Reform Leader Attacks Israel 'Ultra-Orthodoxy,' Council for Judaism DETROIT JEWISH NEWS-3 Friday, June 25, 1954 Bennike Has Freedom Of Action; No Change In Hutchison. Status Direct JTA Teletype W ire to The Jewish News PIKE, N. H.—The 65th con- vention of the Central Confer- ence of American Rabbis, Re- form rabbinical body. opened here Tuesday with a presidential address by Dr. Joseph L. Fink, of Buffalo, praising Israel, de- ploring ultra-orthodoxy in the Jewish state and condemning the anti-Zionist American Coun- cil for Judaism. Reporting on a visit he made to Israel earlier this year. Rabbi Fink told the convention "al. though there is anxiety in Israel, there is no fear." He proceeded to praise the spirit of the Israel- is, deplore extreme nationalism, express hope for the emergence of a liberal religious movement in Israel, and to denounce the anti-Zionist American Council for Judaism. The people of Israel display a "hardening of the moral fiber and a determined ambition" in Spite of the daily crises con- fronting them, said the CCAR president. But the country "stands in sore need of two re- quirments." The first need is material, and supplying that need is "jus- tice not charity," observed the rabbi, pleading for greater sup- port of the United Jewish Ap- peal: The second need is that of peace and toward that end Dr. Fink asked the rabbis to go on record as demanding of the American Government that "it use its best offices speedily and resolutely to promote conditions" of a settlement of the disputes between Israel and her Arab neighbors. Predicting a_ "great revival in Israel," Rabbi Fink indicated that there "are some al eas in Israel where zeal for orthodoxy is of an extreme character and runs so high that the neighbor who is not orthodox is excluded from the teaching of love thy neighbor." The speaker assured his audi- ence that "there are unmistak- able signs of the culmination of MILLIONS O F- BOTTLES SOLD orthodoxy's influence" on Israel- is. He recommended that the conference appoint a committee of men familar with conditions in Israel to "formulate a pro- gram that might inspire indige- nous extension of liberal Juda- ism in Israel." Dr. Fink reserved his strong- est utterances to assail the views and actions associated with the bitterly anti-Zionist American Council of Judaism. Without mentioning the organization by name, Dr. Fink asserted, "We lament the short-sightedness of those Jews who refuse to see the vital connection between the fate of Israel and the fate of world Jewry." U NITED NATIONS, N.Y.. The Secretary-General of the UN told correspondents that General Bennike, chairMan of the Palestine Truce Supervi- sion Organization, "is not under direct instructions from us." As I the "representative in the field," Mr. Hammarskjold declare d, General Bennike "has consider- able freedom." Asked about Commander Elmo Hutcht- son's present status as chairman of the Israel-Jordan Armistice Commission, in the light of Is- raeli protests over his partial judgment' on the Scorpian Pass massacre, the Secretary-General indicated that the UN contem- plated no change in personnel. AS for the current Israel-Jordan deadlock, he said that "the situ- ation has not changed" since Jordan withdrew from the Se- curity Council which has let an- other week go by without any meetings. (AJP) — Report David Croll In Line for Cabinet Post TORONTO, (JTA)—The To- ronto Star reported from Otta- wa this week that David Croll, Toronto M. P. would be given a Cabinet post after the current session of Parliament. Croll, a leading member of the Jewish community, was recently complimented at a Liberal cau- cus for his work as chairman of the Parliamentary banking and commerce committee. Prime Minister Louis St. Lau- rent is said by the paper to be considering Col. Croll for a Cab- inet post, possibly as associate minister of national defense. Israel Physicians Reject Offer to Form Committee TEL AVIV, (JTA)—An emer- gency committee representing the Israeli doctors who last month struck in protest against the refusal of the government and public institutions to in- crease their salaries has rejected an offer from the government to set up a special committee to investigate the situation of sal- aries, physicians. The emergency committee in- sisted that the offer demon- strated no understanding of the plight of the doctors nor of a remedy for the situation. The last strike lasted three days, at the end of which the doctors gave the government 30 days to arrive at a satisfactory offer. Ben-Zvi Recovers from Surgery JERUSALEM, (JTA) — Itzhak Ben-Zvi, 70-year-old President of Israel, was reported today to be in a "satisfactory" condition following minor surgery. 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