Editor's Letter When you From Censure To Seeds • Oliver Finegold, a reporter for London's Evening Standard, was seeking a com- ment from London Mayor Ken Livingstone after a Feb. 8, 2005, reception marking the 20th anniversary since Chris Smith became the first Minister of Parliament to come out as gay. During the attempted interview, according to the London-based Web site Robert A. Sklar Guardian Unlimited, Livingstone ques- tioned Finegold's choice to work at the Editor Evening Standard. "How awful for you. Have you thought of having treatment?" Livingstone asked. When Finegold again asked for a comment, Livingstone responded: "What did you do? Were you a German war crimi- nal?" When Finegold said he was Jewish and was offended by the remark, Livingstone likened the journalist's job to a con- centration camp guard. "You are just doing it because you are paid to, aren't you?" the mayor said. Livingstone's attitude cried out for public rebuke. Last Friday, the Adjudication Panel for England, a three-per- son independent tribunal that rules on complaints against public officials, suspended Livingstone with full pay for four weeks after bringing his office into disrepute for remarks deemed "unnecessarily insensitive and offensive?' The penalty, invoked on March 1, is a joke. It amounts to paid time off. For his part, Livingstone, 60, said the ruling "strikes at the heart of democracy." He's appealing. I'm all for free speech, but public leaders have no business using their official power as a bully pulpit for Jew baiting. The interview never left the gutter. Journalists take insults in stride. But Livingstone crossed the ethical line of public service in ridiculing Finegold's Jewish heritage. There was no provocation to spur such venom. World Jewry can't stand on the sidelines when public leaders think their stature gives them free rein to indulge in anti-Jewish canards. Livingstone has a feud going with the Standard's sister newspaper, the London- based Daily Mail, over its reputed support of fascism and opposition to Jewish refugees as Nazi Germany infested European Jewry in the 1930s. Had Livingstone thought for just an Ken Livingstone instant, he could have avoided the messy affair. He later refused to apologize. His knee-jerk response typifies his approach toward Jews. When the London Organizing Committee for the Olympic Games in 2012 suggested a ceremony to commemorate the 40th anniversary of the massacre of Israeli athletes at the Munich Olympics in 1972, the Jerusalem-based ynetnews.com quoted Livingstone, an avowed left-winger, as saying: "The most suit- able way to commemorate the Munich Olympics is the cre- ation of a Palestinian state next to Israel but without barriers:' Livingstone's loose lips toward Finegold's ethnicity and the someone Daily Mail's long-ago past was more an example of his igno- rance about the physical and emotional toll of the Nazi slaughter and its lingering effects than a knowingly malicious insult to its victims. Still, the Board of Deputies of British Jews is right: "It cannot be right that such statements can be made by an elected offi- cial with impunity." • Dana Naor, 22, completed her Israeli military service and is now a third-year law and poli- tics student at Tel Aviv University. She heard that West Dana Naor Bloomfield businessman Joel Jacob, one of Metro Detroit's communal giants and a Seeds of Peace supporter, was acceler- ating his anti-hunger campaign in Israel and America. And she wanted to help. While working with Jacob, she answered his request to reflect on the impact of her 1997 Seeds of Peace summer. Her response echoed a familiar theme: that not every Arab is a terrorist and that Israel will only achieve a lasting peace if moderate Palestinians somehow gain power in the Gaza Strip and West Bank. "Even though my family is very peaceful, I never had talked to an Arab before camp and I was afraid of them," she said. "So coming to camp and living for five weeks with Arabs was, in itself, an important lesson for me." Naor maintained her Arab friendships after camp, but the Palestinian reign of terror unleashed on Israel in 2000 shocked and disappointed her. "After a while," she said, "I started to understand that we must make it work again, at least for us Seeds. Ever since then, it has been very hard to meet Palestinians and talk to them." She added, "All of us have lost people we knew and loved; having fun with 'the other side' is not what we need right now." What's needed is understanding. So Naor and her friends have begun a monthly negotiating group of eight Israeli and Palestinian young women who dis- cuss issues central to living amid conflict. "The important thing is that we're trying to use what we learned back in camp in 1997 in our lives now," Naor said. "We're not giving up on dialogue yet" Jacob felt Naor's note sparked "a feeling that there is still hope for a better future?' I'm leery of lasting peace in the embattled region any time soon. But I've not lost hope. Such peace will emerge only if young people like Dana Naor and her Israeli and Palestinian friends truly can find common currents, then manage to make them the dominant force amid a dangerous energy field of clashing cultures, politics and val- ues. with a disability, you enrich a life. Yours. The hardest part about having a disability isn't the disability. Its having your gifts and talents overlooked. It's being left out by those who don't know what you can bring to the party. F ma=r So do something nice for yourself. Include someone with a disability in your life. Discover how much more we're alike than different. We can help you make that connection. Call JARC at 248-538-6610 ext. 349 or log onto jarc.org . ❑ POINTS TO PO NDER... T alk about a study in contrasts. The mayor of London is publicly censured for his Jew-baiting statements to a Jewish newspaper reporter, while a 1997 Seeds of Peace experience prompts a young Jewish Israeli to reach out to "the other side." include Is Ken Livingstone's penalty appropriate? Is Dana Naor's dream of peace achievable? E-mail: letters@thejewishnews.com. jarc Helping People With Disabilities Be included In Their Community - All Through Their Lives 107CA3N, March 2 2006 5