Editorials are posted and archived on JN Online: www.detroitjewishnews.com The New Arik W ho is this new prime minister of Israel, and what has he done with the real Ariel Sharon? Surely the architect of the West Bank and Gaza set Clements, the man who urged Israelis to "seize the high places" and build homes on them just four years ago, can't be the same man who told Hakretzs columnist Yoel Marcus on Sunday that "I have given an order to plan for the evacuation of 17 settlements in the Gala Strip." And how is it conceivable that the former general who has said repeatedly he would not negotiate with terrorists could strike a deal with the Lebanese-based terrorists of Hezbollah to hand over 436 prisoners in exchange for one rogue businessman and the bodies of three soldiers? Isn't this essentially the same group of prisoners that Sharon refused to release to the Palestinian Authority last year when doing so might have propped up a centrist prime minister, Mahmoud Abbas, who actually wanted to rein in the Palestinian terrorists? e Something has clearly changed. Whether it is a change for the better or the worse is hard to tell. We don't buy the theory that Sharon is simply look- ing to divert attention from the police investigations of his campaign finances and of his son's sweetheart deal with a wheeler-dealer who was trying to get Israel to approve a resort development in Greece. If anythingfr Sharon's accommodation with Hezbollah and is uni- lateral undercutting of the Gala settlements are likely to increase his troubles, not reduce them. The prisoner deal is the more worrisome develop- ment. Sharon himself acknowledged that Israel was paying "a heavy price" for what he called "a right and moral decision." Included in the price were two prime troublemakers — Abdel Karim Obeid and Mustafa Dirani — who are virtually certain to resume quickly their guerrilla activities. To be sure, the deal, negotiated over several months -with the help of German intermediaries, was- n't all that much of a substantive break- through. The bulk of the 400 Palestinians released had just about completed their sentences, any- way, and the deal may also open the door to more infor- mation about Capt. Ron Arad, an Israeli airman who was captured in southern Lebanon when his plane was shot down in 1986. But appearances are important. The Middle East is filled with a lot of opportunists who will see in the bar- gain the opportunity to profit by kidnapping other Israelis. It sets a worrisome precedent that could be applied to American soldiers and civilians in Iraq. And the timing was awful. The swap went ahead even though two hours earlier a Bethlehem policeman from the Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigades of Palestinian President Yasser Arafat's Fatah movement, blew himself up on a bus in Jerusalem, killing 11 others. The message was that ter- ror carried the day. The Gaza statement seems more forward-looking. We have long held that the 7,500 settlers there do not advance any worthwhile cause for the Jewish state and that protecting them unnecessarily burdens the mili- tary. In the end, those settlements are going to have to be uprooted, as are some West Bank enclaves that will fall outside the security barrier that is now being Com- pleted. The Gaza relocation process is going to require negotiations with the settlers themselves and with a responsible Palestinian leadership, should that ever emerge. Sharon seemed careful to avoid giving any timetable for the process and insisted that all he had approved so far was planning for the eventual removal of the settlements, not the actual mechanics. Still, the prime minister, in the interview and in accounts of his briefing of Likud party members, was more direct about the issue than he had ever been before. Taken with the Hezbollah deal, the action suggests that his vision of how to get some sort of lasting peace with Israel's neighbors is changing. Given that the old vision wasn't really getting any- thing and that the Palestinian violence has continued unabated, a shift is clearly needed. We've given up on expecting that Arafat will recognize Arik's change, but we hope the leadership of the Arab world is more per- ceptive of the opportunity to move in positive direc- tions. I-1 EDIT O 'UAL `Now Is The Time For Crying' The writer wrote this piece in 2001 in response to terrorist attacks. On Jan. 29, 2004, he, himself, was one of at least 11 Jews murdered by a Palestinian suicide bomber aboard a Jerusalem bus. Jerusalem he scene: 7:30 a.m. Israel time, Sunday, eight hours after the Dec. 2, 2001 triple terror attack at Jerusalem's popular Ben Yehuda pedestrian mall. He walked into shul, synagogue. I nodded my acknowledgment, as I always do. He made some strange gesture, which I didn't comprehend. I T — Yechezkel "Chezi" Goldberg, 42, was a Jerusalem- based counselor specializing in adolescents and families in crisis. He also hosted Youth Beat, a program on Arutz-7's English-language radio station. This piece was first published on Dec. 3, 2001, by Jewish World Review, www.JewishWorldReview.com from the heart, enter the heart." He was continued praying. right, of course. Why wasn't I crying? A few minutes later, he walked over to I could not answer. I had nothing to me and said: "Didn't you hear?" say. "Hear about what?" I replied. He pointed around the shul. "Why He grew impatient, almost frustrated. aren't all of my friends crying?" "Didn't you HEAR?" I could not answer. I had nothing to I understood that he was talking about say. last night's terror attack on Ben Yehuda YECHEZKEL "Shouldn't we all be crying?" mall, a trendy nightspot frequented not "CHEZI" I could not answer. I had nothing to only by Israelis, but also Western tourists. I assumed that 'he obviously was intimat- GOLDBERG say. Special What has happened to all of us, myself ing that someone we knew was hurt or Commentary included? We have turned to stone. Some killed. would call it "numbness." Some would I replied: "About who?" call it "collective national shock." Some would He looked at me as if I had landed from anoth- say that we all have suffered never-ending trauma, er planet. "About who? About everyone who was and it has affected our senses. attacked last night." Frankly, the excuses are worthless. All the rea- I nodded. "Yes, of course I heard." sons in the world don't justify our distance from "Then why aren't YOU crying?" His words shot through me like a spear piercing GOLDBERG on page 30 my heart. Our sages teach, "Words that come 2/ 6 2004 29