Historic Conference Launches UJA Drive Detroit Shares in Initial Gifts Totalling $27,000,000 (Continued from Page 1) Presented as a report on Israel's status, Mr. Sharett gave a .brilliant analysis of the relationship of Israel to the Diaspora. He began his report by re- ferring to his meeting, 10 months ago, with the then Secretary of State George C. Marshall and his assistant, Robert Lovett, after which he pro- ceeded immediately to Palestine, on the eve of the declaration of the Jewish State's independence. When he arose to speak the audience spontan- eously began to sing the Hatikvah and there was prolonged applause when he told of his efforts to secure the recognition of Israel by the nations of the world—a task in which he was spared the need of writing to the United States because of Presi- dent Truman's prompt action on May 14. Mr. Sharett paid tribute to the determina- tion and courage of Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion and declared that "his place in history is secure for all time." He also praised "the phenomenally brilliant American," Dr. Ralph Bundle, for his efforts to make peace in the Middle East. He was especially effective in his evaluation of the Arab problem. Declaring that Israel's desire is to live in peace with her neighbors, Mr. Sharett pointed out that the original UN decision called for an almost equal division in population between Jews and Arabs, with 650,000 Jews to have lived there as against 400,000 Arabs. The flight of the Arabs, to the total surprise of the Jews but as a result of instigation by Arab states who believed they would return to drive the Jews into the sea, has changed the picture entirely. Now, he said, a return of Arabs to Israel is impossible because the Jewish State has been built on an entirely dif- ferent basis, strictly as a Jewish community, un- like the plans originally envisioned. The only solution now, he said. is for the Arab states to re- settle their refugees. Part of the funds needed for this purpose, he pointed out, will come from the compensation to Arabs by Israel for lands which Arabs had abandoned. Mr. Sharett revealed that states across the sea already were planning to welcome Jews who were to be driven out of Palestine by the Arabs. To this extent, it was believed. that Israel would be defeated. He paid tribute to the Jewish pioneers and their army which accomplished the superhuman task of defeat- ing seven invading armies with few weapons at their disposal: Mr. Sharett also described the expansion of territory in Israel. Under the UNSCOP Israel was to have 62 per cent of the 10,000 square miles up to the Jordan. After the Jews were forced to yield a part of the ter- ritory, the division was to have been55 per cent to 45 for the Arabs. As a result of the war started by the Arabs, Israel now has 77.3 per cent of that territory. Asserting that there can be no permanent peace as long as the Arab problem exists, Mr. Sharett said that Israel is vitally interested in solving the refugees' prob- lem; that proposals for their return represents 'a "false remedy;" that only their resettlement in neighboring countries will bring a solution. "We have not solidified ourselves in order to find ourselves again attacked from within and without," he declared. "Israel has evolved as a purely Jewish structure and Arabs would find them- selves in a totally different country from the one they left. The UJA must take it into consideration that funds are needed for compensation to Arabs for their lands." Immigration the last 10 months reached 170,000 and the total for the first year of liberation, as of May 15, will reach 200,000, Mr. Sharett re- ported. In the last five months, he said, the average number of settlers per month was 24,000. He declared that the time to disarm has not yet come, "even if we demobilize to some extent in the near future. We all have a vision of peace, but we shall not be the first in the world to disarm. By obeying the sheer instinct of self-preservation, we shall retain an army at as small a percentage as possible. Therefore we must increase immigration to be able to draw upon workers as well as a defense force. We multiply at a smaller rate than our neighbors, although the govern- ment now has a program of encouraging births and of discouraging infant mortality." An interesting pOrtion of his address was his descrip- tion of the acquisition of the Negev, the occupation of Elath and the demands by Jews in Israel for rapid devel- opment of the southern portion of the state. "There are no economic miracleS," Mr. Sharett pointed out. "If you want to produce you must invest. You must have hospitals and schools for the newcomers. We want to see Israel teeming with economic activity, politically free. Our people are