Page 4 - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, October 4, 1990 EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN 420 Maynard Street Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109 NOAH FINKEL Editor in Chief DAVID SCHWARTZ Opinion Editor Unsigned editorials represent a majority of the Daily's Editorial Board. All other cartoons, signed articles, and letters do not necessarily represent the opinion of the Daily. Reunification II European openness exposes long-silent hatred & D~~AY 9 e PL~hJD rrIgp4 T391 j '( J J Prote. ------W r. st-l*e Protect thle Civil WaBr baRttlefildis 0 0 TUESDAY EVENING, THREE HOURS before German reunification, eight men between 18 and 30 and armed with steel-tipped rubber truncheons went on a rampage through the town of Greif- swald, East Germany yelling "Seig Heil." This incident represents the dark underside of the euphoric patriotism that reunification has evoked, and il- lustrates the growing xenophobia, with a strong current of antisemitism, ac- companying it. Unfortunately, the incident is not an isolated one. U.. In mid-August, a Jewish cemetery in Stuttgart was vandalized, although the event received little media attention. On Sept. 2, before an East German- West German exhibition soccer match held in Leipzig to celebrate the future unification of the East and West soccer leagues, 200 neo-Nazi supporters of both clubs joined in a march through the center of town, chanting fascist slogans. After a violent confrontation with the police and many arrests, weapons were confiscated from the group, ranging from knives to hand- guns. German antisemitism and racism are not new phenomena, but the recent in- crease in neo-Nazi vandalism indicates the far right's increased legitimacy. For neo-Nazi gang violence also has an in- creasingly powerful electoral corollary. The Republikaner Party won 7.1 per- cent of the West German vote in the last European Parliament elections, and 7.5 percent in the local government elections in West Berlin. Their leader at the time, Franz Schonluber, a former Waffen SS offi- cer, has openly defended his war role in his book and has called the Jews the "fifth occupying power" in Germany. The Republikaner party openly calls for the expulsion of the large Turkish community - which Schonluber calls "an alien society"-- from Germany. In addition, Schonluber continues to advocate that AIDS victims should have their genitalia tattooed with an "A." He commented after his party's electoral successes last year: "For 40 years, Germans have been afraid to say fully what they think. So when some- body starts saying what they all think, it gives people a freedom; young peo- ple feel free." Eu. - .The problem of antisemitism is cer- tainly not exclusively a German one. Jean Marie LePen, head of the "Front National" in France, a party which holds 10 of the 81 French seats in the European Parliament, has remarked that the Holocaust was a "detail" of World War II. LePen has been con- victed for incitement to hatred for making a joke about gas chambers to a Jewish official. LePen's emergence coincides with increased acts of antisemitism through- out France, where graffiti, gasoline bombs thrown at synagogues, and at- tacks on Jewish cemeteries have be- come increasingly common. Although the resurgence of the far right is real, its infiltration into the po- litical mainstream is perhaps its most threatening aspect. In 1979, Margaret Thatcher spoke of her fear that Great Britain was being "swamped by a people of a different culture." This thinly-veiled racist appeal was followed with an immigration policy effectively barring people of color from Britain's shores. The European Community is following her lead. In West Germany, visas are now obligatory for people from most Third World countries; any entrance of people of "non-European" stock is seen as increasingly undesir- able. On May 21, the French parliament passed a law legalizing the "accelerated" processing of refugees' dossiers. In reality, this foretold a shortened application process, granting refugees callous, superficial treatment and eventual exclusion. As these policies make clear, the far right is not some isolated aberration, however "extreme" some of the inci- dents committed in its name. The Eu- ropean Community, for all its talk of a "common home" in 1992, is clearly working to marginalize large portions of its residents deemed "alien." To the extent that institutional structure rein- forces supposedly isolated destruction, one cannot hope to redress the problem at hand. This problem is particularly glaring in Germany right now, where all talk of "institutions" and "structures" is positive and where the mood is gener- ally celebratory. Germany's new lead- ers - themselves from the right - are determinedly looking forward with lit- tle thought of their country's dark past and racist present. This trend is perhaps best under- scored by the insensitivity evident in Chancellor Kohl's proposal that Nov. 9 - rightly remembered until now as Kristellnacht, the night when Hitler's pogrom against the Jews took on one of itsdmostavirulent expressions - should be a national holiday com- memorating the downing of the Wall. The Berlin Wall