LITTERS 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: rsklar@thejewishnews.com Terror Changes Way To Peace In response to University of Michigan- Dearborn Professor Ron Stockton's remarks about how Israeli Prime Minis- ter Ariel Sharon should start negotiating again ("Detours And Roadblocks," Sept. 26, page 26), how can he or anyone else expect Sharon to even think about negotiating while his citizens are being slaughtered? As long as terrorists like Palestinian Authority President Yasser Arafat and Hamas are still there, Israel will never have peace unless they are wiped out from the planet. Mr. Stockton claims that the security fence is inconsistent with the road , map. The road map does not mention any- thing about theftnce. Even the Labor Party has criticized Sharon for not com- pleting work on_ the fence fast eno ugh. Most Israelis on 'the left as well as the right support thelence. There is nothing in the road map that says Israel is not allowed to protect their people from sui- cide bombers. All the terrorists are from the West Bank, where the fence is being built. The terrorists are to blame for the fence. It's more important to prevent hundreds of innocent Israeli civilians, kids and babies from being murdered than to prevent the Palestinians from being inconvenienced. The fence is not about politics, but rather protection and preservation. It will save hundreds of lives. In the same story, Joshua Berkovitz, president of the Michigan Friends of the Israel Defense Forces, said that Israelis and the Palestinians are like two kids in a fight. There is no moral equivalence. The Palestinians reject peace and democracy. They are infested with ter- rorists, whose main mission is to kill off every Jew in Israel and every American, for that matter. The Israelis haire been the victims of terrorism since the very beginning, and try to stamp out terrorism. Israel values peace and democracy and the Palestinians value torture, death and destruction. So Mr. Berkovitz's analogy is like saying that America and Al Qaida are like two kids in a fight. Michelle Tabak West Bloomfield Israel Needs A Military Victory %TN 10/10 2003 6 The Labor Zionist Alliance of Detroit (LZA) letter ("Expulsion Would Spur More Strife," Sept. 26, page 6) defies credulity. Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat is a murderer and terrorist on the level of Osama bin Laden and Saddam Hussein, who should be treat- ed accordingly. The exile of Arafat, while a vast improvement over the sta- tus quo, would not suffice. We are told that, "The decision would only complicate the peace process." What peace process? Oslo, which caused Israel to repatriate and rearm Arafat? Wye River, which gave Arafat the wrong message? The road map, which is George Bush's paean to Tony Blair? This is a death march for Israel, not a peace process. LZA states that expul- (ion "would ... turn world opinion against stael" What is new about that? The Magen David Adorn is treated as a pariah by the International Red Granholm Cross; the United Nations just voted to condemn Israel 133-4. Israel is consistently c6iid.emned, whether for killing terrorists, bombing a nuclear reactor, defending itself in Lebanon, annexing the Golan Heights [that had been] used as a killing field by the Assad tyranny in Syria, electing Likud governments that declare secu- rity to be more important than any- thing else, etc. Freedom and security require leader- ship. Our community has too much regard for world opinion. With the most loving and goodhearted inten- tion, too many American Jews remained silent, rather than demand- ing publicly that President Roosevelt bomb the train lines to the Nazi Germany death camps in the 1940s. Never again can we as Jews be silent or modify our stated opinions, in order to please allegedly sympathetic world leaders who promise to help us in the realm of world opinion if only we be quiet and go along. Israel must defend itself in its own national inter- est. Israel needs a military victory. It must crush, militarily, the Palestinian Authority with the same vehemence that the Allies crushed Germany, Italy, and Japan. Not until the Palestinian people demand the surrender of their leaders, will the area begin to become governable. Israel is at war, and the . war will advance with the arrest and capture of Arafat. Eric Rosenberg Farmington Hills Granholm On Right Course Mindful that 70 percent of those recently polled stated that Gov. Jennifer Granholm is doing a good job, sev- eral prominent Republican leaders at the recent state Republican Party's Leadership Conference on Mackinac Island attempted to use the occasion to discredit the governor. Instead, they revealed their vulnera- bilities for all to see. Take State Attorney General Mike Cox's remarks, for example: "I still don't under- stand where the state is going, what the direction is, what issues matter most to the governor." That was Cox's best shot, and proves that he is either out of touch or out of ammunition. The best offense State GOP Chairwoman Betsy Devos could muster was to declare that Granholm has nothing to show after nine months in office. The fact is that not a single person criticized Granholm on an issue of substance. The people of Michigan clearly understand that Gov. Granholm is fulfilling her campaign promises. She has balanced the budget without raising taxes and has cut more than a billion dollars of spending. As promised, she has maintained the funding of education as a top priori- ty. Gov. Granholm has returned civility back to state government ending 12 years of partisan hostili- ties. Most Republicans quietly acknowledge that she is an even- handed broker and a willing negoti- ating partner. Even the Mackinac Center, a con- servative think tank, acknowledged earlier this year that, "If Granholm keeps going on the course she has set for herself, she could well become the model for the new 21st century Democrat, one with feet planted firmly enough in fiscal reali- ty to begin taking back the upper hand Republicans have gained on the national political scene, especial- ly in Washington." In these days of political uncer- tainties, Michigan voters are corn- forted knowing that Gov. Granholm is leading their state back in the direction of economic prosperity. Raymond Dubin Farmington Hills Safe Place Aids Women I was very pleased to read the Remember When column recalling the week of Sept. 26, 1993 (Sept. 26, page 40). The column mentioned the dedi- cation of Safe Place, the only kosher shelter in Michigan for victims of domestic violence. Ten years ago, the National Council of Jewish Women, Greater Detroit Section saw the need for a shelter for victims and their children and estab- lished Safe Place. NCJW-GDS pro- vides, furnishes the and maintains facility. Jewish Family Service provides the intake and placement. In addition, the Greater Detroit Section works in coalition with the Women's Survival Center and Shalom Bayit to spread awareness and knowl- edge about abuse and to speak out against violence against women. NCJW-GDS's leadership in domes- tic violence prevention is recognized locally and nationally through StoP, a national initiative that incorporates education, community action, advoca- cy and training. NCJW monitors fed- eral legislation and is a leader in the National Task Force to End Sexual and Domestic Violence Against Women. It was most fitting that this Remember When column appeared just prior to October, which is National Domestic Violence Awareness Month, an initiative to educate the public about what constitutes domestic violence. The National Council of Jewish Women is a volunteer organization that has been at the forefront of social change for over a century Inspired by Jewish values, NCJW works to improve the quality of life for women, children and families and to ensure individual rights and freedoms through programs and projects initiated by its network of 90,000 members and sup- porters nationwide. Florence Herrmann president, National Council of Jewish Women, Greater Detroit Section Southfield