aglow with Messianic impatience." The Foreign Minister said that "without the area of land we owned and accumulated before May 14, with-; out industrial and military equipment, without those potentials, we would not have had a Jewish State. All these helped us achieve our position." He praised the "foresight" of Dr. Nahum Gold- maim who advocated an immediate solution of the problem by accepting statehood in a part of Pal- estine. This statement was interpreted as a vindica- tion of those who accepted and advocated partition. At the same time, Mr. Sharett praised the activities of Dr. Abba Hillel Silver; Dr. Emanuel Neumann and the American Zionist Emergency Council for their tremendous efforts which had led to the favor- able UN decision and for having accepted the de- cision for immediate statehood by abandoning their earlier stand. Here, too, it was clear that he was referring to the acceptance of partition by the American Jewish leaders. . Mr. Sharett . also paid honor to Rudolph Sonneborn, Abraham Feinberg and the group who puchased ships for transporting immigrants at a time when such actions were attacked as "illegal" by the mandatory power. He said that the cnly boundaries in Jewish responsibil- ities to the Jewish state are those of the Jewish hearts. "The UJA," he declared, "is the instrument for the ful- fillment of our needs." He expressed joy over Henry Morgenthau's return to leadership in the UJA. At this point he stated: "We deeply regret the controversy that took place and we were overjoyed to hear that the UJA again is on the march as a force in American Jewish life and that it is headed by Mr. Morgenthau. The work has begun. You must and can exceed your goal. I have heard' it said that business is not too good. Let us rather inquire into the state of business of the Jewish people. The business of the Jewish people is in a state of highest boom. All meetings today shine in the reflected glory of Israel. They all partake of that glathour. But there still are breakers ahead, dangers to be overcome. Between triumph and catastrophe there is only one step. It is up to you to take that step and to assure that triumph." Several -times during the sessions,. references were made to the restoration of unity in the UJA and the return to leadership of Messrs. Morgenthau and Montor. Mr. Morgenthau discarded the prepared text of his opening address to declare that unity would not have been possible without the efforts of Berl Locker, chair- man of the Jewish Agency Executive, and Dr. Nahum Goldmann, the support of Edward M. M. Warburg and the sympathetic understanding of David Ben-Gurion. He expressed confidence that 1949 will be at least as good as 1948 in dollars and cents and that "all of us will have to give as never before. It is a wonderful feeling that we again have a UNITED Jewish appeal. Mr. Sharett can take back with him a message of encouragement to Israel's Finance Minister Eliezer Kaplan who is sitting on pins waiting for the results of this meeting." He added that "business will be good and profits ample." "The old team is back again," he said, referring to Mr. Montor. U. S. Secretary of Agriculture Charles F. Brannan praised the "perfect democracy" of Israel's Knesset and 'Israel's role as "a bastion of freedom and liberty in the Middle East." He bewailed the "callousness of na- tions and governments toward the problem of refugees in the last 15 years" and said that Israel's reception of 180,000 immigrants is "more of a feat than building a government or fighting a war." Mr. Warburg (who will address the opening fund-raising event of the Detroit Allied Jewish Campaign next Tuesday) reported that 10 out of the 50 DP camps in Germany already have been closed. He declared: "Into this hall has come a sense of history," and he warned that it must not\be watered down into a sense of routine. He told of the move- ment of Jews from Yemen, from North Africa, from every port of exit, with the aid of the JDC. Judge Morris Rothenberg, national JNF president and acting chairman of the UPA, urged that we should not "lull ourselves into the false belief that our task is done. The ideal Jews nurtured through the ages was to end the homelessness of a people, and thus restore them 'once more to dignity and national creativeness on their own land. This is the moment to end that home- lessness." Speaking of the "tough job" to reconvene the UJA, Mr. Locker stated that "this conference is proof ithat it has been accomplished and that the UJA is in work- ing order." Dr. Abraham Granovsky, world JNF president, said: "Our frontiers must be secured by the creation of deep belts of 'security settlements' to guard the approaches of Israel, Strategic villages must be established along all major communication and