Editorials are posted and archived on JN Online: www.detroitjewishnews.com Dry Bones Strengthening Our Identity Jr ews are facing attacks on two fronts that could reshape who we are as a people. So said Rabbi Avraham Jacobovitz last week at the 22nd annu- al dinner of Oak Park-based Machon ETorah, the Jewish Learning Network of Michigan. And he's right. In many ways, we face a world" infected with the collapse of moral values as well as utter disregard for human life. Over the past 4,000 years, we've survived slavery, expulsion, ridicule and the Holocaust. Now, we face the daunt- ing challenges of apathy, assimila- tion, intermarriage and spiritual decay. We also must stare down the terrorists who seek to destroy us. The terrorist attacks on America by Islamic radicals on Sept. 11 wrote a new chapter in how far our enemies will go to hurt our friends and allies. Sadly, this chapter is still being written. "We've only seen a little bit of the capacity of the enemies of humanity and, in particular, the enemies of the Jewish peo- ple," said Rabbi Jacobovitz. That warning rings true in the increased police presence marking Jewish events in our community and around the world. Wherever we gather in significant numbers, we're tar- gets. To not take precautions is to fall prey to indifference. Divine mercy alone won't spare us from those who hate us. As for spiritual decay, that's more subjective. But we applaud Rabbi Jacobovitz for bluntly asking if materialism, gossip and lifestyle trends are what we want as the defining parameters of the Jewish community. The Jewish continuity we aspire to should be built on a foundation of reverence for our history, heritage and tradi- tions — and Israel, our beloved homeland. Clearly, we must provide more places to experience the joy of Jewish life, from the beauty of Shabbat.to what family relation- ships are all about, to what loyalty, ethics, respect and love mean. We must inspire Jews who have lost their religious identity — and give them reason and excitement to go find it. The numbers are telling. According to Machon, 59 percent of American Jews don't belong to a synagogue, 70 percent have never visited Israel and 52 percent of those married in the last five years married a non-Jew. Rabbi Aaron Eisenman of Machon's Jewish Resource Center in Ann Arbor put it well: "Unfortunately, many people don't see the beauty of Judaism because they've cut so much out of it." Whether it's regular Torah study, visiting Israel, enjoying traditional Shabbat din- ners or doing more to help or enrich oth- ers, the best way to showcase the beauty of Judaism is by example. We can help reju- venate the continuity that once thrived by making it our business to pass the torch of learning and living Jewishly from one gen- eration to the next, no matter how Torah observant we are. r NAme °NE C F1 cAcRince I 14Av& rimy, NA A 'DE- FOK- PALE - S'n t ■ -)E ADD - I. t-AAKE IT OUP EDIT ORIAL Related story: page 51 ❑ The Power Of Marketing ro alestinians were treated late last month to two very different views of the future. Both came in advertisements, one on gov- ernment-controlled television, the other in a newspaper. In the TV one, which had no spoken words, the camera followed an Arab couple who encounter Israel army troops. The man, angered, plans an attack on the troops; simultaneously, he envisions dozens of young, beautiful women beckoning him from a mist. He is captured by the Israel Defense Forces, but allowed to "escape." As he does ; an Israeli sol- dier shoots him in the back. Then the virgins reappear, pulling the new "martyr" into the • mist, surrounding him and caressing him. The other message was a communique, signed by 55 prominent Palestinians the first time it was published in the Al-Quds newspaper and by 315 Palestinians when it was republished two days later. The core mes- sage from the signers was that they hoped "that those behind the military actions aimed at [harming] citizens in Israel will reconsider [their acts] and cease pushing our youth to carry out these operations, because we do not see them as leading to any results except for increased hatred, enmity and hostility between the two peoples, deepening the chasm between them, and destroying the possibility of both peoples living along- side each other in peace in two neighboring states ... We do not think that encouraging the reciprocal exis- tential fighting between the two peoples in the holy land will lead to anything except destruction and ruin for all people of this region. We find no logical, human or political justification for this outcome." The two ads captured clearly the pulling and tugging that must be going on in Gaza and the West Bank under the pressure of Israel's continuing crackdown on terrorism and U.S. President George W. Bush's strong condem- nation of Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat and the ter- rorism his regime has allowed. Obviously, most Westerners prefer the vision of the newspaper ad, but we should not underestimate the power of the television call to martyrdom. Our common sense tells us that there will be no 72 beautiful handmaidens awaiting the homicide bomber and that his destination is never going to be EDIT ORIAL Paradise. But much of the Muslim world gave up on modernity 500 years ago and yearns to recreate a vanished age of Islamic glory. That is why the Bush demand for a democratic Palestinian entity cannot be easily fulfilled. We may expect the ordinary Palestinian to realize that his or her society would be greatly aided by the rapid adoption of Western ways. But that isn't -the case, and we need to be prepared for the disappointment we are likely to feel when Arafat is "re-elected" next year by a process more like a tribal selection of king than like our polling process. This is, after all, a society in which an infant in Hebron was dressed up as a suicide bomber as a joke to amuse a party. We should be somewhat heartened that the adver- tisement was published at all and that, so far, its signers have not been attacked. Perhaps when Palestinians develop a taste for tolerating dissent a little more democracy will be kindled. But America and Israel should have a game plan for what comes next, when Arafat's announced "reforms" prove empty of substance and his elections return to power the same corrupt and inefficient regime. It would be wise to think about advertising some images of our own in which an Arab couple doesn't have to seek Paradise to find happiness. 7/ 5 2002 33