Opinion Editorials are posted and archived on JNonline.us . Editorial 0, Jerusalem! S ometime before the end of this year, the United States will con- vene a Middle East peace confer- ence of some kind in Annapolis, Md. It's too early to say much about the prospects for success at the meeting because we don't even know what the goals will be. But recent comments from the former mufti of Jerusalem don't give us much rea- son for optimism. "There was never a Jewish temple on Al- Aqsa," said Ikrema Sabri, using the Muslim name for the Temple Mount, "and there is no proof that there was ever a temple." The Western Wall, Sabri told the Jerusalem Post, is just the western wall of the mosque. "There is not a single stone with any relation at all to the history of the Hebrews." That's an astounding denial of history and a frightening picture of the state of unreality among the Palestinians. It's the kind of thing Palestine Liberation Organization leader Yasser Arafat used to claim. How do you respond to someone who makes such a ridiculous claim? Much like Holocaust deniers, someone who denies the existence of the ancient Temple is putting hatred of the Jews ahead of the truth — a truth backed by overwhelming evidence. To deny the existence of the Temple, you have to believe not only that the Jewish Bible and the Christian Bible accounts of the Temple contain nothing but lies and fantasies, but also that the chroniclers of the ancient Babylonians and Persians lied about Jerusalem and that such Roman authors as Josephus, Tacitus and Cassius Dio joined the conspiracy. You also have to ignore ever-mount- ing physical evidence, which has come despite repeated instances over the years of Muslim authorities doing their best to trash the archaeological record. The Waqf, the Muslim organization that controls the Temple Mount, may have inadvertently uncovered remains of the Second Temple during pipe work in August; and the Israel Antiquities Authority reported in October that the Waqf's unauthorized trench digging exposed artifacts from the First Temple. Of course, the most obvious evidence is the Western Wall itself. The massive stones of the wall date from late in the first cen- tury B.C.E., when King Herod renovated and expanded the Temple. The construc- tion was 600 years before Muhammad walked the earth, let alone ascended to heaven, as Muslims believe, from the site of the Dome of the Rock. Still, if the former mufti and other Palestinians want to believe a false history, why should we care? We have enough anti- Semitism and hatred to worry about in Palestinian schools without fretting about a phony version of ancient history, right? The problem is twofold. First, every falsehood contributes to the Palestinian view of Israelis as interlopers who have no roots in the Holy Land and could just as easily make a homeland in Madagascar or Alaska as the Middle East. Second, and more immediate, the denial of the Temple makes peace so much harder to attain. Jerusalem is the ultimate obstacle to a final Israeli-Palestinian peace deal. Although extremists on both sides would fight it, an agreement can be reached to carve out two states, Israeli and Palestinian, side by side between the Jordan and the Mediterranean. But neither side is willing to surrender Jerusalem. Israel might be able to grant some autonomy to Arab neighborhoods in Jerusalem — but not when the Palestinians hold the attitude of Sabri: "No Jews have the right to pray at the mosque. ... No Jewish prayer. If the Jews want real peace, they must not do anything to try to pray on Al-Aqsa. Everyone knows that." What we know is if the Palestinians want peace — and that is an open ques- tion — they must accept free Jewish access to the Temple Mount. '7_ Forever Chelm by Michael Gilbert T See M3 THAT HALF OF THE BoARP IS QUITTING To START A NEW SI-11)1, WHAT? THeb CAN'T PO THAT!/ NEVER BEFORE (N) THE (-115 -foR OF CHE CM HAS SUCH A THING HAPPENED ) I'LL Tow THEIR BOARD, SPLIT I ACT° A THEM APART, THAT'S NOW WE AND START A R TED GOT OUR 5HUI, (N STTHE OVER AGAIN)! FIRST PLACE 4i • rr; 1 .••■•■•■ I Reality Check ) /1, Radio Heroes T he television set arrived on a chilly February morning in 1950, about five months before my little brother did. I was much more excited about the TV. For one thing it meant that we no longer had to drive over to my Uncle Lou's house to watch Milton Berle. It was documented, by the way, that during commercial breaks of that program the level in the Detroit water system dropped precipitously because all the toilets in town were flush- ing at once. No one wanted to miss a min- ute of Uncle Milty. But, more than that, it brought the world into our one-bedroom apartment. The earliest memory I have of baseball, for example, is watching the last game of the 1950 World Series, with the Yankee Stadium crowd booing Casey Stengel for bringing in a relief pitcher for Whitey Ford. My first images of New York City and how sophisticated men and women spoke and behaved were formed then on the tube. I would stay up with my dad on Saturday nights and watch him shake with laughter at Sid Caesar. I didn't fully understand what was so funny about those paro- dies of European movies and American life when I was 9 years old. That would come years later. It was enough to share the expe- rience with my father. I couldn't have known it then, but something also was lost when the big eye came. I was part of the last age cohort to be carried away by radio heroes. I can remember lying on the living room floor by the big console in the gathering gloom of winter evenings. The dial was tuned to Captain Midnight and Tom Mix and a show I always listened to, for some reason, called Tennessee Jed. I had no clear image of what these peo- ple looked like, although you could send away for stuff that had their pictures on it. But I was allowed to use my imagination. Radio days had their rou- tine. Maybe not as stringent as going to watch Milton Berle, but part of the week's rhythm, just the same. On Sunday afternoons we would walk to my grand- mother's house and listen to One Man's Family as a family. Kind of neat, as I recall. In the morning, my mom would tune in The Breakfast Club from Chicago, followed by Jack Burch, "America's favorite whistlin' man. My dad would listen to The Eternal Light, which consisted of dramatizations of Jewish life and Bible stories. And there was an odd show about kids performing songs while riding on a bus, which seemed to appeal to him because he had worked as a bus driver for a few years. When the TV arrived, they all disap- " peared. Jack Benny did make the leap to TV, and I was surprised at how mild he looked. His voice on the radio made him sound so mean, and that's the image that persisted in my ear. It also had never occurred to me that he was Jewish, just like us. I read a story about how one of his Sunday evening shows was recorded in California before an erev Yom Kippur for broadcast later that evening. It upset him that some people might think he was working on the holy day. "But, Jack," said his producer. "Your Jewish listeners will all be in the synagogue anyhow. They won't even hear the show." "I'm not concerned about them," said Benny. "It's what the gentiles might think." Different times, when priorities were clearer and heroes could be found all across the radio dial. George Cantor's e-mail address is gcantor614@aol.com. November 1 • 2007 A31