Retractions of a Prophet of Doom And the Spouting Of Hate by Jewish TH JEWISH NEWS A Weekly Review Self-Haters Commentary, Page 2 of Jewish Events Message of Good Will Season Michigan's Only English-Jewish Newspaper---Incorporating The Detroit Jewish Chronicle VOLUME 24—No. 16.Cr icP74- 7 17100 W. 7 Mile Rd.—VE. 8-9364—Detroit 35, Mich., December 25, 1953 Firmness of Truth in Encounter for Civil Liberties Editorials, Page 4 $4.00 Per Year: Single Copy, 15c viet Russia Supports Arabs in Israel Hydroelectric Issue at UN Satanic Tactics! Arabs Pit Jesus Against Israel in Attack at United Nations By DAVID HOROWITZ Special Jewish News Correspondent at UN UNITED NATIONS, N. Y.—It never fails. Ever since 1947 when the UN was seized by the Palestine question, with the deliberations dragging into the pre-Christmas season, as they have this year, Arab delegates, inspirited with satanic glee, keep on reminding their fellow-delegates all -about the story of Golgatha. In past years, former UN delegate Faris El-Khoury became an expert in this particu- lar type of rabble-rousing. "How can we trust the people who were responsible for the crucifixion of the Savior of Christendom," he would tell the assembled representatives in effect. This pre-Christmas week in the Security Council El- Khoury's "Holy" job was taken over by Charles Malik of Lebanon, the Arab anti-Israel spokesman in that 11-mem- ber body which had already disposed of Kibya and is now winding up its debate on the Canal Project. Malik not only tauntingly pitted Jesus against present-day Israel, he also brought in Spinoza and a host of others in his insidious anti- Jewish tirade. During the 49th Security Council meeting, Thursday after- noon, Dec. 17, Ambassador Abba Eban, presenting his govern- ment's views on the three-power draft resolution relative to the Canal Project (which, by the way, called upon General Vagh Bennike "to effect a reconciliation" and report back in 90 days and which, as a whole, came as a great blow to the Arabs) concluded his statement with a blast against Malik. "What • offended us in this (Malik's) speech was its reference to our religious conscience," Mr. Eban stated resolutely. "If the rep- resentative of Lebanon wishes to prove that the hydro-electric project of Bnot Yaacob is inconsistent with the philosophy and thought of Spinoza, Locke, Berkeley, Hegel, Kant, Pascal and Euber, then, of course, he is welcome to the exercise—but he should not invoke the Divine Name or the prophets and patriarchs of the Hebrew faith for the sake of a political at- tack in a political context. Such statements as 'Has Israel out- grown the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob?" are entirely out of place in this or in any decent discussion. And I would have forgiven the Lebanese representative's inaccuracies or differences of opinion about water if only he could at least have spared us this irreverence." The . late Thomas Sugrue, a Catholic, in the Introduction to Malcolm Hay's book, "The Foot of Pride: the Pressure of Christen- dom on the Peoples of Israel for 1900 years (The Beacon Press; 1950)," fearlessly declared: "Nothing can be done about anti- Semitism until something is done about Christianity. The fact that a Christian is able to feel that anti-Semitism is not a sin, and indeed may be a virtue, a participation in the divine chas- tisement of a race of God-killers, is the evil which spreads and maintains and strengthens this Christian violation of the iaw of love." In his book, Malcolm Hay, also a Catholic living in Scotland, shows that the Gospel of St. John constitutes one of the most anti-Semitic works on record. Referring to the "Christ idea." Mr. Hay says: "The inoculation of the poison began long ago in the nurseries of Christendom." And so declared an honest Catholic. But Charles Malek and his friends would love to see the an- cient, stereotyped and fallacious "Christ Story" against the Jews revived, and have therefore found it necessary and expedient to use the United Nations as a forum for the dissemination of these old lies and calumnies. But they undoubtedly underesti- mate the strength of the millions of Hays and Sugrues within the Christian world. Direct JTA Teletype Wires to The Jewish News UNITED NATIONS, N. Y.