Detroit Ties Color Mood In Israel CentralGalilee n informal survey of Israeli residents and Michigan visi- tors in this partner region of Michigan Jewry two hours north of Jerusalem revealed cautious opti- mism for a renewed chance at peace in the wake of Yassir Arafat's death last week. • Sharon Steinbaum-Open, outgo- ing Jewish Agency for Israel staff professional in Partnership 2000's Central Galilee-Michigan Region, is an Israeli native who has lost close friends to Palestinian terror. She hopes for a negotiated peace, but is deflated with each new terrorist attack. For her, Arafat symbolized the old school of Palestinian military resist- ance. "I had no trust in him," she said. "His death could symbolize a shift if the new Palestinian leader- ship realizes the Jewish state is here to stay instead of continuing to try to break Israeli morale." Under the right conditions, she favors a Palestinian state and helping Palestinians create infrastructure and other systems that would allow them to live decently. But she is not confi- dent even that would end the con- flict. After the Oslo Accords of 1993, she said, "the Palestinian Authority received hundreds of millions of dollars that all went to private bank accounts of Arafat and his cronies." "Corruption is so high in Palestinian culture," she said, "I fear that the leadership will go on attack- ing and not want Israel to survive." • Reuven Amsalem, director of the Nana House for at-risk youth in Nazareth Illit, heard about Arafat's death just before Michigan Jewry's Partnership 2000 steering committee paid a visit the morning of Nov. 11. "The first reaction among the kids," he said, "was, 'Thank God, a barrier for peace just died. One barrier for peace just vanished.'" Amsalem called Arafat's death "a gate to a better world, to a new gen- eration with new ideas — and maybe a new peace." But that gate won't swing open, he said, unless the Palestinians undergo a cultural change that enables them to accept and respect Jews as legiti- mate partners in peace. • Gabi Landau, managing director for the Valleys Tourist Board of the Emek Yizreal Valley Regional Council, says, "There's a sense of hope in the air, an opportunity not to miss, for changes and agreements that could bring peace. "Palestinian commoners are so tired of fighting," she said, hoping Arafat's death recalibrates the mind- set of Palestinians and how they view reality. "We have a matter of weeks," she said. "Otherwise, we lose momen- tum and the advantage caused by Arafat's death — and the matsav [intifida] normal' continues." Landau favors a Palestinian state. The problem is lack of a consensus leader among the Palestinians. "They've got to find their own direction first," she said. She urges interference from the United States or European Union to jump-start peace talks. To her, the U.N. has become irrelevant. • Hillary Murt, outgoing Ann Arbor delegate to Partnership 2000's Central Galilee-Michigan Region, thinks real change can only happen S.Steinbaum-Open Hillary Murt if the Palestinians make the first move. "If Israel reaches out with an olive branch," she said, "it'll put the new Palestinian leaders at risk if they take it." Her hope: a new round of arm's- length, but cordial, negotiations accompanied by what she calls open rhetoric among Palestinian leaders to bridge the culture gulf that pre- vents peace. Reuven Amsalem Ehud Almog • Ehud Almog, 17, of Ahuzzat- Barak in the Jezreel Valley joined Detroit teens on a Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit- sponsored 2004 summer mission to Israel; he visited Detroit last spring. The 12th-grader would like to talk to Palestinian teens about "cross-cul- tural relations between people, not governments — just like Israeli teens do with German teens." Like other Israelis, Almos is wary Gabi Landau unless the Palestinians undergo a culture shock. "We all want peace, Israelis and Palestinians, each in his or her own way," he said. "There's nothing we want to live in peace. They have no want more in Israel; it's the first ), other choice," he said. "They will thing we are searching for. continue to suffer otherwise." II He believes Palestinians "really do • 1987-1993 — Riots break out that grow into the first Palestinian intifada, or upris- ing. The fighting eventually claims the lives estimated 1,100 Palestinians and 150 of Israelis. • 1988 — Arafat says the PLO accepts U.N. Resolution 242, implies recognition of Israel and, at least formally, renounces terrorism. As a result, the United States opens a dia- logue with the PLO. • 1990 — The United States breaks off its dialogue with the PLO after Arafat refuses to condemn a terrorist attack carried out by a member group. Arafat's support for Saddam Hussein after he invades Kuwait, and during the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq the following year, leads Persian Gulf states to cut off their funding for the PLO. • 1991 — Arafat marries his 28-year-old secretary, Suha Tawil. Born a Christian, she converts to Islam. • 1993 — Israel and the PLO agree on a framework for peace in what later are called the Oslo accords. The framework is signed on the White House lawn, where Arafat shakes hands with Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak. Rabin. • 1994 — Arafat, along with Israeli leaders Yitzhak Rabin and Shimon Peres, is awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. Arafat returns to the Gaza Strip after a 25-year exile. • 1996 — Arafat is overwhelmingly elected president of the Palestinian Authority. Under heavy pressure, the PLO's parlia- ment-in-exile votes to revoke sections of the PLO charter calling for Israel's destruction, but never completes the process. • 2000 — Arafat refuses a peace plan pro- posed by Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak at the Camp David summit. Later that year, Palestinians begin a wave of terrorism that intensifies after a visit to Jerusalem's Temple Mount by Israeli opposition leader Ariel Sharon. This becomes the second intifada, which is still ongoing. ROBERT A. SKLAR Editor A • 2001 — Frustrated by Arafat's ongoing support for violence, Israel confines him to his compound in Ramallah, where he remains until October 2004. • 2002 -- The United States breaks with Arafat after he is found to have lied about P.A. involvement with a weapons ship arriv- ing from Iran. President Bush later makes replacement of leaders "not compromised by terrorism" — a clear rebuff of Arafat — a precondition for Palestinian statehood. • 2004 — Arafat dies on Nov. 11 in a Paris hospital. ❑ Jig 11 / 1 9 2004 31