Dry Bones Opinion PREVIOUSLY, r OCCUPIED GAZA Editorials are posted and archived on JNOnline.com BOMBED ISRAELI TOWNS AS AN ACT , OF RESISTANCE., r WELL NOW LIBERATED GAZA IS BOMBING ISRAELI TOWNS AS AN ACT OF RESISTANCE. Editorial Pullout Dividends? e're not Pollyannas, but we have to admit that Israel's Gaza with- drawal appears to be paying diplomatic dividends. For example, Bahrain recently announced that it would end its economic boycott of Israel. The Jewish state's foreign minister, Silvan Shalom, met in Islamabad with his Pakistani counterpart. Pakistan's president, General Pervez Musharraf, spoke last month before the American Jewish Congress and even quoted from the Talmud as well as the Koran. (He also shook hands with Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon at the United Nations.) Musharraf told Jewish leaders that he was responding to "the bold step taken by Prime Minister Sharon to withdraw from Gaza." In addition, Algeria, Yemen and the United Arab Emirates are rumored to be planning offi- cial ties with Israel. And diplo- mats from Indonesia — the world's most populous Muslim nation — met casually with W Shalom and Sharon at the U.N. What's more, Jordan's King Abdullah II is calling for more religious dialogue between mod- erate Islamic leaders and Jewish leaders. Abdullah recently addressed more than 80 U.S. rabbis who had gathered in Washington, D.C. His topic: "Judaism and Islam: Beyond Tolerance." "Our communities must see each other as sharing a common heritage and a common future,' Abdullah said, citing koranic verses and Jewish readings that call for accommodation and respect for other monotheistic faiths. But can all of this last? We've been disappointed and jilted before. After all, the 1990s — the so-called Oslo years — saw simi- lar gains melt away in the second Palestinian intifada (uprising), really a war on Israel, which began nearly five years ago. Now, Israel and the Arab world must figure out how to seize the moment without repeating the mistakes of the Oslo process, which focused more on words and promises than on facts on the ground. This time, we sug- gest that Israel, diaspora Jewry and the Muslim world pay greater attention to building more people-to-people contacts, including cultural, social and academic exchanges throughout the Jewish and Islamic worlds. We also suggest, like King Abdullah, that religious leaders from the world's three great monotheistic religions — Judaism, Islam and Christianity — hold periodic conferences on how they can better understand each other. In Atlanta, for exam- ple, The Temple hosted just such a conference between Imam Plemon T. El-Amin of the Atlanta Masjid of Al-Islam, Rabbi Jeffrey Salkin and pastors from local Christian denominations. Yes, we admit that such confer- ences are an idealist's dream. But they could also be seeds that might germinate good will between Jew and Muslim. As author Bruce Feiler suggested at the Atlanta conference, "the only www.drybonesproject.com force strong enough to take on religious extremism is religious moderation." Meanwhile, Israel has done its part with the pullout, so it's up to the Arab and Muslim world to 'offer more than meetings and hints at better diplomatic ties. Israel's foes must realize that the prime minister is balancing between what his foreign minis- ter calls progress on "the Palestinian track and the Arab- Israeli track." And the Palestinian track is likely to lead to nowhere in the near future. At the same time, however, we applaud Israel's recent air strikes against the terrorists firing mis- siles from the Gaza Strip. Israeli diplomacy must be reinforced by force of arms, lest foes like Hamas, Islamic Jihad and their ilk take encouragement from the Jewish ancestral homeland's inaction. ❑ E-mail your opinion in a letter to the editor of no more than 150 words to: letters@thejewishnews.com Reality Check Malice In Wonderland hen people say there is a need for racial dia- logue, that is usually the last thing they want. What they really mean is, "Stop deny- ing you're a racist. Sit down and shut up." That seems to be the case in a recent incident in Livonia, when a few people made overt and ugly racial comments at a meeting about Wal Mart's plans for Wonderland Mall. They expressed fears that the big store would bring large num- bers of African-American shop- pers into the area and turn the neighborhood, in the phrase of one protester, into a black "ghet- to." Local media detest Livonia because a survey made a few years ago indicated it was the "whitest" large city in America. W MN October 6 . 2005 The automatic assumption was that this had to be a matter of deliberate exclusionary policy, and its residents were presumed racist until proven innocent. The recent comments appeared to validate that belief and the media could hardly wait to pile on. But here was a genuine chance for dialogue. Why wouldn't you want to talk to these people and find out what is making them afraid? If you wish to persuade, you must make an effort to understand. To those who think that such racial attitudes are pathological, an illness shared by all white people in the privacy of their hearts, that answer is sufficient. Instead of a blanket condem- nation, however, and without condoning what was said, I think in Livonia have taken it is important to get at off in recent years and other possible answers. anything that seems to For example, other threaten those values large malls in cities is perceived as a terri- bordering Detroit have ble threat. been the site of highly While these people publicized racial prob- may not be highly edu- lems. It happened at George Cantor cated, they are not Fairlane, Northland, Colu mnist dumb. They have Eastland. The same observed what hap- media that condemns pened to property values when a the Livonia protesters gave a lot community starts to turn from of space and air time to those white to black. incidents. How can they be sur- Their comments were clumsy, prised when some people are unpolished and, the worst sin of edgy about the possibility of all in the eyes of the media, similar events at Wonderland? insensitive. But not irrational. Underlying this, however, are They were based, in their minds, basic economic fears. These are on empirical evidence. not wealthy, college-educated The Jewish community should professionals making these be the last one to point a finger. remarks. They are people whose In my lifetime, I have watched it greatest investment is the equity run from three different areas — in their homes. Property values Central High, Northwest Detroit and Oak Park-Southfield —for reasons of race. Oh, we gave a smoother ration- ale for it: Better schools. A rising standard of living within the community. But, at bottom, the reasons were really not much dif- ferent. There is absolutely a need for honest racial dialogue. But the beginning of wisdom might be to listen to the fears expressed by people like those in Livonia, and then try to build a dialogue on that. Dismissing them all as hope- less racists accomplishes noth- ing, aside from making a severe problem worse. ❑ George Cantor's e-mail address is gcantor614@aol.com . 47