2004-12-29-Kolender-Casuto-Zuckerman |
||||
|
|
|||
|
|
By
Donald
H. Harrison Sheriff Bill Kolender recently told a forum at Tifereth Israel Synagogue that in the wake of the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks, “I truly believe I will be dead, so will my children, and my grandchildren will be very old before this hatred is ever over.” The sheriff said that
among his fellow law enforcement officers, “there is not one of us who does
not believe that something else is going to happen. We do not know when, we do
not know where, nor how, but we know something is going to happen.” “We are doing our best to train our people to be alert,
to be observant, to have an intelligent system that allows us to know who in
fact would be dangerous in this community—we have done that. We have a joint
terrorism task force with the Federal Bureau of Investigation, which is second
to none in our state in terms of cooperation and collaboration among all the law
enforcement agencies. “ Zuckerman, who gave up his
Beth Am post to create the Emergency Response Foundation —which takes American
safety officials to Israel and Ireland to learn how they deal with terrorist
incidents—commented that the last name of Osama “Bin Laden” literally
means in Arabic “son of judgment” and Bin Laden has judged both Christians
and Jews adversely. “When we (Jews) think
about the Spanish Inquisition, we think about Christians coming up and saying
‘convert to Christianity or die by the sword,’” said Zuckerman, who also
serves as a chaplain to the San Diego Sheriff’s Department.
In the Inquisition,
“more Muslims died than Jew,” Zuckerman said. The current terrorism “is a
payback for the Crusades,” he said. “Israel
can fall off the map tomorrow, and it would not change.
The fact is that the United States is known (in Bin Laden’s parlance)
as the Crusaders. So the hatred
goes back centuries.” Casuto said it is
important that as our nation responds to terrorism, “we are not going to
stereotype an entire people. We are
not going to be barbaric in the way that we respond to those who would do us
harm. Every totalitarian, dictatorial regime in history has underestimated the
power of a democratic people. The
key to our success will be that we will fight this war and win it as members of
a democratic society—not as members of a frightened, terrified society that is
prepared to give up their individual freedoms for security, which will never be
total.” Zuckerman said the San
Diego County bomb squad gets called out 500 times a year, frequently to deal
with munitions left over from World War II days.
In comparison, he said, Israel’s bomb squad “is called out 7,000
times a year,” usually to deal with terrorist incidents or threats. Kolender commented that it
was in Israel he first saw a robot that can blow up bombs under the guidance of
law enforcement personnel stationed safely nearby in a mobile monitoring unit. Today, San Diego law enforcement has similar capabilities, he
said. Casuto cautioned that
“Israelis are prepared to put up with things that this country is not prepared
to put up with—unless, God forbid, something happens.”
He told of Israeli police officers coming to San Diego, and going out
with ADL personnel to restaurants, and “they all said the same thing: ‘I am
uncomfortable that there isn‘t a guard at the door.’
“One thing Israelis
really know about is shopping, and when we would go into a mall, they were
uncomfortable,” Casuto added. “There were 14 different ways into the mall,
and none of the stores had guards. In Israel, the police have the right and the
authority to close down a restaurant, a hotel, or a store that doesn’t have a
guard in place. That isn’t going to be the United States, and it is never
going to be the United States. |