THE JEWISH NEWS Lots of Obstacles Still Left Incorporating the Detroit Jewish Chronicle commencing with issue of July 20, 1951 Member American Association of English-Jewish Newspapers, Michigan Press Association, National Editorial • Association. Published every Friday by The Jewish News Publishing Co., 17100 West Seven Mile Road, Detroit 35. Mich., VE. 8-9364. Subscription $5 a year Foreign $6. Entered as second class matter Aug. 6, 1942, at Post Office, Detroit, Mich.. under Act of March 3, 1879 PHILIP SLOMOVITZ SIDNEY SHMARAK FRANK SIMONS Editor and Publisher Advertising Manager City Editor Sabbath Scriptural Selections This Sabbath, the ninth day of Sivan, 5716, the following Scriptural selections will be 'ead in our synagogues: Pentateuchal portion,- Naso, N11711. 4:21-7:89. Prophetical portion, Judges 13:2-25. Licht Benshen, Friday, May, 18, 7:30 p.m. VOL. XXIX No 11 Page Four May 18, 1956 Vital Facts About the Arab Refugees No other question on the world agenda has been so distorted as that re- lating to the Arab refugees. Their num- bers have been exaggerated, its causes and its genesis have been clouded in misstate- ments, the manner in which the refugees are being treated by their own Arab kins- men is being kept a dark secret, and the world at large is unaware of the strenuous efforts that are being made by the Arab nations to perpetuate the problem by making it the chief weapon against Israel. Every move in the direction of clari- fying the issue must, therefore, be wel- comed and encouraged. • In a letter to the New York Times, in which he 'takes issue with figures of- fered in the discussion of the Arab refu- gee problem, Johan J. Smertenko, execu- tive vice-chairman of the Committee to Save the Middle East from Communism, presents the following facts: "In three of these (articles) the figure of 1,000,000 was used loosely as the number of Arabs in the refugee camps. In Lindesay Parrott's article the official figures of the United Nations Relief and Work Agency for Palestine Refugees were presented, totaling 905,986. "That these statistics are inaccurate is proved in the article itself. Mr. Parrott cites last year's report stating that 835,928 were fed 'whole rations,' and he quotes Director Henry R. Labouisse of U. N. W. R. A. to the effect that 'there are at least 70,000 names on the rolls against which rations are drawn, which should be deleted.' This brings the figure down to 765,928. Actually the last figure is as inaccurate as all the others. "There can be no more than 500,000 genuine refugees in the Arab camps. Even this figure is based on the statistics of the British administration in Palestine, which were admittedly estimated on exaggerated reports by Arab village chiefs. For in 1948 there were less than 500,000 Arabs in the area which is now Israel. Of these, slightly more than 100,000 remained in that territory and about 20,000 _returned to it after the invasion of Israel by the Arab states. "Simple arithmetic thus shows that not more than 380,000 Arabs permanently obeyed the order of the Supreme Arab Command to leave that territory. Immediately after the Arab-Israeli war, the Arab press, which is not noted for understatement, stated re- peatedly that there were 300,000 refugees. "Assuming that the Arabs have • been multiplying at the highest birth rate known in the world, 4 per cent a year, these 380,000 refugees could not have increased to a figure beyond 500,000. How, then, does U. N. W. R. A. arrive at the figure of 905,986 or 835,928 or '765,928? "The fact is that the census figures of the refugee camps are falsified by not regis- tering the dead and by a multiple count of the inhabitants, especially the children, be- cause the refugee organization lacks the means to conduct a proper census and to control the camp population on census days. As some of the U. N. W. R. A. officials have testified, children are moved from tent to tent and registered several times in order to enable the occupants of these tents to receive large allotments of food and clothing. "But even these falsifications do not account for the vast increase and the great discrepancy between the actual number of genuine refugees and the number of inhabi- tants in these camps. The difference is made up by the infiltration of Arabs from the surrounding countries, Arabs who have never seen the soil of Israel but who prefer life in these camps to the wretched existence in their own villages. "In view of the importance that has been given to the refugee question in the solution of the Arab-Israeli problem, it is vital to have accurate statistics and to understand the reasons for the inaccuracy that has been so well propagated. It makes nonsense of the lachrymose propaganda of the Arab states when we realize that the action of the fella- kin contradicts the complaints of the Arab spokesmen in