FORUM Lessons from Yassir Arafat to Minister Louis Farrakhan Yassir Arafat of the Palestinian Liberation Organization is a lot like Minister Louis Farrakhan. They share some tenets of Islam. Both have exercised immense stature in a world of politics overlain with religion and race for many years. Arafat and Farrakhan are representa tives of organizations and spokesmen for people whom both portray as "despised ... living in distressing and despotic conditions." Both have described their people, the Palestinians and (inner city) African Americans as "victims of tyrannical politics." Both have long experienced resistance to their positions and sometimes to their very LIFT EVERY VOICE By BILL TURNER presence. Both have been hated for what they represent and for what they say. Both continue to fight for the same thing. One of them has changed. Lately, Arafat has made some recasts of himself and his approach. The results of the "New Arafat" are instructive to Mr. Farrakhan. Yas sir Arafat, long screened through a public image of pariah and mad man, has long found himself cloaked as the shadowy figure in Middle Eastern politics: the demonized, pistol-toting and crafty terrorist, someone no one could ignore, but whom few wanted to deal with. That has changed. There is a new Arafat. In a trip to the United States earlier this month, he said, "We are looking for a new era; why put obstacles in front of it." Seems that he and his advisors figured out that he ? and his image as the aggressive and non-compromising "Arab" ? was the heart of the problem of miscommunication with the Jewish people. On the larger stage, Arafat ? or at least his image -? was the major hurdle and hindrance between the Palestinian people and the world's under standing of their claims. On his official visit to the United States, Arafat was warmly greeted, like a visiting head of state, at the United Nations in New York. Arafat and his ?oup ? the Palestinian Authority ? met with the 15 members of the Security Council of the United Nations. Near Plains, Ga., tourists waited in line for hours to view Arafat in the company of former President Jimmy Carter. Former President George Bush and former Secretary of State James A. Baker held a din ner for him in Houston. Most significantly, Arafat had the once unthinkable invitation to address a New York City breakfast of the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations. The lion sat with the lamb and neither told the other which used to be thought of as which. "We've come a long way," said the past presi dent of the conference, Howard Squadron. Arafat went back to Gaza ? literally the high ground ? with public opinion in his favor. In fact. President Clinton rebuked a recent decision by Israel to build housing in East Jerusalem. Arafat's new approach ? based on the value of advocating his people's posUtQP Vyit^OMt adversarial ? has bro ken the pattern of tha$|jji|pFMat