,rx rprfront ,^fs Grandpa Would Have Been Proud t was a tense stand-off. The Israeli army and police had blocked all roads leading to Yitzhar, a settlement in the Shomron where my newly married 18- year-old daughter, Ayelet Hashachar, and her husband, Akiva, live. This was a showdown. The govern- ment pledged to remove the hundreds of young people who had gathered on a tiny hilltop near the settlement; the kids were determined to hang on. Even with my official press pass, I was hassled and forced to park far away. As I trudged up the winding road that leads to Yitzhar, I didn't know what to expect. I wanted to make sure my daughter was OK. Akiva was one of the leaders of the group of young people that had built tents on the hilltop. He and Ayelet and many of their friends had been in other evictions and had been bruised and beaten up by the army. When I got to the top, my water bottle nearly depleted and warm, it looked like strange combination of a battle-zone and a "happening." The army had gathered a massive force to I Moshe Dann, a former Detroiter and assistant professor of history at City University of New York, is a writer and journalist living in Jerusalem. His e-mail address is moshedan@netvision.net.il obscure board has become a signifi- cant political battleground. Apologists For Terror Islamic and Arab-American groups that have long served as apologists for terror have been fighting tooth and nail to stop Pipes. Organizations such as the Council on American Islamic Relations (CAIR) and the American-Arab Anti- Discrimination Committee have labeled him as a bigot because of his honesty about Islamic terror and the connections between extremist branch- es of the Muslim faith and the terror- ists. This backlash against Pipes should have been dismissed, but as Bush and the rest of his staff refused to stand up for his nominee, it has gained traction. Democrats on the U.S. Senate's Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee — who must approve his evict Jews from an isolated hilltop. Somehow, it didn't make sense. Several APCs (armored personnel carriers) and giant military bulldozers were surrounded by scores of women, some with baby carriages, girls and children. Groups of soldiers armed with M-16s and Galil rifles waited at the side. I looked for my daughter, but couldn't find her. Every now and then, small groups of soldiers ran towards the adjacent hill- top where the young men had gath- ered around their makeshift tents. The kids tried to prevent the soldiers from attacking the buildings. Rabbis and settlement leaders cautioned passive resistance. Some of the soldiers got rough, and some of the boys struggled with them. Some kids were hurt; some soldiers cried and some refused orders to participate in this action. The air was filled with dust from the vehicles poised to begin their descent down the dirt road towards the tents. The drivers revved the engines impa- tiently and tried to maneuver, waiting for the police to clear away the girls who were sitting in their path blocking their way. Mothers holding babies pleaded with soldiers who stood in front them. And then, I saw her. My heart jumped. Ayelet and several of her friends were on top of one of the bulldozers, resisting orders to come down. I had to admire their courage. A policewoman tried to pull her Even knowing that they would down, but she clung to the side. lose such battles, they had a Part of her long skirt was ripped. vision and they would not give "You are destroying our up. The triumph of hope over homes," she screamed. "You disappointment is a good lesson have no right to do this. We at any age. are Jews; you are Jewish sol- I thought of my father, Sol diers; what are you doing?" she Dann, may his memory be a MO SHE cried, her face covered with blessing, who died 28 years dust. The policewoman finally D ANN ago. An ardent Zionist who gave up and climbed down. Spe cial Watching this at the side, I Comm entary lived nearly all of his life in Detroit, he had dedicated his was torn. She was in danger, life to helping Israel. He pub- and I was afraid she would get lished articles defending Israel, warn- hurt. I ran over to her, wanting to ing of the danger of 'Arab refugees," help. But I knew that there was noth- and refuting anyone who maligned ing I could do. She saw me and smiled. "Hi, Abba," Jews and Judaism. He saw himself as a one-man "truth squad." she waved. He sent us, his children, for trips She was like a flag fluttering amidst and he even lived for a year in a battle. This little girl that I had Jerusalem. But he and my mother raised was now a strong, brave and couldn't find their place in Israel, and very independent woman. She was moved back to Detroit. Twenty years fighting for the right of Jews to live in ago, when I moved to Israel, married this tiny place in Eretz Yisrael, and she and became a father I did not think I would not be moved. would be standing in the blazing sun By the end of the day, it was over. watching my daughter risking her life The simple structures, including a for this cause. And maybe this is just makeshift synagogue, had been utterly the way things should be. destroyed. Ayelet cried, "Why? Why?" I wondered what my father would Her face streaked with dirt and tears. I have thought if he could see this now, had no answers. his granddaughter on a bulldozer, Akiva arrived, his arm in a sling. holding on against all odds. "We'll be back," he said, "and we'll Proud. Damn proud. ❑ build even more." nomination — oppose him. Led by Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., they have accused him of having "one-sided" views about the Middle East because he opposes American appeasement of Palestinian terror. They also cite with disapproval his Campus Watch Web site, which provides vital information about anti-Israel activity in academia. In response, the administration has backed away from Pipes and done nothing to work for his approval. Republicans on the committee were unprepared to defend him when it met July 23 to consider his nomination. A vote was postponed due to a lack of a quorum, effectively tabling the nomi- nation for the time being. What brought this about? For one thing, the administration is still unwilling to directly engage the Islamist lobby in this country. Afraid of being tagged as anti-Muslim or of feed- ing a mythical anti-Arab backlash, Bush and his people are kowtowing to the extremists at CAIR, and allowing them to set the tone for this debate. Another factor has to do with Pipes himself. He's no politician, and has a paper trail of columns that can be dis- sected and used against him. He's no foe of Islam, but he honestly discusses its history and the extremists in this country who speak in its name. That makes him politically incorrect. Also, Pipes is an opponent of the lat- est version of the Middle East peace process that Bush has championed. In the February 2003 issue of Commentary magazine, Pipes rightly contended that Israel didn't need "a plan" for peace so much as it needed a military victory over the terrorists. Indeed, Pipes even publicly opposed President Bush's June 24, 2002, policy speech on the Middle East that was much praised by supporters of Israel, including this writer. In it, Bush attached conditions to the creation of a Palestinian state (Palestinian Authority President Yasser Arafat's ouster and renunciation of terror). But Pipes fore- saw the road map plan that has reward- ed terrorism as coming out of the speech. It may be that the White House now regrets ever getting involved with Pipes. But by abandoning him to the mer- cies of partisans and Islamic extremists who would like nothing better than to collect the scalp of their most potent foe, the administration has shown just how muddled its thinking is. It's not too late to save his nomina- tion, but perhaps a man like Pipes, who understood the Islamic threat before 9- 11, still has no place in Washington, even at an insignificant post such as the U.S. Institute for Peace. If that is so, then it appears our leaders are still unready to learn the lessons of one of the darkest days in our history ❑ 8/ 8 2003 31