!TITTERS 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. Mail to the Jewish News at 29200 Northwestern Hwy., Suite 110, Southfield, MI 48034; Fax to (248) 304-8885; or e-mail to: rsiclar@diejewislmews.com Road Map Ignores Hateful Reality B'nai Mitzvah Are Meaningful While the road map to peace in the Middle East is well intended, it is built around a naive and narrow view of reality. U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell warned Israel that it should not cloud the peace process by bringing up issues such as the Palestinians' "right to return." That statement exemplifies Powell's lack of understanding of what fuels the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Palestinian terrorist organizations vow not only to return to Israel but also to destroy the Jewish state. The suicide bombings that continue to kill and maim innocent Israeli citizens confirms their intention. No Palestinian government or outside influence can transform the will of these terrorists, and history has sub- stantiated this time and again. If the Bush administration is serious about crafting a Middle East peace plane, a dose of reality coupled with a better understanding of the facts is in order. Raymond Dubin We concur and applaud your analysis ("Excess To The Max," May 9, page 33) that the Detroit Free Press did a disservice to Detroit Jewry in its April 13 article "Mitzvah To The Max." The reporter clearly missed the essence of why people choose to cele- brate the way that they do. A bar or bat mitzvah is much more than an opportunity to have a big party. Rather, it is a life and family celebration representing one of the most important religiously symbolic events in a boy's or girl's life. Regardless of the size, shape or color of the mitzvah party, we are honored to help so many families create won- derful experiences to share with their friends in whichever manner they choose. Craig Erlich Farmington Hills Be Mindful Of Mirror's Reflection Like so many others, I was greatly dis- mayed to read the Detroit Free Press article "Mitzvah To The Max" on April 13 about the exorbitant events masquerading as bar and bat mitzvah parties. I also agreed with a great many of the points made in your editorial regarding the article ("Excess To The Max," May 9, page 33). However, it is perhaps equally disheartening to see your paper "tut tut" and "tsk tsk" the moral lapses of those who engage in such one-upmanship while at the same time you carried an entire so-called Style at the Jewish News section full of exorbitant clothing and jewelry for a night at a school prom. To paraphrase the immortal words of inspector Renaud in Casablanca, you were surely "shocked, shocked" at what was passed off as journalism in the Free Press, but were standing there with your hand out when the advertis- ing revenue checks poured in for your own. Before you criticize those others (who are also so well deserving), take a look at the mirror first. Paul J. Fischer Southfield 5/16 2003 6 chief executive ofzcer, Star Trax West Bloomfield Right To Privacy And Sen. Santorum On April 27, the third-ranking mem- ber of the Senate Republican leader- ship, Sen. Rick Santorum, R-Pa., con- ducted a taped interview that made the reporter so uncomfortable that the senator was asked if he would like to return to the topic of the interview. But the senator was on a roll and he was not about to be stopped from entering the fray about the govern- ment right to declare sex between homosexuals illegal. The interview focused on a case under review by the U.S. Supreme Court, testing the constitutionality of a Texas statute that bans sodomy. Santorum does not believe the Constitution prohibits states from enacting such laws. The senator said, "And if the Supreme Court says that you have the right to consensual sex within your home, then you have the right to bigamy; you have the right to polygamy; you have the right to incest; you have the right to adultery. You have the right to anything. Does that undermine the fabric of our soci- ety. I would argue, yes, it does." His words are offensive, hurtful and distortions of truth and logic. We also know that attacking gays does not require courage, only an audience. Our society is changing; it is matur- ing. The previous generation of chil- dren would never think of coming out to their parents and friends. However, our society has established normative thinking that allows gay children to reject their lives in hiding. We understand more clearly what harm it does to the fabric of our soci- ety to single out a particular group and rob them of the protection of all citizens under the Constitution. This time around, there is a better possibility that the Supreme Court will strike down state sodomy laws, viewing them as an attack on the right to privacy. However, if Sen. Santorum's thoughts are supported by the court, he can be chief of the sex police. Harold Killer West Bloomfield Diaspora Should Have Israel Say Letter writer Hannan Lis ("Israelis Must Decide Fate," May 9, page 6), takes issue with an earlier Community Views by Dr. Jerome S. Kaufman ("The Hated Solution," May 2, page 26). Mr. Lis' critique unwittingly strengthens the perspicuous, cogent article of Dr. Kaufman. Mr. Lis states that Israelis need to have an economy "representative of the wishes of its own citizens." I agree. Yet because Dr. Kaufman agrees with the finance minister of Israel, Mr. Lis castigates Dr. Kaufman for "diaspora lobbying." Despite Mr. Lis' letter, there is no evidence that the Histadrut strike is "supported by many Likud voters." Ipso facto,- Histadrut is a left wing, pro-Labor Party union; this seems absurd. It defies credulity to most Jews that, during a time of great economic peril for Israel, its Labor-supporting union would launch a strike to try to smash the government's economic pri- vatization plan. Israel's economy needs help, not union politicizing. Mr. Lis' comment that "there is nothing 'socialistic' about Israel" defies credulity. Israel, right now, economi- cally is where Great Britain was before Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher reduced the role of the militant unions and improved the economy in the 1980s. One can support or oppose socialism, but to declare that Israel is not socialist simply denies reality. I would remind Mr. Lis that as recently as a few years ago, former Prime Minister Shimon Peres represented the Labor Party at the modern-day equiva- lent of the Socialist International con- ference. Mr. Lis' concern for permitting Israelis, not the diaspora, to determine Israel's future apparently stops when the issue becomes war and peace. The organization that he helps lead, Seeds of Peace, works from the diaspora. If Seeds of Peace would only teach young Jews that the Israeli govern- ment has a right to defend Israelis and their homeland, I might be far more sympathetic to his arguments. As someone who asserts that he wants Israelis, not the diaspora, to make decisions about Israel, Mr. Lis, from the diaspora, shares his opinions about war, peace and the Israeli econ- omy. If championing from the diaspo- ra is not acceptable, then the Jewish News and its readership had better go silent, right now Eric J. Rosenberg Farmington Hills Israelis Show Rightest Bent As an Israeli, I was shocked to read the letter by Hannan Lis attempting to refute the factual article by Dr. Jerome S. Kaufman and claiming that Israel has a "market driven economy" (Israelis Must Decide Fate", May 9, - page 6). How could he possibly say that when the national air line, El Al, the Israeli Electric Company, the Port Authority — including Haifa, -Ashdod and Eilat — the water works under Mekorot and many other industries are all owned and operated by the Israeli government and under the labor management of the Histadrut Labor Union. There is also no "majority of Israelis at the center of the political spectrum supporting land-for-peace and cre- ation of a Palestinian state." In the last Israeli election, Jan. 28, the anti-Palestinian Authority state party Likud gained an all-time high of 40 seats and the labor party fell to just 15 seats. The far left Meretz party fell to only six members. It is true many Israelis find a way to blame the "settlements" for all their troubles. Military analysts predict that if these settlements are disbanded, the Israelis will experience an even harder lesson than from the abandonment of the security zone in Lebanon, It could well be Israel's last disastrous political decision. Alex Skoczylas West Bloomfield LETTERS on page 10