may have fallen, but the wall used to separate Europe's alienated people's from Europe's vast resources remains. By T ony Siuber There is a place at the Antietam Na- tional Battlefield near Sharpsburg, Mary- land called Bloody Lane. It is a sunken road with picket fence on the eastern slope. On September 17, 1862, thousands of young men in blue charged the road held by young men in grey and they were repulsed with devastating results and thus the name Bloody Lane. I stood on Bloody Lane this past summer as the Maryland sky was darkening and the wind began to howl. Being familiar with the battle, it was a very eerie feeling, to say the least, to walk on the same ground where thou- sands went to their deaths for causes they believed in. Reading books results in an academic and intellectual learning experience, but actually going to a place of history results in an emotional learning experience, very powerful and unforgettable. This battlefield and others within a hundred miles of Washington, D.C. are being threatened by enemies much more vicious than Lee or Grant. The enemies are now land speculators and developers who want to turn these places of history so important to the fabric of the American identity into shopping malls and condo- miniums. They want to deprive future generations of that invaluable learning ex- perience which I was lucky enough to get this summer. Those fields in Maryland and Virginia, where a nation split at the seams tore into each other with a savagery previously un- known to warfare are a symbol of our Tony Silber is an LSA senior and a member of the Daily Opinion Staff. country. They are all we have left of our heritage. Books and photographs are im- portant, but paper burns. Land remains as the greatest teacher of them all. Senator Dale Bumpers (D-Ark) is now composing a bill that would eliminate any speculation or development on Civil War battlefields. This proposed legislation is vital to securing the future of these sights and it should be supported wholeheartedly. This entire controversy stems from the at- tempt occurring right now to develop huge areas of the Brandy Station battlefield in southwest Maryland. This field was the sight of the largest cavalry battle ever on this continent in 1863 as 20,000 soldiers on horseback fought to a bloody draw. in the country. They have become very popular attractions, especially for families, but more importantly they have become centers of historical learning for young and old, alike. Each battlefield has a visitor center which contains an abundance of in- formation on the battle as well as litera- ture to take home. There are guided tours, walking and driving, which enable the vis* itor to appreciate the significance of the sight all the more. But as the growing metropolis of Washington, D.C. continues to creep into the pristine farming counties of northern Virginia and southern Maryland, many of the National Battlefield Parks there like The enemies are now land speculators and developers who wane to turn these places of history so important to the fabric of the American identity into shopping malls and condominiums. Last year, an attempt to develop large areas of the Manassas National Battlefield in Manassas, Virginia was wisely refused, but money talks loud and this controversy will continue until sound legislation is enacted. The battlefields are operated and maintained by the National Parks Service division of the Department of the Interior, but they bring virtually no income to the government as they are free to the public. As a result, the cost to keep up these bat- tlefields around the country is quite high and to local developers, these parks appear as wasted real estate that could be con- verted to income-generating projects. I visited battlefields in six states this year as was very surprised to find many other visitors like myself from every state Antietam, Manassas, and Brandy Station will be targets of greedy developers with- out any sensitivity as to the historical significance of the places. That is why the need for the legislation sponsored by Bumpers is imperative right now while the fields remain protected. A visit to some of these battlefields will convert any skeptical mind as to the importance of this cause. It is difficult to describe, but when you stand on Bloody Lane and there is silence all around, and you reflect on what happened on that spot, the feeling comes over you as you realize that you walk on hallow, almost sacred ground. No book can give that to you and the world without another shopping center seems a very good place indeed. 