Opinion A MIX OF IDEAS Dry Bones Editorials are posted and archived on JNonline.us. AND THE U.S. o A LOWERED ITS FLAG Editorial Shifting Campus Sands V andalism of sukkahs on college campuses continues to be an annual event with at least two struck each year according to Hillel: The Foundation for Jewish Campus Life. The most notable attack this year took place Oct. 3 at Stanford University in Palo Alto, Calif. But sukkahs aren't the only overtly Jewish targets of vandals prowling U.S. campuses. Recent reports of anti-Jewish graffiti range from swastikas painted on dormitory walls to anti-Israel slogans scrawled on buildings. The American Jewish community must stay vigilant. Vandals often become bolder when they sense a lack of restraints or disinterest in their acts, which clearly are meant to draw publicity. The newly revised edition of "The UnCivil University," a publication of the Institute for Jewish and Community Research in San Francisco, underscores what the Jewish Telegraphic Agency (JTA) terms "a growing atmosphere of anti- Israelism and anti-Semitism on North American campuses:' That's an authentic red flag. While violence against Jewish students isn't as severe as it was when "The UnCivil FACE IT' University" was first published in 2005, anti-Israeli and anti-Semitic rhetoric on campus "has risen to a crescendo — the amount of background noise keeps the debate vitriolic:' the publication now reports (www.unciviluniversity.org ). The JTA report reveals a troubling trend. Publication co-author Aryeh Weinberg told JTA that universities don't always work effectively to defuse situations. And the Jewish community is often hesitant to respond, deferring to national organiza- tions like the Anti-Defamation League or Hillel. There's a ray of hope, however. Jewish students confronted by anti-Jewish or anti-Israel acts have begun to exchange fear and isolation for advocacy, with sup- port from the broader campus community. For example, Christian, Muslim and Hindu student groups reached out to the Stanford University Hillel following the October sukkah vandalism, Hillel Rabbi Mychal Copeland told JTA. In response to the outpouring of sup- portive phone calls and e-mail messages, Stanford's Jewish Student Association invited the entire campus to join Hillel for Shabbat dinner in the sukkah on Oct. 9, the last night of the holiday. Sixty people TO REMEMBER THE VICTIMS. /A I * ictu re crowded into the make- shift structure to eat and celebrate together. We're heartened by the interfaith nature of that sukkah celebra- tion. JSA President Jeff Gettinger got it right in TO OPEN ITS EYES A MORE EFFECTIVE his letter thanking the AND DEAL WITH RESPONSE WOULD Stanford community. THE DANGER IT BE FOR AMERICA Noting the temporary FACES. and flimsy nature of the sukkah, he wrote: "This is a reminder that no matter how rooted and permanent we may seem, each individual, each community is dependent on some- thing larger than itself. What grounds the suk- DryBonesBlog.com kah is not the canvas are increasing on campus. The headlines and metal that makes up the frame: It is the people and commu- may seem less daunting, but don't for an instant think the danger has diminished. nity that fill it:' But we can't become complacent: Alarm It still exists and echoes — boldly and in more subtle, but equally perilous, ways. still counters too many of the positive Beware of trends that seem moderating. stories. We must heed the anti-Zionist The vibrancy of Jewish campus life and the rallies, Jewish hate pronouncements and safety of Jewish students are at stake. E Holocaust denial advertisements that Reality Check Detroit Tapestry My mother wrote in white ink on the black page of the photograph album. It is a picture of the two of us standing on a footbridge. "V-J Day on Belle Isle she wrote. "The only quiet place in the city on the day Japan surrendered:' It was Aug. 15, 1945, and half a world away, the city of Hiroshima lay in terrify- ing, radioactive ruins. The population of Detroit was close to 1.9 million. The estimates at Hiroshima, where several war industries were concentrated, was some- where over 400,000. Last month, I received an e-mail show- ing pictures of a vibrant city of skyscrap- ers, lights, streets full of people, with a population of slightly more than a million. Want to guess which it was? I offer a Detroit tapestry: • "Storefronts are empty, theaters are dark. "Grass on the sidewalks but none in the park. Me and my town; we just wanna be loved:' • I have a friend who is lost in the '50s. In his mind, it is mid- way through that decade. Gordie Howe and the Wings have just won their fourth Stanley Cup in six years. Bobby Layne and the Lions have two in the bag and a third just two years away. Al Kaline is the youngest bat- ting champ in American League history, although he'll have to wait another 13 years for his first championship with the Tigers. He spends a lot of his day on e-Bay, looking for memorabilia from that era. It was a time when everything was right and if you were growing up in Detroit you knew ... you just knew ... especially at Thanksgiving, that you were living in one of the best cities in the world. "Hold on to the past:' says my friend:' "It's all we've got:' • "Goin' to Chicago; sorry, but I can't take you:' • Thousands of Detroiters crowd against the doors of Cobo Hall, expecting to get free money from the government. "It's Obama money:' one of them shouts at a radio reporter. "It's from his own stash:' I don't think she was kidding. • Jennie Clow was the prin- cipal at Roosevelt Elementary. In the school office was a pho- tograph of a Ford biplane that was named after her. I wish I had thought to ask why. I like to think she may have been friends with Amelia Earhart as an adventuresome young woman, but went into the education game, instead. My first week in kindergarten, I stepped into the path of someone who was throw- ing an empty pop bottle on the play- ground. It opened a gash in my head and I had to be driven to my uncle's medical office at the Maccabees Building. It left a nasty blood stain on the back seat of Jennie Clow's Ford. • Roosevelt was torn down several years ago when the neighborhood no longer had enough school-age children to justify its cost. • "By day I make the cars And by night I make the bars:' • My mother wrote in white ink on the last black page of the photograph album. I am walking off, waving, typewriter case in hand, to cover a Tigers game for the Free Press in 1967. "How beautiful the city has been this summer;' she wrote. "I hope it continues:' George Cantor's e-mail address is gcantor614@aol.com . November 26 • 2009 53