NATION/WORLD 4Southemn Mexico divided jy religion SAN JUAN CHAMULA, Mexico- Inside the cavernous Church of San Juan in the highlands of southern Chiapas state, Indian men, women and children live out their devotion to a centuries-old blend of Roman Catholic and pagan rituals. Rows offresh flowers and clay animal statues capped with white candles sur- round the glass-enclosed images ofCatho- saints crowned with bright ribbons. nstead of the sacramental symbols of bread and wine, the Chamula people par- take from hundreds of liter-size bottles of a homemade rum, known as"posh," along with plenty of Coke and Pepsi, which enjoy a sort ofmystical status in religious offerings here. Amid the haze of incense, local religious leaders distribute the small glasses of a strong clear rum fermented from sugar cane that follows the Tzotzil *lians from the time of their birth to the grave. Villages like this one, with its 55,000 militantly traditional inhabitants, have become a bulwark against the wildfire- like spread of evangelical Protestantism, whose adherents in Latin America have jumpedfrom 5.2millionin 1960tonearly 50 million today. In the highlands, it is a conflict awash in the blood of innocents. "The evangelists cannot reason," said omingo Lopez Chacojchu, 63, whose testant brother was expelled from Chamula four years ago. "We are pure Catholics. We know how to pray, how to drink. They don't believe in our traditions. They don't drink. If they return, they will be met with bullets," he said. Several miles from Chamula, in a cinder-block evangelical settlement known as New Palestine, Dominga pez Lopez lives with her four chil- en, including a 4-month-old boy who will never know his father. She is a widow at 29. Her husband, Domingo, a 33-year- old evangelical preacher, was prosely- tizing in the village of Arbenza on Oct. 18 when a group of armed Chamula leaders surrounded the home of an ac- quaintance, she says. A bullet fired by one of the men perforated a wood door d Lopez's heart. Though the owner .the house and 15 other witnesses gave statements to investigators, Lopez and local evangelical leaders say there was no arrest. Her family fled the Chamula village of Tres Cruces five years ago. "If we had not left voluntarily," she says, "they would have killed us. Women were raped. Men were beaten and killed. There were kidnappings." Underthecloak oftradition liepolitical economic realities that are fostering ethnic hatred, the expulsion of tens of thousands ofevangelical Protestants from the highlands and waves of bloodshed in Mexico's poorest andmost-divided state. The Michigan Daily - Monday, January 29, 1996 - 5A, Rabin's assassin oeta ao dfiiese own lega de J Lo AP PHOTO Thousands of Ethiopian Jews rise up in protest outside the prime minister's office in Jerusalem. The demonstrators demanded that Israel's health minister resign for supporting a policy that routinely destroys donated Ethiopian blood. Ethopin Jwsprotest Ismael's destruction ofdntdblood Los Angeles Times TEL AVIV, Israel -Yigal Amir, the confessed assassinof Israeli Prime Min- ister Yitzhak Rabin, took over his own defense yesterday after one of his law- yers quit and the presiding judge ac- cused the second lawyer of incompe- tence. Amir seemed unshaken by the col- lapse of his defense team and calmly cross-examined police investigators who painted a picture of him celebrat- ing Rabin's death after his arrest. "When you were questioning me, what was your impression of my state of mind? Was I angry? Did it look like I was seeking revenge?" Amir asked Mordechai Naftali, one of Amir's ini- tial interrogators. "You said it was not out of ven- geance," Naftali responded. "It was your impression that I was agitated or anxious?" Amir asked. "My impression was that he was as cold as a fish," Naftali said, turning to the three-judge panel hearing the case in Tel Aviv district court. In an earlier court appearance, Amir said that he had not intended to kill Rabin but had hoped to render the prime minister incapable of governing by shooting him in the back. If Amir is convicted of murder, he will serve a mandatory life sentence. If he is convicted of the lesser charge of manslaughter, he will serve no more than 20 years. The 25-year-old Amir, a third-year law student, has confessed to shooting Rabin to death Nov. 4 as the prime minister left a peace rally in Tel Aviv. An observant Jew with far-right politi- cal leanings, Amir said he shot Rabin in the hopes that he would put an endto his peacemaking efforts with the Palestin- ians. Naftali testified that during his first interrogation, Amir asked for cookies and wanted to toast Rabin's death. "He asked me if he could have some food, and I told him, 'Do you see us eating?' He said then, 'Well, give me some cookies,' and I said firmly, 'We don't have any cookies.' Then he said, 'Well,then, let's raise a toast."' At the start of yesterday's session, attorney Mordechai Ofri told the court he was quitting Amir's defense team, citing his lack of control over Amir's line of defense and a shortage of funds' to pay for expert witnesses. Presiding, Judge Edmond Levi accepted Ofri's