This Week `Terrorist Next Door' The North Carolina Furniture Market Just Ended... We've Got Lots of NEW Furniture Coming In, We MUST Move out the OLD! Save at least 30, 40, 50% FINANCING DON COHEN Special to the Jewish News D aniel Levitas grew up with- out experiencing any per- sonal episodes of anti- Semitism or racism. "I grew up on the Upper West Side of Manhattan," Levitas explains. "You didn't say bad things about Jews. You didn't say bad things about anybody." But that changed when he moved to Iowa in 1983, soon after graduating from the School of Natural Resources at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor. His experiences would lead him to a career as one of the nation's top researchers and activists battling anti- Semites and racists. Levitas, author of The Terrorist Next AVAILABLE! on All Merchandise ALWAYS 12 MONTH SAME AS CASH Wedding And Party Specialists Flowers For All Occasions G OF NATURE T FLOWERS STATE (248) 559-5424 (888) 202-4466 Fax: (248) 559-5426 29115 Greenfield, Southfield, Ml 48076 V 1114 1 P*4 .34370 IMAGINE the FINEST MUSIC EXCEEDING ALL EXPECTATIONS INTRIGUE The Music and Entertainment that will make your Party' Call Stella. Actis Aldo (248) 879-2373 Visit our web site: www. intrigue-online. corn No Appointment Necessary Zee ate Veat Sett ,0401, Veal Clothing should be laundered & on hangers. Open 7 Days Now Accepting Fall Items Fashions & Accessories Fast Turnover 11/1 2002 28 CONSIGNMENT elotkie- Highland Lakes Shopping Center 42947 W. 7 Mile Rd. - Northville - (248) 347 4570 - U-M graduate Levitas examines the history of the homegrown militia movement and radical right. 624360 Door: The Militia Movement and the Radical Right (St. Martin's Books, $26.95); will speak at the Annual Jewish Book Fair at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 14, at the Jewish Community Center in Oak Park. "The farm crisis hit and it was an absolute social and eco- nomic tumult," Levitas says of his early career days in Iowa. "I was living on a farm, milking cows and organizing farmers to fight against farm foreclosures." He found himself working side-by-side with Jewish organizations trying to help farmers, but soon found that other influential organizers were preaching violent racist, anti-Semitic and anti-government ideologies. He was shocked and compelled to action by the receptivity to extremism that he found in rural communities. "I'd be working on a farm, and having dinner with folks I thought were great people, and they would mention 'the international Jewish conspiracy and how there were 'good Jews and bad Jews.'" Spurred To Action After discovering where these ideas were coming from, he co-founded Prairie Fire to counter Christian Identity groups like the Posse Comitatus, who preached a violent, whites-only pseudo-religion. Claiming Jews controlled the government, groups like the Posse tried to exploit the crisis to build a hate-based, violent, anti-gov- ernment movement and pitch an array of useless pseudo-legal seminars and documents. What Levitas learned down on the farm led him to Atlanta in 1989, where he transformed the National Anti-Klan Network into the Center for Democratic Renewal; and expanded his expertise to the full range of racist, anti-Semitic and neo-Nazi organizations. Since 1993, he has testified as an expert witness in state and federal courts across the nations, while researching his book and consulting with communities and organizations on everything from hate-motivated violence to Holocaust denial, white racist prison gangs and "white-core" hate music. Much of The Terrorist Next Door is a gripping historical examination of those ideologies pitched to rural America, ideologies that formed the foundation of the militia movement. Levitas traces the emergence of white supremacist paramilitary groups from their roots in the post- Civil War period, through the segregationist violence of the civil rights era to the present. While he says he "inten- tionally shied away from making too many predictions," he is particularly concerned about the tar- geting of young people. And he cau- tions us not to take too much solace from the fact that many of the groups have been weakened. You need to measure these groups by more than their membership; you must also look at the strength of their ideas." As he writes in the book's epilogue: "In the post-Sept. 11 world, Americans would do well to be on the lookout for more hardened underground activity on the part of hate groups as well as more efforts by the radical right to recruit and mobilize supporters based on fear and distrust of Arabs, immi- grants, Israel and American Jews." ❑ Daniel Levitas speaks 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 14, at the Jewish Community Center in Oak Park. • , •