0 Drunk Driving Michigan should impose much stiffer sanctions 'THE STATE IS NEW JERSEY. IT IS 2:30 a.m. and you have just stumbled out of the local watering hole, keys in hand, ready to face the short ride to the gomfort of home. But as you are driv- ing, you notice the flash of lights in your rearview mirror; the sound of the 'radio is muted by the sound of a siren. The officer notes that you have been weaving up the road, and asks you to take a breathalyzer. The test confirms that you are legally drunk. Upon your first conviction, your license will be suspended for at least six months. No exceptions. Driving while intoxicated is among the leading causes of automobile casu- alties in the United States today. In re- cent years, many states have set out to deter would-be drunk drivers by im- posing stiffer penalties even for first- time offenders - and Michigan should join them. Legislation pending in Lansing is intended to speed up the process of mandatory 30-day "hard" suspension for those convicted of DWI for the first time. Also, the legislation mandates a 45-day time limit between the incident and the suspension. This qualifies the state for $6 million over five years in federal incentive grants to the Office of Highway Safety Planning. While these new penalties are a step in the right direction, they do not go far enough. Other states that have imposed stricter penalties have met with a de- crease in drunk driving incidents and related deaths. New Jersey implemented its new DWI laws in 1984, requiring a mandatory six-month to one-year li- cense suspension for first-time of- fenders, along with a three-year auto insurance surcharge of $1,000 per year. Other states, such as New York and Massachusetts, have similar laws. In the years that followed the im- plementation of this new law, New Ta enra cr %'7 r r vr i ni a 1 Abortion is not an issue of feminism To the Daily: I am a female graduate student at the University. I consider myself a feminist for many reasons. I believe in the intrinsic qualities that the feminine - in men and women - embodies. I believe feminism denotes a school of thought and inequality. I am committed to working for social jus- tice to the best of my ability, for all: les- bians, gays, heterosexuals, people of all colors and cultures. The purpose of declaring my "feminist creed"? To prepare pro-choice readers for my belief that abortion is not a feminist issue. It is a moral one. I believe that life begins at conception and abortion is mur- der. To say that this is my belief and I have no-right to inflict my morals upon another is to say murder is wrong, but only for some people. Aren't we doing to our vulnerable un- born what men have historically done to our "vulnerable" gender all along? Which form of oppression is more powerful than murder? To argue abortion from a feminist perspective makes no sense. Equality de- mands that we all take responsibility for our actions. Women cannot hold men re- sponsible for the biological fact that women are the gender that can become pregnant when we have sex. Abortion is societies' violent, quick-fix solution. Abortion due to the wrenching reality of rape and incest creates further complexity. However, raking the life of an ,,nlhfrnr. h;1 A hLana a n nmm;"a'ri a tion). We need to employ non-violent al- ternatives to pregnancy, such as adoption. We need to address the feminization of poverty. We need to start educating at young ages. The tragedy of Becky Bell's death is not that she had no choice, but she made the wrong one. Katherine Weber Social Work graduate student Caption was ignorant To the Daily: The caption "Dumbo (actually Ganesha the Scribe) laments the death of coffee table books in ancient India, (9/21/90)" describing a scene from Peter Brooks' movie, The Mahabharata, was rather in- sensitive and totally unnecessary. I realize that this was supposed to be humorous, but it bordered on offensive since Ganesha is the Lord of Wisdom in Hinduism. Hindu Gods and rituals may look strange to the Western eye when they are taken solely at face value, as the author of this caption does, by referring to Gane- sha as Dumbo. However, they are highly symbolic in meaning, and function as guides to the spiritual seeker. The depic- tion of Ganesha's face as that of an ele- phant has many layers of significance rel- evant to the pursuit of wisdom. For ex- ample, the large ears, head, and superb memory -of an elephant signify the ability to acquire, assimilate, and retain .large amounts of knowledge. The trunk has an amazing range of capacity; it can uproot trees or even pluck a single blade of grass. Metzgar's comments are 'mystifying' To the Daily: Emily Metzgar (9/27/90) entreats us to recognize that teenage mother Becky Bell* died because she "broke the law," and that "had she obeyed the law, Becky would not have [died]." How illuminating! The crisis of clan- destine abortions boils down to a matter of laws and lawbreakers after all. I'm sure bereft parents and confused pregnant mi- nors all across Indiana will be deeply con- soled to learn this - there is a new cate- gory of dead criminals (frightened pregnant girls)! I'd like to thank Metzgar for point- ing that out. Irony aside, though, what is truly mys- tifying in Metzgar's commentary on the Bell case is her assertion that "legislation like Indiana's is enacted to prevent situa- tions like [Bell's tragic abortion]." It's in- tended to prevent illegal abortions? What can she possibly mean?. If by some bizarre and inscrutable rea- soning Metzgar is correct about the intent* of Indiana's legislation, then perhaps she should go a step further and make an effort to discern between the law's intent and its effect. Russel Fraker School of Natural Resources Thanks for helping To the Daily: We would like to thank individuals and grouns who have recently offered unbiased