Editorials are posted and archived on JN Online: www.detroitjewishnews.com A 56-Year U.N. Outrage L ost in the 56-year-long outcry by Palestinians over their 1948 uprooting when Israel became a state and their subsequent hardship in the Middle East refugee camps is the United Nations' responsibility for the camps. Palestinian propaganda is far more effective than Israel's. It*has managed to hoodwink much of the world into believing Israel's existence is the reason for squalor and hopelessness in the camps. Joblessness and poverty in the camps, meanwhile, top 60 percent. Talk about make-believe. Deranged Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat must be blamed for inhuman conditions in what are essentially welfare camps. The refugees' plight fuels hatred toward Israel, a situation that Arafat needs to main- tain to rouse the masses against "the Zionist scourge." America helps finance the 59 U.N. refugee camps for Palestinian Arabs. Of this total, 28 camps are in Palestinian-inhabited parts of the West Bank, Gaza Strip and eastern Jerusalem. The rest are in Jordan, Syria and Lebanon. The camps were started in 1949 as U.N.-monitored havens for 500,000 Arabs displaced from Israel. The population in the camps has mushroomed to 4 mil- lion, doubling about every 15 years. At a time when Israeli soldiers hunting for terrorists and their factories are picked off frequently by snipers and roadside bombs in the Gaza war zone, the truth about the camps is of utmost importance. In the camps, Arabs unemployed their whole life are freely supported, weapons and explosives are stored and children learn that all of Israel — not just Gaza, Judea and Samaria -- is their Palestine. The title page of the widely used camp textbook Our Country Palestine reads: "There is no alternative to destroying Israel." It is in these camps most of the suicide bombers have been recruited and given lethal belts to blow up as many Israelis as possible. Most of the rifles, anti-tank rockets, mortars and Still Separate But Equal Editor's Note: On May 17, 1954, the U.S. Supreme Court held in Brown vs. Board of Education of Topeka that the "separate but equal" doctrine (Plessy vs. Ferguson, 1896) did not extend to public schools and that legally enforced racial segregation in schools violated the Constitution. T emple Emanu-El and Second Baptist Church of Detroit commemorated the 50th anniversary of the U.S. Supreme Court's Brown vs. Board of Education decision with a two-day program May 15-16. With committees from both congregations, Rev. Kevin Turman and I brought our members together to reflect on, and Joseph P. Klein is spiritual leader of Temple Emanu- El in Oak Park. I'M REALLY EMBARRASSED explosives used to kill, maim or wound Israelis come to the Gaza camps from Egypt through tunnels. The Israel Defense Forces have destroyed dozens of tunnels in a race against time. Israel fears that terrorists might acquire shoulder-held surface-to-air missiles to shoot down military and civilian air- craft over Israel. On June 1, the Massachusetts-based Center for Near East Policy Research, working with the Israel Resource News Agency in Jerusalem, will issue a study claiming that Hamas is now a key play- er in the camps insofar as this Islamic terrorist group controls the workers and teachers. Stunningly, the camps are a collective terrorist breeding ground while the West largely funds their administrative umbrella, the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East. The UNRWA draws 32 percent of its budg- et from America, 11 percent from Canada and 40 percent from the European Union. The financially strapped agency is doing what it can for the most vulnerable refugees, but the war fomented by Palestinian terror- / ists has intensified the lack of food, medicine and sanitation in the camps. The United Nations could learn from Israel about making refugees productive. After failing to destroy Israel in 1948, Arab states persecuted and finally ousted their Jewish citizens, pil- laging their businesses and possessions along the way. At first, the 860,000 Jewish refugees in Israel had to live in tents and be rationed food. The vast majority became productive citizens of Israel with the will to live and succeed, not die a "martyr." EDIT ORM • Dry Bones KNOW I DON'T KNOW ANYTHING ABOUT SNAVUOT OTHER THAN WE'RE SUPPOSED TO EAT DAIRY PRODUCTS! The U.N. camps overflowing with Palestinian refugees are a flashpoint in the Middle East. Conditions are so bleak, refugees have responded to indoctrination and risen up against their perceived aggressors. A lie remarkable in its ability to spread like cancer gives Jews that undeserving tag. The United States, to the tune of $75 million each year, helps underwrite these camps. Where's our outrage? ❑ tricably connected to the health and welfare respond to, the issues that carried Brown of our neighbors south of Eight Mile Road. 50 years ago, issues that are with us still. Though Brown was a victory 50 years ago, The court case then settled the question the issues that drove it are very much still of whether "separate but equal" education with us. Last weekend, ours was a "shared was necessarily legal. Our situation today congregational commemoration," but requires us to challenge a similarly "sepa- Temple Emanu-El and Second Baptist rate but equal" way of thinking that Church did not gather in "celebration." divides our metro Detroit community. The social justice coalitions that drove Since largely leaving the city of Detroit, RABBI the civil rights movement are no more. The the Jewish community has settled itself in JOSEPH P. Black-Jewish partnerships that promised a comfortable suburban neighborhoods, KLEIN new America of racial harmony and equal believing that it has escaped the conflicts Community opportunity have been broken by bullies and challenges of a city center struggling Perspective who profit from our fear of each other. to survive. "Not in our back yard — it's Fifty years after Brown, we must rebuild not our mess. What has happened there is those coalitions and demand from ourselves and not the result of anything we did or didn't do, and from our elected leaders an end to social so if city and suburb are not 'separate but equal,' inequities. it's not our problem to correct." It is folly for us to believe that we are not inex- KLEIN on page 75 5/21 2004 73