OTHER VIEWS A Next-Door State Of Hatred? ill gybe the immediate world does not know exactly how small Israel is? Maybe even the Jews and even the Israelis don't know? Of course, if one goes by the amount of newsprint, television coverage and public debate allocated to Israel, one would think it to be at least the size of the United States, maybe not quite as large as China? Israel, including the territories regained after the Six Day War of 1967, at its widest point, is only about 85 miles wide, and 290 miles long. Israelis are quickly learning these short distances the hard way. Palestinian Arab terrorists, commit- ting murder within Israeli territory and then easily walking five minutes away into their own Israeli-given sanctuaries, are daily presenting a painful lesson in geography. When one, therefore, hears of the concept of "separation" from the Palestinian Arabs, by even the Israelis, it is evident they are not aware of the size and topography of their own country. They are only indulging, as usual, Jerome S. Kaufman is a Bloomfield Hills resident. His e-mail address is jsk48302@aol.com in their own wishful thinking. And therein lies the bare-naked truth. There cannot be two separate nations in such a small piece of land. This is especially true if one people is sworn to destroy the other and drive them from "Holy Arab Land" — and have so indoctrinated several generations, starting with the train- ing of 3-year-old little girls to be sui- cide bombers. It is also impossible if one people have fabricated an entire history of a fictitious Palestinian Arab people and a claim to the land that not even the newly minted texts of historical revi- sionism can support. Any historian knows that the Arabs of the area were never a distinct peo- ple with a government of their own. They lived under the British Mandate for about 30 years and under the Turks for 500 years before that — and the area was at peace and at peace for only one reason. There was a dominating force that con- trolled the population and made and enforced the rules, just as in any other political entity, including the democracies. Therein lies the only realistic solu- tion. Israel must have the courage to reassume the role of the dominating force. It will not be easy. The expecta- thing many years before the tions of the local popula- now obvious facts were on tion of Palestinian Arabs the ground. and the millions more that What are these dangers? have migrated to the area, • The irrefutable fact that because of the success of the Arab world has never the Jewish enterprise, have reconciled themselves to reached a feverish pitch. Israel's very existence. Israel's This has been aided and mortal enemies — Syria, enhanced by the naive Iraq, Iran, Saudi Arabia and projections and encourage- JERO ME S. Lebanon — and question- ment of Jews historically KAU F MAN able peace partners, Egypt unwilling and untrained Comm unity and Jordan, have easy access to assume the mantle of Vie ws t -i her borders. power and governing. The • The hope of a demilita- Palestinian Arabs fully rized Palestinian state with expect now to have a state monitored borders is a fool's dream. of their own. They have not been Israel has been unsuccessful in main- prepared to accept the bare-naked taining demilitarization even now. truth that it is impossible for a • The Israeli Arab population, rational Israeli to allow a sovereign which long ago discarded any false state of hatred living literally next allegiance to the Jewish state, would door. be an immensely successful fifth col- umn within Israel proper. What Are The Dangers? • The lethal assumption by the The dangers of such a state have Palestinian Arabs of the sources of been projected by both Brigadier Israel's vital water supply. General Aharon Levran, who wrote a • The easier application of terror book aptly called A Disaster Foretold, on a terrorized Israeli population and Morton Klein, president of the already anxious, except for those Zionist Organization of America, awful stubborn dedicated settlers, to who compiled a booklet called The hop the next boat out of town. The Dangers of a Palestinian State. list of dangers is endless. The great Ze'ev Jabotinsky and the unfairly maligned Rabbi Meir KAUFMAN on page 30 Kahane wrote virtually the same Our Grandparents Would Be Proud New York City . most of us, Labor Day marks the unofficial end of summer. However, there was a time when it was something more than that: a time to reflect on the value of America's unions and the workers they represent. Back then, Labor Day had special meaning to America's Jewish commu- nity. After all, it was unions, more than almost any other institution, that enabled our grandparents' generation to lift their families out of poverty T Stuart Appelbaum is president of the Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union and the Jewish Labor Committee, which he represents at the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations. He lived in Michigan 1982-1986, working for the AFL-CIO. His e-mail address is rwdsu@aol.com and, ultimately, into the middle class. Thanks to the economic security won by what were often Jewish-led unions, our ancestors didn't walk away from America's ghettos; they ran away. Today, another generation of Jews is embracing the American labor move- ment. But where their ancestors may have done so out of economic necessi- ty, these women and men are moved by a personal, and uniquely Jewish, commitment to social justice. On college campuses from coast to coast, Jewish student activists are play- ing key roles in the growing campaign against sweatshop labor at home and abroad. At Harvard, Jewish students helped lead recent protests backing a "living wage" for university employees. Many Jewish student activists eventu- ally become involved in the AFL- CIO's Union Summer internship pro- gram or other efforts. Eventually, some are often immigrant workers will become full-time union whose problems are eerily organizers. reminiscent of those faced by Who are they? They're our own grandparents. people like Tana Becker, Though today's immigrant who's worked to organize workers are more likely to hospital workers in hail from Mexico or Asia Massachusetts and Avi than Russia and Poland the Green, who, through the difficulties they face are large- Jewish Labor Committee, ly the same: poverty wages, mobilized support for work- STUART dangerous working condi- er concerns throughout our APPELBAUM tions and employer intimida- community. Special tion and abuse. At the core of the labor Commentary For example, my union, the movement's appeal to these Retail, Wholesale and Department and other young activists is the tradi- Store Union, found that in New York tional commitment of unions to City, supermarket delivery workers — defend the rights of workers, especially many of them recent immigrants from the working poor. After all, Africa or the Caribbean — were often Maimonides himself taught that help- on the job 60 to 80 hours per week, ing people to support themselves is the but earned as little as $1.10 per hour. very highest form of charity. Ironically, the beneficiaries of this APPELBAUM on page 30 new wave" of Jewish union activism " 8/31 2001 29