isstiSS 711E FAISATLY FVN! AN EXTRAORDINARY FAMILY EVENT TO HELP CHILDREN WITH SPECIAL NEWS SVNDAY ApRPI 13 No" - 4 PM ICKETS p AVAILABLE AT THE DOOR! a Great Lakes Crossing Auburn Hills FOUR HOURS OF UNLIMITED PLAYI* 'Limited Restrictions in Prize Zone TICKETS: $40 (16 and Over) $20 (Ages 4-15) Under 4 FREE! Tickets, required for all adults. Children 15 and under must be accompanied by an adult. C's SpringElatiCT benefits,- Harris ChildP*,a4 •Family Division, whi ~ ll'prati ~ des services to hundreds of children with special needs and their families. jam: SpringElation ,7)1 4/11 2003 6 HOTLINE: (248) 538-6610 EXT, 418 704400 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 tide of the writer, and a daytime telephone number. Original copies must be hand signed. Mail to the Jewish News at 29200 Northwestern Hwy., Suite 110, Southfield, MI 48034; fax to (248) 304-8885; or e-mail to: rsklar@thejewishnews.com Shaarey Zedek Bypassed Needs Road Map Leads To No Good Regarding your story about Congregation Shaarey Zedek failing to renew Rabbi Leonardo Bitran's contract ("Synagogue Talks," March 14, page 12), the Shaarey Zedek leadership failed to consider the young professionals and others who join a synagogue because of its cler- gy. Although I have been a member of Shaarey Zedek since my days at its Beth Hayeled, my wife and I consid- ered other shuls in the region just before we got married. We decided to join Shaarey Zedek because we enjoyed the close-knit community at B'nai Israel and because of people like Rabbi Bitran. We enjoyed Rabbi Bitran's sermons and sidebar comments on what Sephardic Jews would do in prayer. We also enjoyed walking into shul and having Rabbi Bitran call us up for an aliyah. In addition, we valued the wonderful relationship we devel- oped with the rabbi and Sylvana, both in and out of the synagogue. Now that my wife and I are expecting our first child in July, we looked forward to raising our chil- dren, and family, with the Bitrans and other young families at B'nai Israel. • We admonish the leadership of Shaarey Zedek for failing to consider the needs of the community, partic- ularly those of young couples and new families who are looking for a shul that is not only a place to wor- ship but also a community. We understand that Rabbi Bitran was interested in growing his com- munity. at B'nai Israel and wanted to include other young couples and families like ourselves. With Rabbi Bitran's and Sylvana's unexpected departure, we are devas- tated for our community's loss and wish them both well in beginning a new life in a new community that cares more about its congregants than its leadership's selfish motives. The void left by Rabbi Bitran's departure will prove difficult, if not impossible, to replace. While we respect the clergy at Shaarey Zedek and long admire - Rabbi Joseph Krakoff and Cantor Chaim Najman, the shul will be at a loss for spiritual and emotional guid- ance that Rabbi Bitran provided. Daniel and Marni Cherrin . Berkley Regarding the "road map" to peace in the Middle East ("Trashing The Map," April 4, page. 29) , the issues at hand are becoming quite clear. The battlefield of diplomatic forces is now fully arrayed. On the one hand, there is the United Nations and the European Union. Both are eager to accept the Palestinian Authority as an appropriate partner in peace. Their real aim, however, is to throw a bone (a Jewish bone) as appeasement to the Arabs. Then there is the United States, which --- through National Security Adviser Condoleeza Rice (who says the process of the "roan map" is irrevocable) and Secretary of State Colin Powell (who claims that the U.S. will accept only "comments on the road map") — is going down the primrose path of the Oslo agreement. We, of course, know how the Arab nations react to Israel. Even Prime Minister Ariel Sharon has accepted (albeit with conditions) the "road map." On the other hand, against this awe- some coalition there is arrayed the not inconsiderable force of the Israeli and U.S. citizenry. They have indicated in polls that they are overwhelmingly opposed to the establishment of a Palestinian state. This sensible citizenry, along with a few editorial writers and a few organizations such as the Zionist Organization of America, are the only opposition to the "road map." Let us hope that the voting public of Israel and the United States will prevail. They understand that a Palestinian state is anathema to peace and would only be a terrorist state. The "road map" to peace is only a road map to "Oslo" and war. Joseph Savin president, ZOA-Michigan Region Southfield Good For Iraq, Good For PLO? Recently on television, National Security Adviser Condolezza Rice pro- claimed that the United States' efforts to quell Iraq and depose Saddam will succeed and all fedayeen will be elimi- nated. Why did Ms. Rice not say the same thing with regard to Israel and their ongoing stalemate with the PLO/feday- een? Even after another militant Arab defeat, Iraq will not turn "democratic." Still, the U.S. State Department (Rice's voice with President Bush's gestures) will boost the PLO/fedayeen into a pseudo-Palestinian government, stealing the Judean-Samarian Hills from the Jews with the rest of Israel as future bait. Is this President Bush's vision of a "peace" in the Middle East? A brand new Palestinian-Arab state established on obviously Jewish land? All that will be accomplished, despite President Bush's reassurances to Jews being blown up in Israel, is to bring about a new anti-Israel war: militant Arabs who murder, Europe that applauds. Michael Drissman Farmington Hills Anti-War. It's Anti-Semitic President of France Jacques Chirac's pro- Saddam stance seems to have embold- ened his nation's anti-Semites. "Street protests against American and British military action in Iraq have esca- lated into attacks by Muslim youths on Jewish demonstrators, sparking fears of a new wave of anti-Semitism across France," the Telegraph in London, England, reports. "Protesters, some of them carrying pic- tures of Saddam Hussein, burned the Israeli flag and turned on Jewish students, attacking one of them with an iron bar, during a series of anti-war rallies." This isn't the first time this has hap- pened. Last month, the Jerusalem Post report- ed that anti-American demonstrators - attacked arid injured two young Jewish boys. And in an earlier incide'rit, "three masked men attacked a 21-year-old female Jewish student in the French town of Aix-en-Provence and carved a Magen David [Star of David] on her arm. " JPost reader Edward Hume offers this suggestion: Given the anti-Semitic acts happening in France with the tacit approval of the French government, it's probably time to declare that French Jews may come to the U.S. and be granted refugee status automatically. Such an announcement by our gov- ernment would embarrass the French government; it might embarrass them enough to take steps to end the danger to French Jews. If the French do not stop, it might allow French Jews to escape persecution. Michael Seltzer Bloomfield, Hills