transportation routes." A message to the conference from Dr. Emanuel Neumann, ZOA president, declared that the UJA this year "must command the support and devotion of all sections of American Jewry." Yaakov Zerubavel, Chief of the Department for Middle East and Oriental Countries of the Jewish Agency, warned that "Jews in some Moslem lands are threatened with death or imprisonment and confisca- tion of their property unless they can flee to Israel. The 21 Jews recently tried in absentia and sentenced to death in Iraq were extremely fortunate to escape to Israel. Many other Jews in Arab lands may look for- ward to trials in absentia and' punishment of death for crimes they did not commit unless they too can flee to Israel. "New schools are being created for Arab students in areas where the Arab population is high," he said, "and it is interesting to note that when the fighting ended in Faluja (in the Negev) and that territory be- came part of Israel, the Arabs did not leave, but were • eager to remain in the Jewish state." David Hacohen said that Israel has major tasks ahead of it to consolidate the recent military victor- ies it has won. He warned: "There is no guarantee that we cannot still lose our battle for independence in Israel. We must realize what our victory meant to the Arabs, whom we hope to be our friends. Today, they are embittered by defeat, and we must prevent a situation whereby in five or ten years, under some new military leader, they might rise against us once again. We must work to fortify and strengthen the state, even if it means we must maintain a large army—and we hope that we will not have to do so. One way to overcoming that dif- ficulty is to bring in hundreds of thousands of im- migrants, so that our state can be strengthened by force of numbers. The immigrants desperately need to come to Israel, and Israel desperately needs them." A cable from Dr. Israel Goldstein, treasurer, of the Jewish Agency, cautioned the conferees that "th e re- sults of the Washington conference of the United Jew- ish Appeal will determine whether the Jewish Agency will be compelled to say to the myriads of Jews in Europe and North Africa "We cannot make room for you in Israel." Julian B. Venezky of Peoria, Ill., chairman of a 53-member UJA delegation to Israel, said: "The need for cash to care for the immio- rants is. desperate. Credit resources which provided for their food and clothing are exhausted. High government. officials with whom we spoke in Israel expressed the fear that they might have to limit immigration if great amounts of cash are not made available through the United Jewish Appeal —not two months from now, not a few weeks from now, but immediately." Mrs. Golda Myerson, in a message to the conference, said that "that which seemed impossible a year ago has happened. We in Israel, a mere handful, for a long time practically empty-handed, have emerged the win- . ners in this struggle against well equipped armies of seven Arab states. I wonder at times whether the Jews of the United States realize how great a share is theirs in our victory." The picture in transient camps of Marseille where . Jewish refugees are awaitino . ships to Israel was de- scribed as "not a pretty one" by Mrs. Walter E. Heller, of Chicago, a vice-chairman of the National Women's Division of UJA, member of the UJA overseas delega- tion, who declared that "both in Israel where newcomers live crowded in tiny tents and in Marseille where they are packed into so-called transient camps, the condi- tions are almost as bad as in the DP camps from which they have just come." An urgent appeal for maximum support of the UJA was addressed to the 1,200 delegates by Dr. Chaim Weiz- mann, President of Israel. Speaking to the conference by means of transcription, the Israeli Chief Executive said that of the Four Freedoms enunciated by the late President Roosevelt during Wotid War II, freedom from fear and freedom from want "have special meaning for the people of Israel and especially for those home- less and oppressed whom we are receiving on. our shores." He declared that Israel can assure the new- comers that they will have freedom from fear, but that the Jews of the United States must. through their support of the United Jewish Appeal, provide the funds that will guarantee freedom from want. Asserting that the establishment of Israel "has swung open the doors of opportunity for large masses of the Jewish people," former Governor Herbert H. Lehman pointed out that now Americans . can see the end of the road of relief and charity, of providing mere subsistence for the pitifully small remnant of European Jewry. He emphasized- that the emptying of the DP camps of all Jews before the end of 1949 was a major item on the agenda of the