECK OUT OUR PRICES ON OMNIA LEATHER AND CARTER UPHOLSTERY AND PAY No SALES TAx NTIL APRIL 15m! Israelis reacted differently to the pope's visit, depending on where they were from John rather than John Paul II who touched down at Ben-Gurion Airport. An Israeli youngster can go through 12 years of school without here was an enormous learning the basic facts about difference between the Christianity for Islam for way that adult that matter). Israelis, on the There are a few excep- one hand, and their chil- tions, to be sure. Dor, a dren, on the other, related Analysis 12th grade history major at to the pope's visit. a local high school., has stud- The adults, or at least ied the foundations of Christianity those who grew up in pluralistic and the development of the Papacy. Western countries, followed the pon But among the 260 teenagers in tiff's pilgrimage with great interest his grade, only eight are history because they understand v,,ho he is majors. The other 252 can hardly dif- and what he stands for Sabras, in ferentiate between a pope and a pizza. contrast, were generally indifferent; What little knowledge they have they know practically nothing about about Christianity is mainly acquired Christianity and would certainly have within the context of their studies of been more excited had it been Elton NECHEMIA MEYERS Special to the Jewish News . Head In His Hands Using your treadmill as a doilies han • er? Sell it in an ad in The Jewish News 1E800E354E5959 Mercedes Benz of Bloomfield Hills - Ask for Paul Milgrim • Year 'round personal service • 23 years experience • Largest Mercedes inventory in the IVILidwest 3/31 2000 243644-840 I floo INood%vard Ave,„ Bloorkifield • As the pope departed Sunday night on an El Al 747 with the name "Jerusalem" on its nose, interfaith activists realized his would be a hard act to follow. "We have come very far, but that does not mean there is still not a long way to go," said Rabbi Melchior, who' announced during the Western Wall visit his intention to launch a new interfaith dialogue forum. "I know that there are more and more Christians and people in the Catholic Church, as well as Muslim leaders, who want to join in a different kind of dialogue." This, however, was not clearly evi- dent from the pope's visit. Before visiting the Western Wall, John Paul toured the Temple Mount, which houses the AI-Aksa Mosque, Islam's third holiest shrine. There he heard Palestinian griev- ances about Israel's behavior toward them in eastern Jerusalem since the Jewish state took control of the entire city in the 1967 Six-Day War. He also met the grand mufti of Jerusalem, the leading Islamic cleric in the city, whose inflammatory com- ments published that day accused the Jews of exaggerating the Holocaust to win world sympathy. The pope's spokesman said John Paul was unaware of those remarks. Earlier during the trip, the mufti refused to attend a Jewish-Christian- Islamic summit. A second-tier Islamic representative stormed out of the meeting after lashing out at Israeli pol- icy toward Palestinians in Jerusalem. As he listened to competing Jewish and Islamic claims to Jerusalem, the pope held his head in his hands. Reality Check Throughout his pilgrimage, John Paul skillfully traversed the religious and political chasms that sever the Holy City. He kept himself above attempts from both sides to politicize the visit, and he issued universal calls for peace wherever he set foot. Rabbi David Rosen, director of the Anti-Defamation League's Israel office and a veteran interfaith activist, said the difficulties in finding common ground with Islamic leaders demon- strated the importance of pressing ahead with interfaith work. "This has been a boost for inter- faith relations and an inspiration for those of us who work in this field," said Rabbi Rosen. "But it is not going to change the reality we will have to contend with, which is not only a politicization of religion that tends to work against interreligious but also the "cultural context in which people perceive themselves as exclusive