THE DETROIT INSTITUTE OF ARTS Red Hot and Very Cool Caving In Majority Voice The upshot? The U.N. looks better in the eyes of many. The secretary- general improved his image. Israel, the perpetual U.N. loser, was queen- for-a-day. But the nagging question is, where does this leave "never again"? Widening the lens, we notice that in December the U.N. adopted 22 resolutions condemning the state of Israel, and four country-specific res- olutions criticizing the human-rights records of the other 190 U.N. mem- ber states. Also in December, the public entrance of the U.N. sported the annual solidarity with the Palestinian people exhibit, featuring a display about Palestinian humiliation at hav- ing to bare midriffs at Israeli check- points. (No mention was made of the purpose of the checkpoints or the Israelis who have died from sui- cide belts on Palestinians who cir- cumvent them.) On exactly the same day that the secretary-general announced the holding of the commemorative ses- sion, Jan. 11, he also pushed forward the U.N. plan to create a register of the Palestinian victims of Israel's non-violent security fence. (There are no plans to create a register of Israeli victims of Palestinian terror- ism.) - In March, the U.N. will begin its annual session of the U.N. Human Rights Commission, at which Israel will be the only U.N. member state not allowed to participate in full because U.N. states continue to pre- vent it from gaining equal member- ship in a regional group. The U.N. remains without a defi- nition of terrorism, never having transformed the names of Palestinian terrorists from abstract entities into the targets of specific U.N. condem- nation or consequences of any kind. And any day now, we can expect the secretary-general to continue his pattern of denouncing Israel's lawful exercise of self-defense as "extrajudi- cial killing" or as a morally repre- hensible.contribution to "a cycle of violence." In other words, U.N. demoniza- tion of Israel and the green light to the killers of Israelis that such demo- nization portends will not skip a beat. This is the face of modern anti-Semitism. Jews everywhere are indebted to the willingness and ability of Israelis to live and breathe self-determination. When contemporary political issues are set aside, and an affirmation of the centrality of the Jewish state's well-being to the Jewish people's well-being is not key to a commem- oration of the Holocaust, "never again" is an empty phrase. Worse, situated in a place where a U.N. General Assembly resolution said Zionism was racism until 1991 and the 2001 U.N. Durban Declaration delivers the same mes- sage, it plays into the hands of those who would separate Jews from Israel for no other reason than to divide and conquer. The speaker of the Italian senate, Marcello Pera, was the only non- Israeli participant who was prepared to stand against the wheeling and dealing in the backrooms, telling the General Assembly that the anti- Semitism of "today ... feeds on ... insidious distinctions ... made between Israel and the Jewish state, Israel and its governments, Zionism and Semitism. "Or ... when the struggle for life led by ... Israelis is labelled 'state ter- rorism."' The less-cynical response to our original question — about the meaning of "never again"? Some Holocaust survivors such as Nesse Godin and Congressman Tom Lantos were able to speak directly — during the unofficial lunchtime break organized by B'nai B'rith, in a room far from the General Assembly. Some people listened. Some people heard. The pictures of Auschwitz are still in the front hall of the U.N. for a little while longer. A blow was struck against Holocaust deniers. And for one day, the democratic state of Israel was not the most reviled mem- ber of the U.N. (less than half of whose members can be called "free" according to Freedom House). When all was said and done, how- ever, the U.N. got a lot more than it gave. Improving the image of the U.N. and its secretary-general could prove more costly than Israelis have bargained. [1] Murano Glass Off the coast of Venice lies Murano, a small group of islands that is home to the world's greatest glass designers. See some of the finest examples of art glass, red hot from Murano's magical furnaces and VERY COOL! LIGTION GLASS F Trough February 27 Purchase tickets onsite at the DIA Box Office or online at dia.org Members receive FREE tickets. Join today! 313.833.7971 Also see Detroit Collects Murano Glass, an exhibition from local collectors. DIA r you 9a.0? 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