PI ION Editorials are posted and archived on JNOnline.com Greenberg's View Twisting The Holocaust here there's promise there's hope, howev- er slim. We can't help but think the Israeli Arab lawyer who runs a 3-month- old Holocaust education center in rented space on the main street of Nazareth, Jesus' hometown, isn't as compassionate toward the Jewish cause in the embattled Middle East as he seems to be. Let's be blunt: Khaled Kasab Mahameed's comments on his Web site leave a lot to be desired. Still, his apparent sincerity in talking to the press about the existence of the Holocaust is a significant first step given the long-held Arab claim that the Holocaust never happened or was exaggerated — a claim broached by Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas in his dark past. Mahameed learned about the Holocaust while studying at Hebrew University In Jerusalem. He awards stipends to Arab students who want to study the subject. The Arab Institute for Holocaust Research and Education tells the story of Nazi Germany in Arabic. It is rooted in the belief that Arabs must understand Hitler's fury if the Israeli-Arab conflict is to end. It contains a few dozen photographs that Mahameed says he bought at Yad Vashem. Notably, the Israeli city of Nazareth is Arab to the core: a third Christian and two-thirds Muslim. Mahameed, a Muslim, argues that centuries of Jew hating have compelled Jews to defend against perse- cution and protect their ances- tral homeland from invasion. This defensive posture, he argues, permeates Israeli policy toward Palestinian Arabs in the West Bank and Gaza. He con- tends that once Arabs stand with Israel against such hatred, the Jewish people will respond with a show of greater under- standing of the Arab plight per- petrated by Israel through cur- tailed rights in Israel and mili- tary occupation of the territo- ries. We're incensed that Mahameed wants Jews to believe that Palestinian suffering allegedly fomented by Israel's creation is equal to Jewish suffering in the Holocaust — or that all Israeli policy, and world Jewish opinion, is somehow colored by the ashes of the Holocaust. "Understanding the mean- ing of the Holocaust in a proper way can lead to very positive results on creating the peace between the two peoples," he writes (wvvw.alkaritha.org). A hint at what Mahameed means by "a proper way" lies in his contention that Arab understanding of the universal effects of the Holocaust can lead to peaceful resolution of what fuels the Israeli-Arab conflict. He mindlessly contends that Arab under- standing of how 6 million Jews died from Nazi ter- EDIT ORIAL E-mail your opinion in a letter to the editor of no more than 150 words to: letters@thejewishnews.com . Take Back Your Ham I once appeared on the Auntie Dee show. To those under the age of 55, that means absolutely nothing. But if you were growing up in Detroit in the 1950s, you will recall that it was a fairly big deal. Kids with talent clamored for a slot on the Channel 7 show. I had very little tal- ent but I clamored anyhow. With three co-conspirators, I formed a quartet at Roosevelt Elementary School. We sang two num- bers. One was "The Syncopated Clock," and the other was not. We auditioned and, much to our aston- ishment, were called back to appear on live TV. We sang our song, Auntie Dee hugged us, and then we got our prize: a Hygrade's Honey Brand Ham. This presented a problem. I grew up in a kosher home and extreme treif like this didn't cut it. My mother put the ham in a back hall, and I never asked what happened to it. The only award I ever won in show business, and I couldn't keep it. ror will convince Jews that, because Arabs care about this wrongful Jewish slaughter, Jews should care about Palestinian turmoil caused by Israel through its land, border, economic, security and set- tlement policies. He also feels that Arab grasp of the lessons of the Holocaust would encourage world leaders to shed the kid gloves and pressure Israel to gives its Arab minority the same rights as Jewish citizens. If the museum changes the thinking of Holocaust deniers, it will have achieved a noble purpose. Whether it has an impact on the Israeli-Arab con- flict, which is rooted in the Arab commitment to Israel's destruction as a Jewish state, only time will tell. We have but a glimmer of hope. ❑ was doing me a favor by bringing it up to Sometimes, life is like that. my place. I gave it to him and wished him Mom used to make something called happy holidays and told him just to keep it beef" enette, which fried up like bacon but himself next time. But there was no next was a kosher product. This was deemed time because I got married and moved out. permissible, although I think it violated the A few years later, the local TV station for spirit of the thing. But that was the closest which I was doing features went into a cost- we came to the dietary line. cutting mode and decided it could dispense My father wasn't glatt and we would eat with my services. I was called into the news GEORGE at restaurants. But only fish or dairy. We director's office and given the hard news, CANTOR had to walk out of two restaurants on vaca- which was a bit of a jolt because the money tion trips when they didn't have a single fish Reality was pretty good, and it was a cold entree on the menu. Check December outside. When I moved out on my own, I lapsed We shook hands cordially upon my departure, on this issue, although keeping kosher in my own and then he called to me as I walked out the door. apartment. But, then, I had to deal with "Don't forget to pick up your Christmas ham on gift hams again. the way out," he said. In the days of looser journalistic ethics, I think he was trying to cheer me up. Instead, it newspaper people customarily received hol- just made me see that I was to be haunted by these iday gifts from organizations they covered. unwanted hams throughout my career. Not good, but an accepted practice more I haven't led an exemplary life. I could have been than 30 years ago. more observant. I was travel editor then, and every year one of On the ham issue, however, I stand firm. You these companies would send me a gift. A big old can fire me, bribe me, mock me with unusable Christmas ham. prizes. But take back your lousy hams. It turned up at the office twice, and I refused On the other hand, a jar of gefilte fish, and I'm delivery. The third year, I opened the door to my yours. ❑ apartment one day and there, sitting on the living room floor, was the ham. The caretaker thought he REAL ITY CBE CE George Cantor's e-mail address is gcantor@thejewishnews.com . 4IN 6/30 2005 27