Editorials are posted and archived on JN Online: ewishnews . co m WWW. detroitj Dry Bones A Sheik In The Crosshairs T op Israeli officials have signaled anew that they are again targeting the leader of Hamas, Sheik Ahmed Yassin, for assassina- tion. They shouldn't. It is not that Yassin does not deserve to die. He has without an ounce of shame sent suicide bombers to attack Israeli civilians and soldiers, and he has said that Hamas will never rest until the Jewish state is eradicated. Far from being a "spiritu- al" leader — as he is often styled in the captions of pictures showing him in the wheelchair to which he has been confined for half a century — he is a vicious, malevolent killer. If Israel had known exact- ly how implacable he was in his hatred, it surely would never have released him from prison in 1997, after he had served eight years of what had been a sentence for life. Since then, Israel has tried several times to kill him, generally in response to yet another ter- rorist atrocity that Hamas arranged. Last September, it bombed a Gaza City apartment building where he was meeting with other Hamas leaders. He escaped with a light wound . because Israel used too small a bomb, in an effort to avoid exactly the sort of civil- ian casualties that he delights in inflicting on Israeli innocents. Targeting Yassin is not an issue of morality. Killing him could be justified either as an act of revenge for the destruction he has already wreaked or as an efficient way to decapitate the Hamas lead- ership and make it less able to carry out further attacks. Most of the civilized world would be as pleased to have him gone as they were to have Saddam Hussein deposed or his brutal sons killed. Indeed, the Palestinian people as a whole would be a lot better off without the sheik and his swarm. What good, after all, did it do them to have Reem al-Reyashi, a 22-year-old mother of two children, FROM LIBYA TO SYRIA THERE'S A blow up herself and four Israelis at the Erez crossing in Gaza last week? It cost thousands of Palestinians the opportunity to work in Israel while the crossing was closed. Because she falsely cited medical problems to get around the inspectors, the bombing will undermine real Palestinian emergency medical claims for expedited treatment. Al-Reyashi can hardly become a model of Islamic virtue since she reportedly was forced into the suicide as a way to atone for having sul- lied family honor by conducting an adul- terous affair. And, of course, the brutal act didn't affect Israeli determination not to be terri- fied. Still, killing Yassin would probably not advance Israel's security. It would give him the martyrdom that he has repeat- edly said he seeks and it would surely incite other bombings by Hamas members intent on vengeance. Better by far to try to capture the sheik alive and toss him back in the jail where he should have been kept to begin with. It would be difficult to seize him, no doubt, but think of the impact it could have on his followers to show him Saddam-style as a prisoner. Israel should not lose sight of its goal, which is to EDIT ORIAL BUT FROM GAZA AND THE TERRITORIES reduce the level of violence and to give the Palestinians time to come to their senses. Targeting Yassin for death would have the opposite effect. ❑ End The Preoccupation MICHAEL BROOKS New York Jewish Week I Ann Arbor srael advocacy on campus has become a front-burner enterprise for the. American Jewish community. Attacks .by anti-Israel campus activists, including a fair-number of Jewish students and faculty, demoralize and often intimi- date most Jewish students who are ill-equipped to counter these efforts to de-legitimize Israel. It is a mark of the Jewish community's growing concern that more than 25 national organizations are now involved in train- ing campus activists to defend and promote Israel and thereby inspire Jewish students to feel a sense of pride in themselves and the Jewish state. But as well intentioned as the efforts of the growing coalition of Israeli advocacy organiza- tions are, I believe that if we win this battle, we will have lost the real war, which is not for Israel's security but for the hearts and minds of this generation of young American Jews. Let me explain. In the post-Six-Day War euphoria, most of us could not see what growing numbers of Jewish college students have come to believe and even Israelis on the political right are now admitting: We have been blind to the corrosive effects — as well as the demograph- ic threat to Israel's democratic and Jewish identity — of the decades of what even Prime Minister SPEC IAL COMM TART Michael Brooks is executive director of the University of Michigan Hillel. This column is reprinted with permission from the originating publication, the New York Jewish Week (www.jewishweek.com) and the author. Ariel Sharon has called "the occupation," however unwanted it may have been and however intransi- gent most of the Arab world has been about com- ing to terms with the reality of Israel and ending the suffering of the Palestinian people. Arguing, as so many Israel advocates do, that Israel's behavior is less immoral or problematic than that of her neighbors, or even other democ- racies at war, is factually correct, but is not likely to restore a sense of boundless Jewish pride in the almost 90 percent of college-age Jews who attend universities in North America. Most of them are, indeed, as Israeli Minister of Knesset Natan Sharansky characterizes them, the Jews of silence — not simply because they are not up to winning the campus debates with Israel's enemies but because they have largely tuned out. Most of these students, from my experience BROOKS on page 28 1/23 2004 27