Friend Or Foe? Tumult over honoree at annual gala threatens to obscure the goals of Seeds of Pedce. DIANA LIEBERMAN Copy Editor/Education Writer 0 rganizers of the second annual Seeds of Peace Gala have little more than a week to tie up the final details of a banquet they hope will attract 600 or more multi- ethnic guests to the main ballroom of the Ritz- Carlton Hotel in Dearborn. The last thing they need is a brouhaha over one of the three men selected as honorees for the event on Monday, Nov. 18. But a brouhaha is exactly what the organization has encountered, with a widely cir- culated letter by Jerome S. Kaufman of Bloomfield Hills disapproving of the choice of U.S. Rep.- John Dingell, D- ' Dearborn, as recipient of the 2002 CongresSional Leadership Award. Rep. John Dingell "Perhaps the Jews involved with Seeds of Peace do not know Dingell's record in the United States Congress • vis-a-vis Israel," wrote Kaufman, national secretary of the Zionist Organization of America. Reached in his Washington office, the 74-year-old congressman, whose Dearborn-centered 15th dis- trict represents the largest Arab constituency in the United States, repeatedly used the term "honest broker" in reference to his views on the Middle East. "My feeling is that the United States government must take no position so we can broker an end to the terrible situation in the Middle East," Dingell said. While Kaufman stated that the congressman had "consistently vote[d] against the foreign aid bill whose largest beneficiary is Israel," Dingell respond- ed that he has "voted for almost every foreign aid bill since I came to Congress in 1955." "Invariably," he added, "I make the point that I support the existence of the state of Israel." Dingell defended his lack of support for last May's congressional resolution expressing solidarity with Israel as an objection to an "unbalanced reso- lution." "This action stands in the way of the United States' acting as honest broker and friend to all par- ties," he said at that time. Another of Kaufman's statements — that Dingell was the only congressman voting against a February 2001 resolution congratulating Ariel Sharon, Israel's prime minister, on calling for an end to violence — is incorrect. The congressman who voted against the resolution was Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas. Last month, Dingell, along with 132 other mem- bers of Congress, voted against the resolution grant- ing President George W. Bush unilateral power to take military action against Iraq. Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich., voted against the corresponding Senate resolution. Dingell said the removal of Iraqi's Saddam Hussein is "obviously a desirable change." However, he said, whether the U.S. decides to remove the Iraqi leader or instead disarm the coun- try of its weapons of mass destruction, unilateral action would be "a great strategic and -tactical error. On The Podium In addition to Dingell, the Seeds of Peace gala, "Courage in the Pursuit of Peace," will honor Robert Lutz, vice chairman of General Motors and chairman of the automaker's North American Operations. Lutz will receive the Peacemaker Award, given in memory of Seeds of Peace founder John Wallach, who lost his life to lung cancer earli- er this year. Janet Wallach, wife of the Seeds founder and co- author of several of his books, will host the event, which will feature presentations by a diverse group of Seeds of Peace campers. The guest speaker, CNN newsman Bernard Kalb, a close friend of Wallach, also will be honored. Also on the podium will be Dr. Aaron David Miller, senior adviser for Arabgsraeli negotia- tions at the U.S. Department of State and Wallach'8 likely successor as Seeds president. Janet Wallach has been filling in as acting president. John Wallach, a Pulitzer Prize-winning newsman, began Seeds of Peace a decade ago to bring youth from regions of conflict around the world to a summer camp for purposes of mutual recognition and friendship. Each participant, known as a "seed," is selected by his home country's government and goes through a rigorous multiple-step application process. After graduation. from the Seeds program, participants continue in various follow-up programs. "We're not in the business of politics," said . Farmington Hills' Florine Mark-Ross, who co-chairs the Nov. 18 event with Jane Abraham, wife of for- mer Sen. Spencer Abraham, U.S. secretary of ener- gy. "All we are interested in is getting young people to a camp and helping young people to learn to know one another. ), David Gad-Harf, executive director of the Jewish Community Council of Metropolitan Detroit and a board member of the Seeds Detroit chapter, said the decision to honor Dingell, "a member of Congress who has been supportive of Seeds of Peace ... was made at the national level." "While I didn't think it was an appropriate choice from the Detroit Jewish community's perspective, I continue to support Seeds of Peace — its goals, its summer camp program, the local programming for Arab American and Jewish youngsters, and its fund- raising," . Gad-Harf said. Balancing Act Amy Baroch, senior events coordinator of the New York-based Seeds of Peace, said in an e-mail to the Jewish News that Congressman Dingell had been selected "primarily because John Wallach, the late founder and president of Seeds of Peace, felt that, as the longest-serving member of the House, Dingell was a good choice to continue the Congressional Leadership Award inaugurated last year — especial- ly since Dingell represents the largest Arab con- stituency in the nation. "Seeds of Peace also recognizes Dingell as a pow- erful Democratic member of Congress — a good balance to [Rep.] Joe Knollenberg [9th District], who was recognized last year and is a Republican. Seeds of Peace is very careful to give balance to all of our events ... " Along with Congressman Knollenberg, last year's gala, held Sept. 10, 2001, -honored Jac Nasser, who then was Ford Motor Co. president and CEO. Ford continues to give Seeds of Peace major financial support, joined this year by General Motors Corp. Last year's guest speaker, Martin Indyk, former U.S. ambassador to Israel and assistant secretary of state for near east affairs, drew criticism from mem- bers of the Arab-American community. Still, Kaufman calls Seeds of Peace a "pro-PLO, anti-Israel organization." Among his reasons: "Seeds has had on their pro- grams to speak Yasser Abed Rabbo, chief media spokesperson for Yasser Arafat, and Yossi Beilin, dis- credited Israeli former member of the Knesset and one of the authors of the disastrous Oslo Peace Accords." Replying to this statement,•Detroit chapter co- chair Ariela Shani of Rochester Hills pointed out that, because the organization is dependent on the cooperation of governments of diverse, and often warring, countries, it works with political leaders who may disagree on everything but the Seeds • camp itself. Among the Seeds graduates are children of PLO negotiator Saeb Erekat and Jewish children from the settlements of the West Bank. "We bring together people from the left wing, from the right wing. From wherever they are politi- cally, we bring them together in- a nonpartisan way to help bring about real peace," Shani said. "The children who are at camp come to an understanding that the enemy is a human being, just as we all are. If they can do it, we can do it." E 11/8 2002