EDITOR'S NOTEBOOK jarc •- Tempered Hope 'BEAU Arfal LOW 10131tS10 ) , ...a loving way to celebrate a simcha... 13I' IN A CAW ISUALIA Sumo I 'm hopeful that Israel's Arab neighbors somehow come to terms with the Jewish state and its right to exist in peace. To not have hope is to reject our 4,000-year-old survival instincts as a people. Despite Egyptian slavery, the Inquisition, the Russian pogroms, the Holocaust and today's smoldering anti-Jewish sentiment in Europe, in the Arab world and, maddeningly, at many U.S. universities, we've managed not only to survive, but excel far beyond our percentages in helping make the world a better place. But I confess that my hope is cloaked in mistrust of the Palestinian Authority's so- called peace overtures. The Palestinian sui- cide bombing that killed five people and wounded at least 50 in Tel Aviv just before Shabbat also had Syria's fingerprints all over it — and that should surprise no one. The Palestinian terrorist group Islamic Jihad boasted responsibility for the bomb- ROBERT A. ing outside the Stage nightclub. Where is SKLAR the group based? Damascus. Editor Even Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas seemed rankled by the attack and its goal of sabotaging the fragile truce he struck Feb. 8 with Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon. Syria not only harbors terror groups, but also encourages them to carry out attacks, which endanger Israeli relations with the Palestinians as well as regional stability. Another Syrian ally is Hezbollah, the Iranian-backed group commit- ted to Israel's destruction, which is the leading financier of Palestinian terror cells like Islamic Jihad. Terrorists reject an Israel of any size and want a Palestinian state that includes Israel ... period. Talk of a truce is nice, but the end result seems always the same: dead Jews. Without A Doubt Hezbollah no doubt had a hand in the nightclub bombing on Tel Aviv's beachfront promenade. Sheik Hasan Nasrallah put Hezbollah's "reason for being" in stark terms in a speech aired on Al Manar TV on Feb. 18. The Washington-based Middle East Media Research Institute translated and disseminated the invective for all to read. "Israel is our enemy," Nasrallah said. "This is an aggres- sive, illegal and illegitimate entity, which has no future in our land. Its destiny is manifested in our motto, 'Death to Israel.'" That's crystal clear to me. Nasrallah called the Bush administration an enemy of the Islamic Nation "because it has always taken a position of aggression, of occupation and of supporting Israel with weapons, airplanes, tanks and money as well as political support and unlimited protection." He blamed the presi- dent for the Islamic Nation's social ills and branded him "the greatest plunderer of our treasures — our oil and our resources." "Death to America," Nasrallah said. Israel isn't just fighting the Palestinian people. It's fight- ing Iran, the greatest threat to Israel's security, and Syria, notwithstanding the Syrian Accountability Act passed by the U.S. Congress. Hezbollah managed to hoodwink the European Union into believing it's not a terrorist group despite a stable of 12,000 rockets and Palestinian terror support to the tune of $9 million a year. It pays families of suicide bombers up to $100,000. "This organization — the long arm of the Iranian terrorist regime — has replaced [Iraq's] Saddam Hussein as the main external element pro- moting and financing terrorist attacks against Israeli citizens," says Israeli Foreign Minister Silvan Shalom. The Campus Shame It's sad to hear about Jewish students supporting anti-Israel campus activists who, without knowing all the facts, con- demn Israel's military occupation of the Gaza Strip and West Bank and who call for U.S. divestment in companies doing business with Israel. Have these students forgotten their Israeli brethren who have died or been maimed at the hands of Arab terrorists? Jewish targets especially include the young because they represent Isrkl's future. Anti-Israel propaganda has infiltrated the University of Wisconsin in Madison, where the Faculty Senate voted to recommend divestment from companies that sell weapons to Israel, and Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, where Jew hating reached a crescendo with the Feb. 14 appearance of black power speaker Malik Zulu Shabazz, who told Jewish students, "I'm watching you." Israel also has been excoriated over the past four years in limited student actions at Wayne State University in Detroit and the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor. The universities didn't sanction this anti-Zionism, however; they also have provided the setting for pro-Israel events. Nationally, on-campus hatred of Jews sometimes has been subtle and other times blatant. U.S. Jewry shoulders the blame for not insisting that our high school and uni- versity students learn more about anti-Israel propaganda — not only how to recognize it, but also how to counter it. We must implore our communal leadership to be even more vigilant of such propaganda so it stays out of class- rooms. And we must inspire our youth to be proud advo- cates for Israel and not be content with knowing so little about who they as Jews. We must teach our youth about their peers on the front lines fighting for Israel, and dying, and patronizing Israeli cafes and clubs to keep businesses going, and dying. Only through a balanced education can our youth be equipped to sort myth from fact on the Middle East and combat the myriad of "reasons" bubbling up for Jews to question Israel's plight. Only with stronger support from the Jewish world will our students feel safe and smart enough to speak out and exhort against Jew bashing. We must guarantee students an academic setting that val- ues truth and respects their heritage. They shouldn't fear speaking up in class to correct anti-Israel bias. They should have the confidence to know the organized Jewish commu- nity will speak up to defend their rights as American Jews. Meanwhile, our universities must be made to feel they are being monitored fof integrity. They must feel an obli- gation to change the climate that allows hatred of Jews to take root. We, as a community, must demand a correction; our children are at risk. We must show our outrage! "I am proud to say that I am a concerned Jewish moth- er," a JN reader with a daughter at U-M told me. "I hope we have a proud Jewish community." I do, too. It's up to us to protect our students from the deceit of a hijacked culture that finds justification in the Koran to murder Jews, who the hijackers see as vermin. ❑ Potthle g0141 4 Mitzi/al ...a meaningful way to help people with disabilities in our community... Here's how... • Use JARC Place Cards • Present your guests with a JARC Tribute expressing your unique message • Create centerpieces to donate for use in JARC homes • Recognize your honoree with a special gy't to a JARC home ...or your own idea... we love to create new opportunities! To discuss how to enhance the beauty of your important day, call Alissa (248) 538-6610, X349 111 jaw 4 Helping People with Disabilities Be Included in The Community — All Through Their Lives 30301 Northwestern • Suite 100 Farmington Hills, MI 48334 www.jarc.org 340720 Tift, 3/3 2005 5