resignation. That left Jonathan Ray Goldberg, an immigrant from the United States who lives in a Jewish settlement in the West Bank, to defend Amir. Goldberg, who speaks Hebrew poorly and seems to have a limited grasp of the Israeli legal system, is believed to have been hired by supporters of Amir's who hope to turn the case into a show trial for right- wing ideology. Goldberg succeeded yesterday only in enraging Levi, who at one point lost his temper as he rejected Goldberg's appeal to delay the case and give him more time to prepare a defense. "If you ask one more time for a delay, I will consider forcing you to pay all the court expenses," Levi responded. "The negligence in which you are handling this case is unbelievable." Prosecutors said that because Amir disputes only the motive behind the shooting and not the facts surrounding it, they are cutting their witness list" from 47 to 15 and may finish calling witnesses as early as today. It is not clear whether Amir will call any witnesses in his defense. Levi let Amir cross-examine witnesses yester- day even afterGoldberg questionedthem: Los Angeles Times JERUSALEM - Denouncing as racist an Israeli government policy of destroying blood donated by Ethio- pian Jews, thousands of Ethiopians clashed with police outside the prime minister's office during an angry dem- onstration yesterday Police fired water cannons, rubber bullets, percussion grenades and tear gas at the protesters, and several Ethio- pians reported being beaten by club- wielding riot police. Army Radio re- ported that 62 people were injured, 41 of them police officers. Police spokesperson Eric Bar-Chen said police used force only after dem- onstrators broke through fences and attacked the building where Prime Min- ister Shimon Peres was holding the weekly Cabinet meeting. Bar-Chen estimated that between 5,000 and 6,000 Ethiopians joined the demonstration. They were confronted by about 500 police officers. The demonstrators demanded that Health Minister Ephraim Sneh re- sign for supporting the policy of rou- tinely destroying donated Ethiopian blood. Sneh has said the policy - instituted in 1991 by the nation's blood bank - is necessary because Ethiopians have a higher incidence of HIV infection, the human immu- nodeficiency virus that causes AIDS, than any other ethnic group in Israel. He and other health-care officials insist that the policy is based on statistics alone. But yesterday's demonstrators - who ranged from older men and women dressed in traditional robes and carry- ing colorful umbrellas to young people wearing T-shirts and high-topped sneakers - said the blood policy is painful evidence of how Israeli society discriminates against Ethiopians, who are black. Crunching through shattered T glass outside the building, the dem- outthat onstrators were de- fiant. De We have kept si- lent until today," said Natan Solomon, a19-year- old Ethiopian who stood in the crowd. "But this blood is- sue brought us out. we are I We won't be silent anymore." Kifle Tessema, a Leader 32-year-old who Je runs an Ethiopian community health project, agreed. "You put a lot of issues together and sometimes itjust takes one more thing to make the situation ex- plode" he said. "This blood issue is all about racism. What connects us? It is blood. If our blood is not Jewish, than what are we, animals?" Addressing the crowd with a'bullhorn, Addisa Musala, a leader of the Ethio- pian Jewish community, declared Israel's efforts to integrate Ethiopian Jews into an overwhelmingly white Is- raeli society a failure. "For 10 years they have told us that Q I e? our immigration was successful," Musala said to the cheering crowd that packed the parking lot and spilled into the streets outside the p r i m e Fm inrister's of- S havefice. "It was a lie. Today, we td ifound out that we have been treated like animals. ... All , tagw_,eask for is to gZIV i us the { feeling that we are Israeli and raei ... belong to this "a.S O Ce et y." A ddisa Musala MazeZanava, n the Ethipial an 18-year-old l ish c ommunwty who lives in the southern town of Beersheva, said she doubts she will ever feel a part of Israeli society. With his executive offices virtually under sicgc, Peres agreed to meet three leaders of the community. After the 5Csei on, the covernment issued a state- nent sayin it wil I form a committee to examine the blood donation policy and other aspects of Ethiopian integration into Israeli society. Peres promised to chair the committee himself. "In my heart, I am weeping," Immi- gration Minister YairTzaban told Army Radio. Know of news? Call 76-DAILY I 12I 01. .. RECOM I p hone: E 1147 suhnversity (above mo .turs.: 9:00a-1 fr.&sat.: 9:00a-1 E Rin~t ION I &Air rCoveuse+ usc ILDS 363.5800 -p goodtime chadeys), AA 0:00p sundays 1:oop 11Oa800p va) ly J*, 30 y ch d UttE'd. 0%4 y .--- 4 AAU t2,. _ _ . JIJ e 4k: 8esutFOl cell, Cel &~~~ rf5 kA I. A A 0 , -. get it first get it on sal_. ,t MINDRITY HEALTH r February1 " ". Informational Meeting FAILING .,1 )om __j League Be Part of the Solution r.; r"; ; .i :vv: ..; . CMk: ';4::: hyi: :".vrJ f . 'ff Au.. atit' A 1! i .4 .~w I Annilvarlons I111 i r