Purely Commentary Local Group Plans Roy Reuther, Abraham Harman Here To Address 4-Day Habonim Parley Tercentenary By PHILIP SLOMOVITZ Speeches by Avraham Harman the Workman's Circle on Lin- , Expansion of Detroit's Jewish Tercentenary Committee and. and Roy Ruether will highlight wood, will be David Breslau, formulation of plans for the ob- the 23rd annual national con- past national Habonim' presi- dent who currently is educa- servance of the 300th Anniver- tional director of Bet Berl sary of the settlement of Jews Institute in Israel. His topic in this country was announced will be "Israel Today." this week after 'a. meeting of the Dani Kerman, national Habo- provisional tercentenary com- nim president, will arrive early mittee. • to participate in Saturday even- The enlarged committee -Will ing's fourth conference of Garin meet •March 3' at Temple Israel. Gimel, which denotes the group On Feb. 3, committee- chairinen of Habonim members who are will confer " on . the budgetary preparing to make their homes needs for the celebration.' on a settlement 'in Israel. There • Plans for Detroit's AserNiance are currently 1,000 former mem- include the publication Of a his- bers of Habonim in Israel. tory of Michigan Jewry, a Public Delegates from all parts of the meeting . to mark the event, United States and Canada will special school and religious Ruether Harman represent 8,500 members in the events, and women's participa- vention of Habonim, Labor Western Hemisphere at the tion through special events. Zionist youth group, which will four-day meetings. During the Irving Katz was named chair- be held from SUnday through day, workshop sessions on all of man of the editorial committee Wednesday, at Cong. Bnai Habonim's activities are plan- for the i'proposed history of Moshe, it was announced by ned. Included in the discussions Michigan Jewry. 1 Eleanor Goldberg Wesley, con- will be planning for Habonim's Dr. Richard Hertz announced vention chairman. that Temple Beth El is planning! Mr. Harman, Consul General 14 summer camps, organiza- a special' Tercententary Service, Of the Israeli delegation in tion of membership drives, Jan. 1g with the noted historian, America, will speak Monday improvements for its four evening on "The Validity of publications and various other Dr. Jacob Marcus, as speaker. Zionism Today." Ruether, who items. Plan Religious Observance Habonim, which means "The is coordinator of political action NEW YORK. N.Y.—A national for the UAW-CIO, will address Builders," is open to all youth religious program for the Amer- the conferees on Tuesday even.- in four catagories: 10 to 12; ican Jewish Tercentenary was ing on "Crisis- in Democracy." 13 to 15; 16 to 18 and 19 to 23. announced here by Rabbi Simon Speaker at the opening ses- There are nearly 100 Habonim G. Kramer, chairman of the sion, which is scheduled at members in Detroit. Tercentenary committee on re- ligious and education participa- tion. The religious program was worked out at a conference of rabbis and lay religious leaders here last week. Rabbi Kramer said that national Deeply moved by the friend- nounced on the next morning synagogue organizations and na- ships shown them on the occa- that they would plant the grove tional rabbinic bodies—consti- sion of the deditation of their of 1,000 trees. Mr. Hordes said tuencies of the Synagogue Coun- new office building at 17616 Wy- that he will have a tree certifi- cil of America—will issue a oming ; the Hordeses . this week cate assigned to each person who joint proclamation declaring the announced that they would was present at the dedication. period from September 1954 plant a groxe of 1,000 trees in Scores of bouquets of flowers, through May 1955 to be a time Israel in honor of their friends. a large number of telegrams for religious observance and cele- More than and other expressions of friend- bration of the Jewish Tercenen-. 1,000 people at- ship were in evidence at the ary in America. tended the ded- The first religious event to ication of the dedication. mark the official launching of new building on The new Hordes Insurance the tercentenary on Sept. 12, Sunday a f te r- Agency Building has adequate 1954 will be a reconsecration noon. office space for complete insur- service at Congregation Shearith Willian ance services. Israel, which was founded by Hordes, his son, the first 23 Jewish settlers 'in Earl, and son- New Amsterdam in September in-law, Edward 2 DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 1654. The Tercentenary will be Wishnetsky, an- William Hordes Friday, December 25, 1953 brought to a close on May 29, 1955, with an outdoor religious ceremony at the Carter Barron Amphitheatre in Washington, D. C., involving the Orthodox, Conservative and. Reform move- By BORIS SMOLAR (Copyright, 1953, Jewish Telegraphic Agency) ments of Judaism. The Retraction of a Prophet of Doom A major obstacle in the path of Israel's quest for peace in the Middle East is the obstreperous attitude of her antagonists who have even refused to recognize her existence. Until recently, the Arabs went so far as - to avoid using the term "Israel." They kept on referring to the Jewish State in veiled terms by speaking of bad Jews (the good good Jews they know . are those who would stab their fellow-Jews in the back) and Zionists. There are, unforfunatelY, non-Arabs who join with Israel's enemies in aimitfg;• at destroying they•young state. But the more realistic must come to terms with reality, as one prophet of doom did a short time ago. The story of this prophet's retraction— which is modified by an, unjustified fear of Israeli "expansion"— is told in the following item, taken from the London (England) Jewish Observer and Middle EaSt Review: "The State of Israel cannot last tong." This was what Major-General. Sir EdWarcl, Spears told a Jewish Observer and Middle East kevie.w.interviewer in July 1952. In over a year the prophet of doom has not merely retracted,. he , has radically recast his views. "We must accept, for it _cannot be otherwise, that Israel. has come to stay," writes Sir Edward in the July number of The Arab World. 