"I have been distressed and disturbed by the vitri- olic words and inappropriate content in the NGO document," Robinson said. As a result, she said, she was unable to recom- mend the entire document to the governmental del- egates, only passages of it. Especially "unacceptable," she said, were accusations that Israel was guilty of "genocide." Nevertheless, she reiterated that she believes refer- ence must be made in the final declaration to "the suffering of the Palestinian people." Jewish activists remained skeptical. Surely, Robinson and other organizers knew what was coming down the pike, the activists said, and could have intervened. Likewise, they said, interna- tional human rights groups could have worked to defuse the crisis before it hit Durban. "Hatred Stops Dialogue Nobel Prize winner Elie Wiesel was invited to Durban to speak, and initially accepted before read- ing the draft declarations. He withdrew and said Tuesday that the United Nations would now be associated with "shame." "I do not believe I can dialogue with hatred," Wiesel said, answering critics who believed the United States should have stayed at the conference and debated the controversial language. "Hatred stops dialogue, and there was so much hatred there that I got frightened." Instead, a group like Amnesty International may have fanned the flames by accusing Israel of war crimes in its response to the past year of Palestinian violence. An Amnesty press release handed out during the NGO conference cited sev- eral examples of racism and human rights abuses around the world, but mentioned only Israel by name. In a press conference Monday that tried to refo- cus attention on the conference's ostensible anti- racist aim, Irene Khan, secretary general of Amnesty International, allowed that "there are very serious human rights issues in the Middle East. If we name one country, we should name them all." Still, she said, "I think it's time to move ahead." That response was too little, too late for Felice Gaer, a human rights expert for the American Jewish Committee. "The human rights movement above all is about speaking out," Gaer said. "The tepid, after-the-fact remarks about the unquestionable hate-filled lan- guage and spreading of hate propaganda is an extraordinary disappointment." Jewish activists speculate that the Palestinians, pre- sumably funded by the Arab world, spent millions to prepare for the conference. Activists say they saw workers unloading huge cartons of posters, banners and free T-shirts bearing slogans such as "Israel Is an Apartheid State" and "Zionism Is Racism." The Palestinians also handed out thousands of free kaffiyeh scarves in Palestinian national colors, which many participants happily draped around their necks. One woman, a Bosnian from war-ravaged Sarajevo, was spotted wearing the scarf-like a bandana. "The Israelis should give it up, and the DEBACLE on page 26 The Battering To Come American Jewish leaders worry that conference will further isolate Israel. JAMES D. BESSER Washington Correspondent I srael faces a return to the dark days of international isolation, and Jewish activists may be about to con- front a new surge of internation- al anti-Semitism in the name of human rights. Those are some of the poten- tial results of this week's interna- tional racism conference in Durban, South Africa, according to U.S. Jewish leaders. On Sunday, the conference non-governmental organization forum adopted a resolution branding Israel a "apartheid, racist" state and accusing its gov- ernment of "genocide and ethnic cleansing." And on Monday, the United States and Israel with- drew their low-level delegations after concluding they would be unable to remove anti-Israel Ian.- guage from the final declaration produced by the government portion of the conference. At midweek, European and South African officials were working frantically to find a compromise formula, but Jewish leaders say that even if that effort succeeds, Israel has sustained major body blows at Durban. "It's a return to the language and attitudes of 26 years ago," said Daniel Mariaschin, execu- tive vice-president of B'nai B'rith, referring to the 1975 U.N. "Zionism as racism" reso- lution. "I don't know what's going to happen in the next few days, but it's a major statement that the United States and Israel did not get the support they needed to block this effort months ago." The hijacked conference repre- sents a new and potent strategy by the Palestinians, Jewish lead- ers say. The goal is to undercut Israel's legitimacy in the interna: tional arena, not just leverage its leaders into making more con- cessions to the Palestinians. "Durban is a wake-up call,' said Rabbi Abraham Cooper, associate dean of the Simon Wiesenthal Center, who attend- ed the conference. "Just as [Palestinian Authority leader Yasser] Arafat made a tactical BAT' ERING on page 22 A Nation Shocked, For some Israelis, U.N. forum revives memories of persecution. DAVID LANDAU Jewish Telegraphic Agency Jerusalem sraelis had little time to savor, with grim gratification, the United States' walkout from the U.N. World Conference Against Racism on Monday. Early Tuesday morning, a Palestinian suicide bomber blew himself up outside a hospital in downtown Jerusalem, gravely injuring a policeman and wounding a dozen passers-by. While Israel was raked over the coals in Durban, South Africa, for its "aggression" and "racism" in response to Palestinian vio- lence, Palestinian terror bombings in the heart of civilian areas got little attention at the conference. In such bombings, men, women and children are targeted only because they are Jews. There is no attempt to narrow down the field of victims by applying other criteria such as age or fighting ability. Race is the sole death warrant. I While Tuesday's bomb belongs in the context of a conflict in which both sides have bitter griev- ances, the irony of Israel being physically attacked on the streets of Jerusalem while being verbally assailed in the meeting rooms of Durban was not lost on Israelis. The Israeli public is united behind the government's decision Monday to follow the United States in walking out of the conference. "This is the first time that the opposition entirely endorses the government's position," opposition leader Yossi Sarid said Tuesday. Taking Stock However, important differences of opinion, which transcend the usual hawk-dove divide, are emerging in Israel as a trauma- tized nation begins to take stock. The fault line seems to be forming between those seeking rational explanations and advo- cating rational responses to the harsh anti-Israeli criticism at Durban and others who feel the surge of anti-Semitism on dis- play has deep and dark roots that can't be plumbed by reason, throwing some Israelis back into a fortress mentality they thought had been left behind. Leftist-rationalists do not excuse the Israel-bashers at the U.N. conference or the NGO conference that preceded it. Yet they maintain that Israel's 34- year occupation of land the Palestinians claim in the West Bank and Gaza Strip has blight- ed Israel's image in much of the world, especially among Western liberals and among nations that were former colonies. Rationalists on the right say Israel has failed to respond with enough toughness and resilience to the past year of Palestinian violence, leading haters of Israel to conclude they can attack the Jewish state in the international arena with impunity. Politicians on both sides, among them former Prime Minister Binyarnin Netanyahu of the Likud Party and leading labor Party SHOCKED on page 25 2001 19