We Must Not Be Quiet M y father used to tell me stories about being a young Jew in Detroit in the 1940s, that it was simply normal to feel different. As a Jew in school, in the army and in the workplace, fear of discrimi- nation was a natural part of life for a Jew. In Livonia in the 1960s, I never thought much about what it meant to ride on a bus twice a week to the United Hebrew Schools on West Seven Mile Road in Detroit and face a flurry of rocks coming at our windows on each ride. We kids just thought it was part of growing up. Today, most of us "baby boom- er" Jews live our lives as if we were typical Americans, working, going home to our families and watching TV. Then, Mel Gibson blames Jews for all the wars in the world, Jimmy Carter writes that Israel is no better than South Africa in its "apartheid" policies, Paul Wolfowitz, a Jew, gets targeted as the instigator who talked the Bush administration into start- ing the Iraq war and a conference titled, "The Holocaust: A World Prospect:' takes place, with 70 Holocaust revisionists from 30 countries. The confer- ence is sponsored by the Iranian government whose leader has called the Nazi Holocaust "a myth." It is so easy for baby boomers to feel uneasy about what's going on in the world, but it's easier to live our lives as if everything were okay, to believe that the freedom and democracy we take for granted is a God-given right that won't ever be taken away from us. We are sincerely delusional; not much different from Jews who believed the German govern- ment in 1941 would eventually come to its senses and act like a responsible government of decent human beings. We are in a very precarious time for Jews. The risky war to install democracy in Iraq has fallen apart. We are now arguing about how to get out of Iraq without the Middle East falling into even worse anarchy than it is in today. Many of the countries in the world have ganged up and blame the "U.S./Israel alliance" for the bombings and shootings that are destroying thousands of innocent civilians every month in Iraq. But what can we expect? When President Bush announced the onset of war in Iraq, many of us, including me, were skeptical and fearful, but trusted our govern- ment to act wisely. We sat still, quietly accepting this war. We prayed that we could bring the wonders of freedom to Iraq and that democracy would spread like flowers everywhere. Yes, and the Palestinians would suddenly accept the right of Israel to exist. Haven't we dreamed before that Palestinian leaders might be able to keep peace and accept Jews and turn terrorists there to freedom-loving people? Yes, in our dreams, which are now our nightmares. So today, the world is more dangerous, with bombs and guns everywhere, terror in the streets of Iraq, Iran getting stronger, unparalleled genocide in Africa, a fence put up to protect Israel and a fence to be installed along the southern U.S. border to protect America from illegal immigrants. We are too busy to notice. We baby boomers get our new high- definition TVs, go on our cruises, buy our stocks and clothes, go to work, take our kids to sporting events and hope that our Jewish organizations as well as our rab- bis will speak up and protect us from the crazy fanatics focused on killing Israelis, Jews, and Americans throughout the world. We, who expect the world to stay sensible and free, must stop depending on our Jewish leaders and our parents to protect us. Our parents have been the people who have continued to fund and aid Israel and our critically needed organizations. It's our turn now. We have to speak up. We have to give of our time and money. We cannot stay quiet, worried only about ourselves and our families. Our brothers and sisters in Israel are surrounded by people and coun- tries with a supreme goal: Kill as many Jews in Israel as possible and then come for us in America. Whether you hate the Iraq war or were angry that Israel fought back in the north against Lebanon, you must speak up. You and I must protect our freedoms. We must stand up for our kids to have a world that will want them in it. We must not be quiet anymore. We must write and call and e-mail our thoughts and opinions to anyone who will listen and even to those who won't. Otherwise, like so many Jews over 60 years ago, we will go quietly into the night and accept our fates ... whatever our fates will be. 17, Arnie Goldman is a Farmington Hills resident. Ancient Lies No Basis For A Policy Philadelphia T wo seemingly unrelated events in the waning hours of 2006 pretty much summed up everything you need to know about the Arab-Israeli conflict. Their mean- ing can be characterized simply: The Arab world's obsession with eradicating the State of Israel and the West's willingness to deceive itself about the char- acter of Arab leaders and their intentions both are based on lies. The more famous of the two events was the hanging of deposed Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein. In his final moments before he got his just desserts, the doomed Iraqi once again played the card that he and other Arab despots have always used with impunity: Israel. Thus, among his final comments on the gallows came this declaration: "Palestine is Arab!" Why invoke this cause with his last breath? Because also by their intel- even at that moment, lectuals and would-be he still thought it worth reformers who ought a try to deflect discus- to know better. sion of his comeup- By focusing on pance to that of the the external enemy conflict with Israel. — and a state ruled The Arab world has by a despised minor- used the fight against ity of dhimmi Jews at Zionism as an excuse Jonathan S. that — the Arabs have Tobin for every problem that given themselves as exists within their soci- Special well as their leaders a Commentary eties. Whether it is the ready-made excuse for domination of tyrants all of their failures. like Saddam or the lack Though he spent of economic progress and the rest his career terrorizing his own of the standards by which they people, Saddam was always care- lag behind the West, the answer is ful to pose as a pan-Arab anti- always the same: It would be dif- Zionist. When his troops were ferent if only there were no Israel. evicted from Kuwait in 1991 with That this thesis is nonsense has little resistance on the part of his been no deterrent to its frequent army, it was no surprise that he use. This diversionary tactic is so used his Scud missiles to attack deeply ingrained in the culture of Israel. the Arab world that it is routinely Though Israel had nothing repeated not just by spokesmen to do with Saddam's looting of for the regimes that run rough- Kuwait and was excluded from shod over their own people but the international coalition orga- nized to oppose him by the first President Bush, it was imperative for him to make it appear as if Israel was actually a belligerent in that war. This earned him the cheers of Palestinians, who took to their rooftops to cheer the mis- siles headed for Tel Aviv. He reinforced that impression with his subsequent payments to the families of Palestinian suicide bombers. But this was, like every- thing else he did, a lie. Like the rest of the Arab world, Iraq did nothing useful for the Palestinians other than to encourage them to continue in a pointless war. But by doing so, he deflected criticism from Muslims who still prefer to embrace canards about the Jews rather than to examine their own faults. And by saying "Palestine" before the trap door opened, Saddam gave Arabs another excuse to ignore the truth about the campaign to remove his regime. All this also helps to feed the fallacy — still widely believed in the West — that the Arab- Israeli dispute is the source of all the region's problems. But as Saddam's life and death proved, intra-Arab warfare and atrocities have little to do with the Jews. Another event that was received with far less fanfare took place only days before Hussein's death. It was the release of a 33-year-old classified document by the U.S. State Department. It confirmed what had long been rumored: that the late Palestinian Liberation Organization leader Yasser Arafat personally ordered the murders of two kidnapped American diplomats in March 1973. Members of a PLO-front group called "Black September gunned down the two, Cleo Noel, U.S. ambassador to Sudan, and the embassy's Charge d'Affaires Tobin on page 32 Ja n ua , 2esk0"7