'And not only has Israel come to stay but Sir Ed- .. ward now fears Israeli expansionism. "We must establish," he writes, "a physical barrier that the Arabs will accept (which, .; will be no easy matter) ; which will convince them that the Jews, will not expand beyond the prescribed frontiers. It would _ need nothing less than the establishment of lines of military posts with irrevocable orders to resist _an advance from either side"—a Middle East Maginot Line, it -Would seem. In line with his new policy for the Middle East, Sir Edward Spears no longer rejects the suggestion that the Arab refugees be re-settled. Instead, he outlines a U.K.- and U.S.-Sponsored development plan for the Arab countries that would include provisions for the problems of the Arab refugees. But drawing on his own war-time experiences in the Levant, Sir Edward warns against allowing feudal landlords, specula- tors and money-lenders to benefit from the plan and not the people themselves. Patience may solve many problems, and those who aim at destruction may eventually join the builders of a better future in the Middle East. But for those on the spot, the waiting is a painful interlude. * But * * the "Un - Jewish" Council Is Different But the American Council for Judaism, to whom Dr. Leo Jung refers (in his preface to "Jewish Leaders") as "un-American, un- Jewish, and has no counsel of significance to offer," is differ- ent. It must hate! It is bent upon a policy of destroying Israel. Its December bulletin is devoted to an endless attack on Israel. Half the face of the envelope containing this bulletin is devoted to a reprint from a Memphis paper rebuking Israel on the strength of information it received from the un-Jewish council. The 32 pages of the bulletin continue to pour out venom upon the Jewish state. All the hate material that could be gathered is incorporated in this periodical, and its contents seem to shout "hate Israel . destroy Israel ... hate Israel ..." It is unfortunate that this council should have been given cause to gather the anti-Israel forces on the ground of the hor- rible Kibya tragedy. No one has condoned that occurrence, just as no one in a position of responsibility ever approved of the Dir Yassin incident. But fair minded students of history and ob- servers of events in the Middle East, while condemning the mas- sacre, nevertheless recognized that endless provokations by Arabs have been major causes for. retaliations. The un-Jewish-un-American group could have been more tol- erant, more considerate towards people who are struggling for their very lives against enemies who are virtually in their back March of Dimes Seeks yards. But not the small group of Jews who continually sound the To Double Volunteers refrain of hate . . . hate . . . hate . . . hate . . . for an inexplicable reason. They quote the few Jews whom they have misled and "Two for One", according to some non-Jews. They fail to take into consideration a viewpoint Anne Campbell, chairman, will like this one, from the Dayton (0.) Daily News, whose editor view- be the slogan for Detroit's drive ed the "Fault of the Blockade" as follows: to enlist volunteer workers for The firing by Egyptian shore batteries on an American the 1954 Mothers' March on Po- freighter loaded with wheat for Palestine refugees in Jordan lio, climax of the 1954 March of ought to dramatize something more than an offense against Dimes. the American flag. Between now and the end of It ought to dramatize also the illegality of the blockade December, every effort will be which Egypt has thrown up against Israel. made to sign up two workers for The Egyptian gunners fired on a shipload of wheat des- every one who served last Janu- ary. "Sort of a bring-a-friend tined for one of their Arab allies under the evident misappre- hension that it was bound; not for the Jordanian port of Aquaba deal," she said. "Of course, we at the head of the Red Sea, but for the nearby Israeli port of hope that everyone who worked Elath. The government of President Naguib will find it easy, to make last year's March of therefore, to render the proper apologies. Since the aim of the Dimes such a success will work artillerymen was bad, there will probably be no question of again in 1954. At least $7,500,000 will be needed for the new pre- indemnities. ventive polio vaccine tests which But an. attacker's offhand apology: "Sorry, I was shooting will begin in January. Girls and at the wrong guy," does not excuse that kind of gunplay. Since boys in second grade—a million the Egyptian blockade