LETTERS We prefer letters that relate to articles in the Jewish News. We reserve the right to edit or reject letters. Brevity is encouraged. Letter writers generally are limited to one letter per 4-6 week period, space permitting. Letters must contain the name, address and title of the writer, and a daytime telephone number. Original copies must be hand signed. Nlail to the Jewish News at 29200 Northwestern Highway, Suite 110, Southfield, MI 48034; fax to (248) 304-8885; or e-mail to: rsklar@thejewishnews.com `Pianist' An Epic Holocaust Film With a great deal of apprehension, I attended the new Roman Polanski film The Pianist ("The Pianist," Jan. 3, page 53). The only other film of this magni- tude was Schindler's List. The violence, brutality and inhumanity by the Nazis in both films were sadly similar. I couldn't help but feel that Polanski injected some of his own experiences in the Kracow ghetto, where, coinci- dently, I was also interred. Just as in the film, young children become street-smart out of necessity to survive. Prominently featured, too, were scenes of starvation in the ghetto contrasted with the abundance of food on the Aryan side. Among the highlights of this film are the Jewish ghetto uprising in April 1943 and the Polish Underground uprising against the Germans in - August 1944 prior to the Soviet forces entering Warsaw. Also, it was hearten- ing to see the humanity shown by many Polish people trying to help Mr. Szpilman. Although it brought back night- mares for me, I hope that many peo- ple, both Jewish and non-Jewish, will see this epic film. Sam Offen West Bloomfield Arabs N erit Rightful Role 1/17 2003 6 Your editorial endorsement of Israel's Central Election Commission's ban on the candidacy in the upcoming Knesset election of Ahmad Tibi and Azmi Bishara, both current members of the Knesset and both native-born Israelis, grossly oversimplifies the issue put by the ban and is wrong ("Legislators And Loyalty," Jan. 10, page 29). While both men strongly disagree with the majority view in Israel that it is a "Jewish and democratic state" and urge a broader definition of what must constitute a democratic state, this view should not be censored. What they argue for is a definition that they believe gives equal status to the 20 percent minority Arab population with that of the 80 percent majority Jewish population. Gad Barzilai, associate professor of political science and law and co-direc- tor of the Law, Politics & Society Programs at Tel Aviv University and author of the recently published University of Michigan Press Book Communities And Law: Politics and Cultures of Legal Identities, has spoken out in support of Bishara's candidacy saying that he should be allowed to run even though many Israelis do not like to hear what he has to say and noted: "It is a frightening scenario if one has to be a Zionist to participate in Israeli politics." Ildaretz has said of the Jan. 10 deci- sion of the Israel Supreme Court, which 11-0 rejected the ban on Tibi and 7-4 rejected the ban on Bishara: It was just and wise and that the justices "addressed both the legal situation and the needs and realities of the state." Following the logic of your editorial, the 1798 Alien and Sedition law in this country would have received your endorsement and you would have sup- ported the banning of John C. Calhoun from the U.S. Senate in the mid-19th century as well as Vito Marcantonio from the U.S. House of Representatives in 1948. While Israel formally does not have a First Amendment in its Basic Laws, the decision of its Supreme Court rejecting the Central Election Commission ban effectively gives it one and assures the-Arab minority in Israel effective participation in the upcoming election for the Knesset. Avern Cohn Detroit Iraq through an illicit pipeline con- necting the two countries. Further, Syria maintains its own WMD pro- gram and is now taking possession of some of Saddarn's bio and chemical weapons to avoid their discovery by U.N. inspectors. Needless to say, Syria is headed by a dictatorial regime that maintains power through an unoriginal combi- nation of political repression and gross human rights violations. Damascus University cannot be other than a direct extension of this illegitimate, terrorist regime. For a major American academic institution such as WSU to enter into an agree- ment no different than it might do with say, Cambridge University, is to assist in the legitimization of that which is wholly illegitimate and indeed criminal. Predictable arguments about aca- demic freedom and the elevation of academics above politics ring hollow when they concern a country that per- mits no such freedom and uses aca- demic affiliations like WSU's as politi- cal tools to enhance its international standing and authoritarian control. I urge the WSU Board of Governors to apply all necessary pressure to force Dr. Reid to rescind this shameful agreement. Steven I. Victor Birmingham WSU-Syria Pact Shameful We Can't Be Silent Again As an alumnus and supporter of Wayne State University's Law School (class of 1950), I find WSU president Dr. Irvin Reid's recent consummation of an agreement of scientific coopera- tion with Damascus University dis- graceful ("Syrian Connection," Jan. 10, page 12). Syria is a country that is wholly complicit in the support and perpetua- tion of international terrorism. In fact, no fewer than 10 terrorist organiza- tions are headquartered in its capital, including Hamas, the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine and Hezbollah, an enterprise recently char- acterized by a senior U.S. State Department official as being "on the A-List" of terrorist organizations. For its troubles, Syria has earned itself a spot on this country's official list of state sponsors of terror. In direct contravention of U.N. res- olutions, Syria helps finance Saddam Hussein's development of weapons of mass destruction (WMD) by illegally purchasing $1.2 billion of oil from When of bar mitzvah age, I remember so well the horror of hearing of my fel- low Jews and relatives being murdered in Europe. What was equally disheart- ening was the helplessness my family felt at out being unable to do anything to save our brethren. As then, today we lovers of Zion are facing critical times. A new report by the Zionist Organization of America has found that during the six months since President Bush's major Middle East pol- icy speech, the Palestinian Arabs have not fulfilled any of the conditions that the president set forth before the United States will support creation of a Palestinian Arab state. There has been no crackdown of ter- ror, no end of incitement on television or radio or in newspapers, no new lead- ership and no meaningful reforms of government. Despite the fact that the Palestinians have failed to meet the Bush plan, President Bush and his spokesmen have claimed the Palestinian Arabs are mak- ing "progress" and declared the goal of creating a Palestinian state in 2003. The European Union, United Nations, Russia and the United States have developed a disastrous "road map" for peace. Given what we know of the Palestinian Authority, turning it into a state would only be creating a new ter- rorist entity. Though there is little influence we can have with the U.N., E.U. and Russia (who, if they didn't have Israel as a punching bag, would never have any exercise), we can have a voice in the United States. American Jews are the most powerful and prosperous diaspora community in Jewish history. This is the difference between now and 56 years ago. We cannot lose an opportunity to use our influence to support a secure Israel. "If there is a will, there is a way." Joseph Savin president, Zionist Organization of America-Michigan Region West Bloomfield Israelis Manage Amid Danger I second Laurie Sendler Rappaport's point of view in your Editor's Notebook "Israel's Unflappable Will" (Jan. 10, page 5) and add our experi- ence living in Nazareth Illit for the last 21 years. We listen to the news when it hap- pens to come on Kol ha-Muzika, the classical music service of the Israel Broadcasting Corporation or on Reshet Aleph, which has especially interesting programming. Reshet Bet, the news station, is not on our menu. We don't have a television, either, so we never see the live action as it happens. We read the weekly newspaper on Shabbat, and I look at Hdaretz in English on the Net every day to glean insights that go beyond the daily news reports. Often enough, I hear about recent events from people around. This does not mean we don't care, but that we try to live our lives as nor- mally as possible, knowing that we have to be careful. Yes, when I went to visit family in Ra'anana, I made a point not to take the bus that went through Wadi Ara; in the end, I took a shemt (taxi) along that route and continued up to my destination from the coastal road. It was faster my way, in any case, because the bus that goes through the Wadi is a local. Even the "news" that we have to change our gas masks at the community center is taken without panic. In fact, if LETTERS on page 10