EDITOR'S NOTEBOOK Say It In Arabic IV hat the delegates say in Arabic to their coun- trymen when they return to the Middle East will determine the real value of the U.S.- . Arab Economic Forum held in Detroit last week. The forum was billed as a way to improve the image of the Arab world in the United States by fostering eco- nomic, educational, political and social reform. Though Israel wasn't invited to take part in the summit, it remains to be . seen how many Arab nations now will entertain the idea of recognizing the Jewish state as a legiti- mate diplomacy or trade partner. I don't see how a U.S.- Arab business pipeline could prosper with- out the participation of Israel, a high-tech nation and America's strongest Mideast ally. Against this backdrop, I hope the summit conversation in the comfort of the Renaissance Center on the Detroit river- front leads to a lasting Arab warm-up toward Israel. Delegates who tell Westerners that Israel ROBERT A. is a legitimate player in the future vitality of SKLAR the Middle East, but back home don't con- Editor demn Palestinian terror against Israelis, are hypocrites. Despite the terror, Israel, a sov- ereign state for just 55 years, is far more advanced cultural- ly, politically and economically than any of its Arab neighbors. Without a doubt, the Arab world stands to bene- fit from an Arab economic partnership with America that includes ties with Israel. U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell got it right at the summit. A predilection for terror will "continue to drag Palestinian dreams further down a tragic, dead-end path," he said. He said ordinary Palestinians are dependent on "a true partnership of opportunity" that will derive only from the U.S. putting support "behind those in the region who are already working to broaden economic opportunity and to expand popular participation and to improve education." Parting Ways Palestinian statehood is more distant than ever. Yasser Arafat reportedly has a stash of money in foreign banks and his wife lives in Paris; but his people are starving, angry and desperate. He takes pride in schools and music videos that teach kids as young as 6 to aspire to become suicide bombers and kill Jews to please Allah. Just this week, the Israel-based Palestinian Media Watch reaffirmed that the Palestinian Authority "gives lip service in English to condemning terrorism while its official TV broadcasts promote and glorify violence as the means to destroy Israel." The delegates who came to Detroit hold a key to chang- ing such a barbaric mindset. Young and yearning for a vibrant region, they're smart enough to realize the spoils from the summit will be few and far in between until they speak out in Arabic against terror that targets Israelis. It's hard to believe the brightest minds in the Arab world don't see recognizing Israel as their key to a more prosper- ous Middle East. The key would be within reach if educat- ed Arabs joined forces in chipping away at the terrorist infrastructure that blocks any hope for Arab children who have known only squalor and hate. Instead of confronting the terrorists, Saudi Arabia Foreign Minister Prince Saud Al-Faisal contends that Israel, while defending itself, has "deviated from dialogue and negotia- tion and opted for repression, persecution and political assassinations." To equate defensive strikes with suicide bombers is ludi- crous. The new U.S.-Middle East Partnership Initiative is backed by $100 million in U.S. tax money. But that, too, stands to run amok until the Arab leaders of tomorrow stand up to the terrorists who have hijacked their religion and their future. A Wasted Mind Has anyone stopped to ponder that Syria-based Islamic Jihad, one of several Palestinian purveyors of terror, chose Shabbat — and the day before Yom Kippur, the holiest Jewish holiday — to send a suicide bomber to the Maxim, a popular Haifa restaurant with Jewish-Arab ownership? The bomber, armed with a belt spiked with nails, shards and rat poison to assure an especially lethal effect, killed 19 people. The dead ranged from 1 to 71. Jews, Christians, Arabs. Families. Loyal employees. The blast spared no one; more than 50 were hurt. Looking at a photo of the suicide bomber, Hanadi Tayseer Jaradat, 29, from the United Nations refuge camp of Jenin in the West Bank, I can't help but imagine what she might have achieved for the Palestinian people had she chosen a different course. With a law degree from Jordanian Jerash University, she could have fought for an effective Palestinian judicial system that actually protected citizens' rights from the corruption of Arafat and his seat of government, dubbed the Palestinian A National Authority. She could have advanced women's rights against an increasingly repressive Islamic culture. She might have picked the long path of peace instead of the short route to hatred and destruction. Instead, she was brainwashed to believe she could avenge the June deaths of her brother Fady and cousin Saleh by becoming the sixth female suicide bomber of this second intifada. The men died in a fight with Israeli soldiers. "Why should we cry? It's like her wedding today, the hap- piest day for her," gloated her 15-year-old brother Thahar the day of the blast. No wonder the Palestinian culture is on a one-way road to ruin. Whatever good feelings the U.S.-Arab Economic Forum created, I won't be impressed until I know the message taken back to the League of Arab States called for normalcy with Israel. Until then, Israel's only obligation is to protect its land and its people, unconditionally, while standing ready to negotiate with Palestinian leaders who demonstrate reason. It pains me that decent Palestinians are sometimes caught in the crossfire. But to yield to Arafat's grand plan to break the Israeli will, bit by bit and brick by brick, is to invite doom for the land we so love. Former Detroiter Moshe Dan of Jerusalem succinctly captured the essence of what confronts Israel. "What people don't understand," he said, "is that peace would destroy the Palestinian revolution; Arafat cannot afford that. They don't want a state — another one — they have a revolutionary vision. The real challenge to Zionists today is to provide a meaningful competition." ❑ 271 WEST MAPLE DOWNTOWN BIRMINGHAM 248.258.0212 Monday-Saturday 10-6 Thursday 10-9 Sunday 12-5 J1Z 10/10 2003 5