Editor's Letter Silence Not Golden I t could have been a prank by thoughtless, unaware teens "I conveyed to him the pain and revulsion I felt that a swas- although the culprits have yet to be caught. Whatever the tika had been painted on the school and in the community to intent, the vandalism was no less hateful, pernicious and which we are integrally tied and also what a repugnant affront the swastika represents to Jewish students, families and all foreboding. That's why the concise, powerful way that Principal Rick decent citizens:' Stulberg told me. Rightly, she felt the crime compelled a response that the Jones and Farmington Public Schools spoke out against a swastika being painted on the student school and the district had no room for expressions of hatred rock in front of North Farmington and their concurrent scars on humanity and history "The High represented an important public swastika is a chilling symbol of evil and its brandishing any- where is a vile assault on the memory of the millions slaugh- pronouncement. The school district's zero-tolerance tered under the Nazi regime she said. After an exchange of conversations heading into the policy against incitement of any kind is refreshing given the rise in anti- Thanksgiving break, Jones assured Stulberg that the district was listening and would react responsibly. Semitism and other ethnic hatred, on U.S. college campuses especially. And it did. The Jewish community could learn Curiously, the rock incident at North came close on the heels from Farmington Public Schools' of an elegy by Jones in the high school newsletter, the Raider directness and leadership. Just as we Rap. The elegy spoke to the proud tradition of the rock. It also are quick to challenge other examples came less than a year after North's interdisciplinary study of bias and defilement, so must we respond with resolve in devoted to the subject of genocide and the menace of hate. seeking redress from clearly anti-Jewish acts like using swasti- Given the school's and the district's embrace of diversity and kas — the signature of Nazi Germany. multiculturalism, the rock incident presented a unique teach- The week of Dec. 17, Farmington Public Schools broadcast able moment to reaffirm that commitment. Exposing intoler- over its classroom network a spot produced for "Live at 45" and ance is a key first step. aired on TV10, the district's cable channel. Superintendent Sue Stark Influences Zervalic set a critical precedent in condemning the desecra- tion at North and all acts of hatred and bigotry. The response The need to spotlight hate-mongering rather than just hoping stands as the gold standard to which other districts, academic it fades away is high in light of the resurgence, yet again, of institutions and public entities should be held accountable neo-Nazism and the Ku Klux Klan, according to the Southern when prejudice stakes a claim. Poverty Law Center and the Fortunately, swastikas aren't Anti-Defamation League. FBI part of the normal landscape of The need to spotlight data reveal that more than 66 Farmington-Farmington Hills or percent of the 1,462 religion- hate-mongering is high in its schools. The school district's based hate crimes in America broadcast described the swas- last year targeted Jews. light of the resurgence of tika at North as a symbol that The swastika incident at "sends a message of racism, North and the subsequent neo-Nazism and the KKK. aggression and intimidation •reports of hangman's nooses toward Jewish people!' It called inside labs at Central Michigan the act "cowardly." University are part of a larger national trend toward symbolic It went to say: "We unequivocally denounce this act and hate, which can morph into physical harm if left unanswered. what it represents. This type of activity will not be tolerated New York City's Day Out Against Hate, held last Nov. 29, illus- at North Farmington High School or anywhere in our school trates how one city mobilized against hate crimes. district or community!' While some argued that we shouldn't rivet attention on the It declared that "hate is not welcome' at North and that swastika defacement at North, I side with Stulberg, who main- "our students deserve learning environments" free of hostility, tained that the best way to fight hate is to confront it and mus- intimidation and harassment. ter a collective outcry. To turn a blind eye signals that hate isn't That really echoes. so bad; manifestations thus begin to metastasize aggressively. Defacing public property with the mark of Nazism not Taking Action only is contemptuous, but also may violate federal and state The backdrop began Oct. 13 when a motorist along 13 Mile, civil-rights and hate-crime laws. The poster of a new U.S. Civil west of Orchard Lake Road in Farmington Hills, noticed the Rights Commission educational campaign sums it up well: swastika spray-painted on the highly visible rock. Outraged, "Silence is an ally of hate!" she went home to get some paint. She returned to the school Thanks, Principal Jones, for doing the courageous — and to cover up what some dismiss as graffiti but which I call bla- right — thing. ❑ tant filth. The witness took photos before she painted over the rock, according to the Farmington Hills police report. Is it better to repudiate or ignore Linda Stulberg, a North Farmington parent whose family IX swastikas in public places? ti) was incinerated by the Nazis, learned of the vandalism from a student. After corroborating the details and speaking with Z Z How key is it for public school officials other parents about what happened, she contacted Jones, a to denounce hatred? well-respected principal. oan 2. ACE Animal Control Experts Kerry Streng Action Video & Imaging, Inc. Advance Packaging Technologies Ronald M. Applebaum, Esq. Danny Aronovitz, D.P.M. and Marvin Aronovitz, D.P.M. Automatic Apartment Laundries Blossoms, Inc. Bodman LLP Cheryl Melamed Photography Detroit Popcorn Company Dykema Energized-Solutions Kathy Allesandro Evolution Media Fran Victor and Bill Harder Faces in the Air, Ltd. FASTSIGNS of Farmington Hills Barry W. Feldman, M.D. Forest Post Productions Franco Public Relations Group Full Circle Graphics, Inc. •• • OOOOO • • • • • • * • • j arc JARC saiutes its Business Buddies for donations of goods and services over the past 12 months. •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Gayle's Chocolates Glenn Triest Photographic Great Lakes Building, Inc. Great Lakes Landscape Design, Inc. David Grogan Harry's Garden Centers, Inc. Hersch's Lawn Spray Honigman Miller Schwartz and Cohn LLP House of Blinds and Drapery Barry Balbes Jo Bruce Corporate Training Associates Joe Cornell Entertainment Lighting Supply Company Maddin, Hauser, Wartell, Roth & Heller, P.C. Mattko Systems Matt Prentice Restaurant Group Nicole Meadows, D.D.S. Metro Air, Inc. 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