Opinion A MIX OF IDEAS Editorials are posted and archived on JNonline.us. Dry Bones 514AVUOT Editorial The Protocols Lingers T he ill-fated Oslo Accords between the Palestine Liberation Organization and the State of Israel were signed in 1993. That unprec- edented pact between Israel and the PLO was portrayed as a baseline for future talks aimed at resolving final-status issues between the Israeli government and the Palestinian Authority (P.A.), which at that time controlled the West Bank and the Gaza Strip. The P.A. represents the only Palestinian leadership that President Obama believes to be a legitimate peace partner, its lack of interest in actually coming to the negotiating table notwithstanding. The trouble with Obama's belief is that since the now-hollow Oslo Accords, P.A. politi- cal, religious and educational leaders have continually presented The Protocols of the Elders of Zion as a true account of a Jewish conspiracy to rule the globe. It's important that the Jewish commu- nity understands that the P.A., which now governs only the Fatah-controlled West Bank, embraces the notion that the Zionist renaissance that led to the First Zionist Congress at Basel, Switzerland, in 1897 generated The Protocols as a driving force. Oddly, this Russian Empire forgery was exposed 100 years ago, yet the Arab com- munity, including Israel's only possible peace partner, the P.A., still considers The Protocols an authentic document that guides Israel in a sinister Jewish plot to subjugate the world under Jewish rule. How deluded is it that the P.A. has con- sciously elected to weave the infamous, long-dispelled fabrication into the fabric of its already confused society? Clearly, the deception is compelling evidence of the P.A.'s snub of any movement toward real peace. A recent dispatch by the Israeli-based Palestinian Media Watch (PMW), a fore- most authority, reports that in 2004, the P.A. Ministry of Education chose to teach The Protocols as authentic. The 10th- grade textbook History of the Modern and Contemporary World taught that a group of confidential resolutions adopted by the First Zionist Congress — The Protocols of the Elders of Zion — sought world domination. In 2005, the PMW revealed the text to the European Parliament during a lecture. Some of the ministers present were from nations that had funded the writing of the P.A. schoolbooks. Only after that revelation did the P.A. remove the false passage from later editions of the textbook. We concur with the PMW that P.A. ideology accepts The Protocols as genuine, given that senior P.A. educators chose it to be included in the school curriculum and only excised it under European Parliament pressure. In 2006, Dr. Ahmed Bahar, deputy speaker of the Palestinian Parliament, erased any notion that The Protocols had been relegated to the dustbin of history. He declared on P.A. TV: "The killing of children, women and men is promoted by their false Talmud and by their false Bible and The Protocols of the Elders of Zion:' In 2009, P.A. TV, the official television network of the Palestinian Authority, showed Najat Abu-Bakr, a member of the P.A. Parliament, describe Al Jazeera as the only Arab community channel "that behaves in a conflict-seeking manner." He claimed the occupation — Israel — cre- ated the channel to pursue its objectives, namely, The Protocols. We support the hope for two sovereign states, one Palestinian and one Jewish, liv- ing side-by-side and interacting in peace. We just don't see that hope translating into reality while the Palestinians remain influ- enced by a century-old hoax against the Jewish people. ❑ Reality Check Teddy Bears And Stuff T wo more pearls of wisdom from my favorite Detroit Tigers broad- caster: In discussing an opposing player's approach to hitting: "That's not a rem- edy for success!' The question arises, why would you want a remedy if you're successful? In discussing the style of another hitter: "Your lower body should be kept under- neath you." Frankly, I don't know what else you'd do with it. I think I know what he means. But how can one be sure when dealing with a man who once said: "Rondell White is literally on fire." Sound the alarms, boys, and bring out more hose. • Here's a salute to WDIV-TV in its drive to have things both ways. After covering a "news" story about two girls involved in a screaming, hair-pulling match inside their school, and sternly deploring such behavior and the people who let it happen, the station advised its viewers that the complete tape of the two-minute incident would be available on its website that evening. Atta' way, boys, and here's more film of lions devouring Christians and a pizza delivery man being beaten senseless. • People keep mulling over the question of whether Detroit will ever be a great city again. Not if the reaction to Chris Hanson's recent report on NBC News was any guide. Instead of admitting that Hanson did a fairly decent job of delineating the city's prob- lems, Detroit went into the usual defensive posture: Knees up, head down. That never seems to change. For the millionth time, Detroit does not have a perception problem. It has a reality prob- lem. Denial doesn't get it done. • In a pastry display case at Laurel Park Mall in Livonia, a cake bearing the letter- ing "We'll miss you!' If that isn't the story of Michigan in the first decade of the 21st century, I don't know what is. • I am the proud owner of a new teddy bear for the first time in maybe 65 years. Thanks to my wife's mahj buddy, Faye Braverman, of Commerce Township, who belongs to an organization called Sojourn Bear, Inc. They assemble pint-sized stuffed bears meant for people recov- ering from cancer treatment. Mine is in a baseball uniform. After all, you're never too old for a teddy. My mother says I had one as an infant and spent many hours complaining to it after I got shots. But I can't remember its name and neither could she and it van- ished many decades ago. I'm calling the newcomer Nate after my middle name, Nathan. My grandfather was responsible for that. Before arriving at New York's Ellis Island, his name was probably Julius Sandler. But an immigra- tion officer confused his name with his occupation, so Cantors we became. He was sent to a small shul in Danville, Va. A few days after arriving, he spotted a large man walking down the middle of the street and crying: "I got religion! I got religion!" Upon making inquiries, he found out that he was a local character who was known as "Big Julius." He promptly walked over to the courthouse and changed his name to George. Actually his Hebrew name was Nahum Yehuda. But not much has been done with the Nahum part until the arrival of my teddy bear. So a careless immigration official and a Virginia religious enthusiast made me what I am today. Just don't call me Georgie Porgie. ❑ George Cantor's e-mail address is gcantor614@aol.com . May 13 2010 33