United Jewish Appeal. U. S. Ambassador to Israel James G. McDonald,. in a message to the UJA meeting, said that he was con- vinced that Israel was now on the road to establishing_ peaceful relations with its Arab neighbors. He said that the Jews of Israel will increasingly demonstrate that as a people they have capacities comparable with the most advanced people of the West, and, if given' the opportunity, they can not only rebuild their national life, but, through it. give rich gifts for our common humanity, • and not the least of these gifts would be to bring more and more to millions of non-Jews in the United States. and elsewhere the conviction that anti-Semitism is as outmoded as witchcraft. Israel will not only make secure' the future of your brethren, it will also help to save us other Americans from the grievous sin of brute preju- dice. Israel will thus help us all, Jews and Christians, to be better Americans." William Rosenwald, president of the United Service for New Americans, reported to the conference that the United States Displaced Persons Commission is anticipating an influx of between 10,000 and 12,000 DPs per month durincf this coming summer. He said b equipped to meet the needs of that the USNA must be a "bare minimum" of 25.000 Jewish DPs in 1949 and probably larger numbers, if Congress acts favorably on President Truman's recommendation for liberalization of the present DP law. Eliahu Elath, Israeli Ambassador to the United • States, warned the assembled Jewish leaders that the reconstruction tasks today facing Israel cannot be suc- cessfully accomplished without the assistance of the - Jews of America through the $250,000,000 campaign of the United . Jewish Appeal. In a stirring address which electrified the audience, Dr. Nahum Goldmann acclaimed the great collec- tive UJA enterprise and called the fund the test of the political and moral maturity of American Jewry. He asserted that "it is much more difficult to retain collective responsibility after success has been attained." He reiterated that total political victory has not yet been won, that there still are dangers, that "no Jew can allow to demobilize himself as long . as there is no real peace;", that we must remain in a state of minor mobilizat ion. He said there are three categories of Jews who are waiting to be ad- mitted to Israel: DPs who are yet to be evacuated, East European Jews who must be taken to Israel while the doors of exit are open for them and the Jews of North Africa. Levi Eshkol, chief of the Agricultural Settlement De- - partment of the Jewish. Agency, reported that 60 new settlements have been established in Israel in the past 10 months, and that present plans call for the establish- ment of another 100 in the coming nine months. He said that one-fourth of the immigrants coming into Israel will be settled on the land. He stated "that 5,000,000 of . Palestine's 7,000,000 acres now belong to the Jewish states" as a result of the, establishment of independent Israel and the clearing of its territory of Arab invaders. Mrs. David Levy called for assurance of "the biggest campaign to Meet the biggest opportunity in Jewish history, and urged that the women be utilized for • action in behalf of UJA. A message from Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion, broadcast to the conference by a special recording, .stated in part: "You, the Jews of America, have played a noble part in the rise of Israel. With your help and the help of Jews throughout the world, memorable things have been accomplished. But our eyes are turned as they always have been, to the boats which are coming in and which are yet to come. Some 25,000 Jews are arriv- ing month by month. They must be housed, fed, clothed, enabled to pursue their crafts and professions and helped to become productive citizens in our democracy, "The country which our victorious army has liberated must speedily be rebuilt to receive all the Jews who wish to and must leave their present abode. History has placed in our hands this great historic chance, to put an end forever to the misery and degradation in the life of our people and to insure for Israel a permanent place of honor among the nations of the world. We here all hope that you, the great Jewish community in Amer- ica, will once again rise•to the great occasion and crown with complete success this grand and glorious mission which has fallen to our generation. With your devoted help it will be achieved.' The conference sent a congratulatory message to Dr. Stephen S. Wise who on Sunday night was honored at a dinner in New York on his 75th birthday. Many of the delegates left for New York upon conclusion of the Sessions to attend the dinner in Dr. Wise's honor. THE JEWISH NEWS---I3 _Friday, MaKeli 25, 1949