Offer extended through July 31, 2002
Boys light
candles at a
vigil for slain
Toronto man
David
Rosenzweig
on Monday
evening.
retc
URCHASE ANY PACKAGE AT OUR REGULAR PRICE
AND RECEIVE YOUR SECOND PACKAGE FOR
occurred last year in Durban under
the guise of free speech. I think
Durban gave license to these skinheads
to do deeds like this and let them
think they're doing the world a favor."
Frank Dimant, a friend of the fami-
ly and the executive vice president of
B'nai Brith Canada, said the stabbing
was the result of a hate culture that
has been allowed to grow in Canada
"thanks to some of the media in this
country and thanks to some of the
unions and thanks to the anti-Israel
bashing that demonizes Jews."
"Here we have individuals who were
apparently skinheads, which seems to
be a clear statement of their ideology,"
Dimant said. "They come into a
Jewish restaurant in a Jewish neighbor-
hood to cause trouble, and they kill a
Jew. I don't think they necessarily have
to scream, 'I hate Jews.' Their
demeanor says it all."
An estimated 2,000 people, includ-
ing Toronto's mayor and the premier
of the province of Ontario, attended
Rosenzweig's funeral Monday.
Despite the official show of support,
the murder seems to have touched a
"We are party to a lawsuit challeng-
ing the Florida voucher plan on state
constitutional grounds," he said. "That
will be the first straw in the wind after
the Cleveland case." He said he
expects voucher supporters to mount a
"major assault" against constitutional
barriers to vouchers in up to 37 state
constitutions, including Michigan's.
But new voucher proposals, he said,
will also face a more mundane but no
less formidable obstacle: money.
Dozens of states are facing budget
emergencies, making it unlikely they
will appropriate more money to pay
for voucher experiments. ❑
nerve in Toronto's Jewish community of
about 170,000, the largest in Canada.
"I hate to say it, but I'm going to
tell my grandchildren not to walk to
shul wearing" yarmulkes, said
Edmund Lipsitz, an educator and for-
mer official with the Canadian Jewish
Congress, who lives two blocks from
the murder site. "I thought that after
going through the Holocaust, I would
be able to live my life peacefully, but it
looks like evil times are back again,
even in a city like Toronto." ❑
Israel Ins
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THE ISSUE
While the potential terrorist actions
of an individual or a cell are high
priorities for Israel's defense, the
Jewish state went public earlier this
month to alert fellow democracies
to another threat — that of rogue
nations.
BEHIND THE ISSUE
In a rare public testimony before
NATO ministers, the head of
Mossad, Israel's foreign intelligence
service, singled out four rogue
nations — Iran, Iraq, Syria and
Libya. Mossad outlined the threat
they pose with known arsenals of
biological and chemical weapons
and the missiles to deliver them,
and their potential for developing
nuclear arms. Of most immediate
concern to Israel, and possibly
Turkey and Jordan, is Syria. With
the help of North Korea and Iran,
Syria soon will begin production of
a Scud missile with a range of 400
miles and the ability to carry a pay-
load of 1,500 pounds.
—,- Allan Gale, Jewish Community
Council of Metropolitan Detroit
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7/19
2002
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