oints of view >> Send letters to: letters@thejewishnews.corn Editorials There's No Mistaking Al Qaida Is A Real Threat H amas, Palestine Islamic Jihad, Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigades, the Palestine Liberation Organization and the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine grab head- lines as terrorist organizations that endanger Israel. But let there be no doubt: Al Qaida, the most notorious pro- prietor of terror, is making deep inroads into the Jewish state by providing an online means to acquire weapons and find jihadi inspiration. "Over the course of 2012 and 2013, Al Qaida leader Ayman Zawahiri has increasingly mentioned Israel as a target in his communications to followers, as part of a drive to place the Palestinian conflict at the center of his global jihadi narrative," reported Steve Emerson's Washington-based Investigative Project on Terrorism on Jan. 28. Case in point: Israel's secret security service, Shin Bet, has taken down an Al Qaida cell thought to be strategiz- ing at least two mega terrorist attacks in Israel. News of the Shin Bet arrest of three Palestinians made weeks ago came Jan. 22. The suspects interacted with Al Qaida via Skype and Facebook, underscoring the ease of cultivating new terrorist recruits via social media. Reports say the cell handler, eager to develop more terrorist units, was based in the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip – and he reported directly to Zawahiri. What raises the caliber of the arrests is President Obama's State of the Union vow to doggedly pursue Al Qaida. Let's hope he's serious about that pursuit given his administration's up and down attitude toward Al Qaida, post Osama Bin Laden. If the Afghan government signs a pending security arrangement, Obama said last week, "a small force of Americans could remain in Afghanistan with NATO allies." Their task would be to train and assist Afghan forces as well as maintain counterterrorism operations to identify "any remnants of Al Qaida" and keep them at bay. Obama acknowledged that while Al Qaida's core leadership is weaker, danger lurks "as Al Qaida affiliates and other extremists take root in different parts of the world." That's why he must respect Al Qaida's capacity to surface anywhere. The attacks Al Qaida planned in Israel are chilling, despite the Obama administration's curious downplaying President of them as "aspira- Obama tion." Reports say both the U.S. Embassy in Tel Aviv and the International Convention Center near the central bus station in Jerusalem would've been bombed. Meanwhile, a suicide truck bomber in Jerusalem would've targeted emergency respond- ers there. Obama cited Al Qaida networks in Yemen, Somalia, Iraq, Mali and Syria. To that list of hotbeds we add Lebanon and Egypt's Sinai Peninsula. Obama promised to keep our military strong, but, in deference to our war- weary nation, observed: "We must fight the battles that need to be fought, not those that terrorists prefer from us – large-scale deployments that drain our strength and may ultimately feed extremism." Obama talked not just about staying vigilant against terrorist networks, but also about reinforcing America's focus on drone use, surveillance reform, cyber attacks, the Guantanamo Bay prison – "and strong and principled diplomacy." As revolution, insurrection and brutal regimes keep the Middle East a tin- derbox, and as Al Qaida galvanizes its fundamentalist mission amid the tumult, Israel must rely, more than ever, on its ultra-capable security and reconnais- sance operations – and hope Obama delivers on his pledge that America will stand "steadfast" with the Israeli people. Clearly, it's no longer up in the air whether Al Qaida will turn its attention to Israel. _I Vatican's Pius XII Archives Must Be Opened V atican City is sending up vir- tual smoke to signal its inten- tion to confront the Roman Catholic Church's contentious past and ultimately open the secret archives relating to the World War II pontificate of Pope Pius XII. World Jewry long has questioned whether the pope did enough to help Jews during the Holocaust. The Vatican maintains Pius worked behind the scenes to save Jews. According to Jewish Virtual Library: "For much of the war, he maintained a public front of indifference and remained silent while German atrocities were committed. He refused pleas for help on the grounds of neutrality, while making statements condemning injus- tices in general. Privately, he sheltered a small number of Jews and spoke to a few select officials, encouraging them to help the Jews." Opening the archives should defini- tively answer the question that has lin- gered for nearly 70 years. Document catalogu- ing has taken six years. News reports indicate A- the thousands of files could be opened within 18 months, pending Pope Francis' approval. In 2009, the Church declared Pius "vener- Pope Francis able" and on the path toward sainthood despite the Italian-born pontiff seeming to act more out of political expedience than moral conscience when it came to wartime Jews. Argentine Rabbi Abraham Skorka, a longtime friend of Pope Francis, told The Sunday Times of London that Francis doesn't believe Pius should be beatified and canonized until his war- time role has been assessed. So open- ing the archives is inevitable. Underscoring this is the 2010 book On Heaven and Earth, which Francis, then Buenos Aires Archbishop Jorge Bergoglio, co-wrote with Skorka. The then-archbishop wrote: "Opening the archives of the Shoah seems reasonable. Let them be opened up and let everything be cleared up. Let it be seen if they could have done something [to help], and until what point they could have helped. If they made a mistake in any aspect of this, we would have to say: 'We have erred.' We don't have to be scared of this – the truth has to be the goal." How refreshing! Jews learned early on in his first-year pontificate that Francis, though modest and priestly, likes to mingle with the masses. He quickly became beloved. He encourages understanding and respect, while condemning any sort of religious or ethnic prejudice. He should have a compelling impact on Jewish-Catholic discourse. His predecessor, Benedict XVI, expand- ed the relationship between Catholics and Jews initiated by John Paul II. But Benedict lacked the resolve to challenge the ghost of Pius. Francis, less inhibited by the papacy, is destined to rise to that important challenge. Guest Column Detroit's Gotta Have Art o city can thrive or even survive without its art, which is why I've been so heartbroken over the potential sale of artwork at the Detroit Institute of Arts. However, while we've all been paying attention to the DIA, another art phenom- enon has been taking hold of the city of Detroit. I first noticed it last year during a tour of Jewish Detroit when I spoke to Jimmy Ketai and Dan Mullen, who both work at Bedrock, a Quicken Loans com- pany. Something Dan said really stuck with me. He mentioned that all the surveys and studies about how to revitalize the once-great city of Detroit had one suggestion in common. Get the artists on board! The idea that artists could actually save Detroit so intrigued me that I began to investigate just what was happening to our once-great city. What I found out is so exciting I feel the need to scream it from the rooftops (or write about it in the IN). Enter the Red Bull House of Art as one prime example. Located in Detroit's Eastern Market dis- trict, this cavernous underground area — once used as a prohibition hideaway — has been transformed into raw studio space. Found inside the newly nicknamed "Creative Corridor; the gallery allows artists who work in a variety of media, from oil painting to fiber to steel sculpture, Red Bull House of Art Art on page 48 February 6 • 2014 47