CZd Xeile g, Now taking reservations for Valentine's Day 410 February 14th Arts Entertainment %. ,, sq.00 Off 4 inneiptiv& Trouble In `Paradise' a, $q•oo Off Muslim protests lead to cancellation of play inspired by Palestinian teen suicide bomber's murder of Israeli youth. iiinehlot two Monday-Thursday Only MARILYN H. KARFELD May not be combined with any other offer. Not good on holidays. Not good with any other offer. Expires 2/15/03 Cleveland Jewish News Cincinnati RISTORANTE ITALIANO pm, 7 aweek1/to ll Private rooms available for your next special event. Up to 80 people capacity. 146 CENTRE STREET Main Centre Building Downtown Northville 30005 ORCHARD LAKE ROAD South of 14 Mile Rd. Farmington Hills 248.73500101 248.932.9999 TRY OUR NEW: Breakfast Items, Breakfast Sandwiches to go, Peach Pancakes, Eggs Benedict, Stuffed French Toast New Salads, New Dinner Entrees Daily Specials Will Be Prepared b y :0474; i :11 "* ": , ": • r C491/(e,ii4 in Sout „to •, 44••<•;'. ,,N41,.0, %, :w .: • % OFF TOTAL BILL Differences Of Opinion Not valid 11p.m.- 2p.m. Monday - Friday 1 coupon per table • expires 2/28/03 Not good with any other offer f. J Now Open at 6:30 a.m. Monday-Friday • Bloomfield Hills • Long Lake & Woodward (248) 647-3400 2/ 7 2003 76 • Southfield • Northwestern at Inkster (248) 358 1700 - Non-Smoking Restaurants arly last month, before the script was finished, let alone performed, the Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park bowed to intense pressure from the Muslim community and canceled a touring production of Paradise by Glyn O'Malley. The new play, aimed at eighth through 12th-graders, explores the impact of war on children through the lens of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Performances at Greater Cincinnati high schools had been scheduled for March and April, to be followed by two public performances at the play- house, the area's most prominent regional theater with a nearly $9-mil- lion annual budget. Protests by Muslim activists about the play's anti-Islam bias and pro- Zionist slant led to such "a stir we were afraid we would lose so many [high-school] bookings, it was not worth pursuing," says Ed Stern, the playhouse's artistic director. "I believe in the play. [But] the play would never be allowed to have a voice of its own." Neither he nor Bert Goldstein, the playhouse's director of educational programming, would comment on whether or not the play might be pre- sented at the theater at a later date. New York playwright O'Malley says the theater's option to produce his play expires in May. ato, 22c): It was Goldstein who suggested that O'Malley write about the Mideast conflict and, in particular, the teenage suicide bomber who last March killed herself and two other people, includ- ing a 17-year-old Israeli girl. Playhouse in the Park commissioned the play, which won this year's Lazarus New Play Prize for Young Audiences, given by the Lazarus Fund of the Federated Department Stores Foundation. Federated Department Stores, headquartered in Cincinnati and New York City, operates 468 stores in 34 states. Acknowledging the play's sensitivity for Muslims and Jews, O'Malley agreed to attend a Dec. 16 reading at the playhouse of the fifth draft of the play. The idea was to hear constructive comments from a rabbi, a professor of Middle East studies and one or two members of the Cincinnati Muslim community. Instead, more than a dozen angry Muslims showed up and started to scream at him that the play was racist, anti-Islam and anti-Palestinian, O'Malley says. Rabbi Robert Barr of Congregation Beth Adam was the sole Jewish repre- sentative to attend the Dec. 16 read- ing. He was not comfortable with the tone of some of the dialogue and thought the playwright "sugarcoated" the Palestinian girl's act of murder. While Barr offered suggestions, he never said the play should not be produced. "There were times I wanted O'Malley to take sides, but that wasn't his job," says Barr. "I wasn't there to give a seal of approval or to give the perfect Jewish position. The Muslims wanted an ideal- ized version of Islam and the Palestinian discussion. They weren't willing to say people had different posi- tions even within their own world." Strongly Protested With the play's cancellation, the com- munity has lost the opportunity to educate children about the Middle East conflict, Barr says. However, he doesn't blame the theater, with its lim- ited time and resources, for not fight- ing for the play. "Extremists who can shout the loud- est got to dominate the agenda," the frabbi says. "Those that find that uncomfortable walked away." At the request of Muslim activist Majed Dabdoub, the Cincinnati Human Rights Commission held a hearing Jan. 9 on the play. Dabdoub, whose daughter attends Cincinnati's Sycamore High School, which has a significant Muslim and Jewish population, worried the play .would inflame students. He feared his daughter, who covers her head, might be endangered, says Art Shriberg,