—The Soviet Union allied itself in the Security Council Monday with Nationalist China, Pakistan and the Lebanon in an effort to torpedo an amended draft resolution introduced by the United States, Britain and France, seeking settlement of the Israeli-Syrian dispute over the Israeli hydroelectric development at Bnot Yaakov in the demilitarized zone. The Soviet delegate, after violently criticizing the Three Power resolution as be- ing "irrelevant to the issue" and for introducing broad new issues of economic develop- ment, formally called for indefinite postponement of a vote on the resolution to give time, he said, for negotiations between the two parties concerned and for further study of the implications of the economic development indicated in the eleventh paragraph of the draft resolution. Syria officially declared the Big Three draft resolution unacceptable to the Syrian government. The Syrian spokesman, Farid Zennadine, told the Security Council when it resumed debate Tuesday morning that the resolution does not constitute a verdict on the Syrian complaint and merely invited the Council to refrain from acting on complaint of a nation member of the UN. The Syrian accused drafters of the Big Three resolution of deliberately employing vague terms in order to cloak the real meaning of the resolution which he said speeches by the three sponsors failed to reveal. He charged the resolution was drafted in fear that Israel would flout commands of unfavorable resolution, and asserted that Israelis had guided the hand that had penned the draft. Zennadine virtually charged a cabal of Big Three and Israel to give Israel a free hand in the Middle East, asserting, "Israel minus the three powers, equals zero. Israel plus the three powers is a formidable force." He asserted that in this as in past cases the three powers secretly are conniving to give Israel its way. He condemned the extension of financial, military and moral aid to Israel by the three powers. He charged that Zion- ism was the tool of certain powers interested in the Middle East and warned that the Soviet Union and important Asian elements do not favor the Zionist movement. Zennadine moved in his speech to secu re continued stoppage of Israel work at Bnot Yaakov by having the question kept under continuing Council study. He urged con- tinued effort to find a settlement of the question. In this he was presumably motivated by the fact Israel agreed to halt work as long as the council is urgently considering the question. The Security Council adjourned on We dnesday, until next Tuesday, without action (See Earlier Story on Page 20) on the resolution. Open First Modern. Paper Mill in Near East HADERA, Israel, (JTA)—The first modern paper mill in the Middle East was officially opened by Acting Prime Minister Moshe Sharett. Costing $40,000,000, the American-Israel Paper Mills, Ltd., plant is located on a 22-acre site midway between Tel Aviv and Haifa and can meet all of Israel's paper requirements except for some specialized papers. The mill was put up by Joseph M. Mazer, treasurer of the Hudson Pulp and Paper Corpo- ration of New York; the Palestine Economic Corporation of New York and other American, foreign and Israeli investors. It will produce approximately 15,000 tons of newsprint annually, writing and kraft papers. The mill is expected to save Israel $1,000,000 annually in foreign currency. Israel Protests to UN Egyptian Seizure of Meat ID estined for Israel The Israel government lodged a formal complaint with the Security Council against the confiscation by Egypt of 140 tons of meat being carried to Israel in an Italian ship from East Africa. The ship, the S. S. Franca Maria, of Italian registry, bound from Massawa in Eritrea to Haifa in Israel, was intercepted at Port Said Dec. 14 and was later permitted to continue on its voyage after the cargo of meat was confiscated. In his letter to the President of the Security Council, Am- bassador Abba Eban, pointed out that this intercepti6n and con- fiscation was in flagrant violation of Security Council and UN resolutions. The Council called upon Egypt at that time to terminate the restrictions on the passage of shipping and goods through the Suez Canal wherever bound and to cease all interference with such shipping. "Despite this clear injunction of the Security Council and its rejection of the Egyptian claim to belligerent rights against Israel, the government of Egypt has persisted in its interference with shipping trade with Israeli ports through the Suez Canal," Ambassador Eban wrote, .... .. ....... . `Supreme lEffort for UJA national leadership re-elected to office shows, left to right (top) , MORRIS W. BERINSTEIN, national campaign chairman. EDWARD M. M. WARBURG, general chairman; JOSEPH HOLTZMAN, of Detroit, SOL LUCKMAN of Cincinnati and WILLIAM ROSENWALD of New York, national campaign • chairmen. They were among top leaders re-elected at the UJA's national conference at the Waldorf-Astoria, New York, Dec. 1 1 13, where more than 1,200 communal representatives from all parts of the nation set a 1954 goal c lose to $120,000,000. Lower left: Mrs. EL. EANOR ROOSEVELT and Mr. WARBURG. Lower right: Governor JOHN S. FINE of Penn- sylvania and UJA national chairman RUDOL F G. SONNEBORN. The delegates called for a supreme effort in behalf of UJA's 1954 campaign to speed Israel's economic freedom and to finance urgent refugee aid programs in 20 other countries, through the United Israel Ap- pal, Joint Distribution Committee and United Service for New Americans. , UJA consituent agencies, -