has no standing in international law, of them in 200 communities the offense would have been just as great had the American throughout the nation—will be freighter actually been bound for Elath. inoculated. In addition, $19,000,- The fact is, not only was the shooting an unfriendly act, 000 will be spent for gamma but it was perforMed in an unlawful endeavor to strangle the - globulin — at present the only economy of a neighboring nation. TM) years ago the United means of stopping the spread of Nations, by resolution, declared Egypt's Red Sea-Suez blockade epidemics and the prevention of of shipments destined for Israel to be a violation of interna- paralytic polio, until a vaccine is tional law. The violation has continued and the UN has done tested and found efficient." nothing further about it. In contracst to the harshness of the The Mothers' March chairman resolution the General Assembly has- just passed in condemna- emphasized that this total of tion of Israel's raid on the Jordan border town of Kibya, the $26,500,000 for the polio preven- rebuke to Egypt two years ago apparently was little more than tion program was in addition to a slap on the wrist. the always staggering costs of • The incident in the Red Sea presents an occasion for the giving financial assistance to po- UN to move in on the illegal blockade as it has failed to do lio patients who need help and forcefully up to now. • continue the March of Dimes The Prophet Isaiah described Jewish self-hating groups well programs of professional train- when he said (1.2) : ing, epidemic services and lab- Children I have reared, and brought up, oratory research. To raise enough money will And they have rebelled against me. But the same Prophet, in the same chapter (1.27) offers require twice as many volun- • teers who will give' one hour the hope: • during the Mothert'' March on Zibn 'shall be redeemed with justice.': So that even' the , frightekred Jews; -.Who , !I tier'' now forging Polio to be held Thursday ; Jan. 8, 7 to 8 p.Y3a. - - Sileapons against their own kinmen, 'may' yet' 4)e redeemed.. • , Hordes Family Honors Friends With Grove of 1000 Trees in Israel — Between You and Me The American Scene American Jewry will ve engaged in a unique campaign dur- ing the next three months . . a three-month drive to get well- to-do Jews in the United States to supply their signatures to loans for Israel in their local banks. . . These loans will be paid off within a . period of five' years by the United Jewish Appeal . . Thus, the loans will actually be made to the UJA, but the local Jews will be the guarantors . . The money secured from these loans—it is expected that $75,000,000 will be. raised—will go to cover the short-term credits which the Israel government must now meet in the United States . . . Already some Jews who are able to do so have indicated their willingness to guarantee up to $100,000 each toward the total which is sought . . . Others will guarantee smaller sums, but all indications point to the fact that this limited campaign will be met with sympathy by all friends of Israel who wish to see the Jewish state maintain its good rec- ord on payment of foreign loans ... The money raised through this five-year loan will have no connection' whatsoever with the regu- lar UJA fund-raising campaign for 1954 . . . However, within the five years for which the loan stands, each of the guarantors will deduct 20 per cent of his annual contribution to the UJA in order to repay within the five-year period the full sum guaranteed by his signature . . . There is a good deal of optimism among those Jewish leaders who will direct the campaign . . . Private confer- ences on this subject were held in New York with Jewish corn-. munity leaders from all parts of the country, and the sentiments, expreSsed at these parleys were exceptionally favorable to the new' method of helping Israel meet its urgent dollar obligations. Behind the Scene A new plan to bring American Zionist and non-Zionist per- sonalities together, now being prepared by Dr. Nahum Goldrnann, provides for the. formation of an advisory council composed of Zionists and non-Zionists to work hand-in-hand on behalf of Is- rael . . . It is understood that non-Zionist personalities who hesi- tate to become members of a expanded Jewish Agency executive are not averse to being members of an advisory council ... The entire problem of how to strengthen the relationship between Is- rael and .all elementS of American Jewry may soon be discussed at a national conference in New York . . . Originally, it was sug- gested that the Jewish Agency executive be expanded by inviting individual non-Zionist leaders to join it . . . The new plan of creating an advisory council seems to have the same aim ... In such a council, leaders of many Jewish communities throughout the U. S. could participate . Israeli leaders are especially im- pressed by the solidarity with Israel shown by all elements of American Jewry when the State Department suspended its grant- in-aid to the Jewish State - . . Similarly, the recent gathering of prominent American Jewish leaders at the Economic Conference in Jerusalem impressed the Israelis as "a heartening demonstra- tion" of the determination of leading Jewish perSOInalities' front:all walks of life=outside of . the Zionist can to make Israel