the United Nations and else- where on the plight of the Arab refugees. "These spokesmen use the number and condition of the refugees as a potent weapon in their campaign against Israel and as a plausible excuse for their refusal to make peace. The impression that a million human beings are living in misery is both wrong in fact and prejudicial in its implications. When American newspapers repeatedly ac- cept these inaccurate statistics, they unwit- tingly play into the • hands of those who are exploiting the situation." We completely share the view that misrepresentations about the Arab refu- gees assist in creating tensions and that they play into the hands of those who seek to perpetuate a state of war in the Middle East. We repeat what we have stated time and time again: that the refu- gee problem is being exaggerated, that it is being totally distorted, that Israel's enemies would vanish once they become informed about the truth of the situation. More than that: it is our contention that the refugee problem can and should be settled speedily. But the Arab politicians stand in the path of progress and seek to prevent the integration of the refugees into a wholesome economic society. That's where all the trouble comes in. That's wherein obstruction hinders a lasting peace in the Middle East. Mr. Smertenko may have underesti- mated figures. He has merely scratched the surface in dealing with the refugee problem. There are issues ,involving com- pensation, partial resettlement in Israel and the willingness of the Arab states to cooperate in a humane program of re- patriation. But insofar as vital figures are concerned, he has called attention to mis- statements that must be corrected. A protagonist of the Arabs, Prof. Millar Burrows, of Yale University,—the author of one of the popular books on the Dead Sea Scrolls—in a reply to the Smertenko letter, also published in the New York Times, insists that "freedom to return to the places from which they fled must be given to those who still wish to return. This is one point on which Isrealis must differ with him and on which the practical men in the United Nations agree with the Israelis. A return 'of the refugees, whose minds have been poisoned during eight years of inactivity in concentration camps that were created for them by Egypt and other Arab countries, would mean the in- jection of a fifth column in Israel and the inevitable destruction of the country. This, Israel will not submit to, and Israel's friends will not yield to it. Prof. Burrows calls for "real and ade- quate compensation." Israel has offered it. Israel has made it possible for relatives of Arabs now residing in the Jewish State to return to their former homes and to rejoin their families. Why do the apolo- gists for the Arabs overlook this important fact? The United Nations and the United States are prepared to assist in a refugee rehabilitation program which must be made effective in the only workable area:' in the underpopulated Arab states where labor is at a premium. These countries, as well as the Arab refugees, can be helped in that fashion, and a world problem thus can be solved. But the Arab politicians find it more convenient to keep their kinsmen enslaved, to perpetuate their problem as a weapon against Israel. The wisdom of the statesmen of the Western world is needed to impress upon the ob- structionists the advisability of a speedy, realistic solution. And realism dictates that these unfortunate people can not return to Israel; that the sooner they are resettled in Arab countries the healthier for all in- volved. Then we may indeed have peace in the world. Hayim Hazaz's 'Mori Sa'id' Novel About Yemenite Jews Thanks to Eretz Israel, the world has been introduced to a very romantic people. From the backward country of Yemen has come a very fine element. The Yemenite Jews now are an important factor in Israel's life. They help in the State's up- building. They assist in its de- fense. They are wholesome and productive. They also have a personal life. They laugh and they cry. They dream and they also sin — al- though, to qualify the latter, they are perhaps the most re- ligious element in Israel. • But few people know or un- derstand them. That is why the new novel, about these Sephar- dim, "Mod Sa'id," by the able Ashkenazi writer, Hayim Hazaz, assumes such great importance. "Mori Sa'id," published by Abel- ard Schuman (404 4th, NY16) was ably translated from the Hebrew by Ben Halpern, editor of the .Jewish Frontier. The author was born in the Ukraine in 1898 and came to Israel in 1931. Thirty years ago he began his writing career with three stories about the October Revolution and its effect on"Jewish life in Russia. From that time on he became widely known and admired as a Hebrew writer. His "Mori Sa'id" en- hances his career. The story is fascinating. Mori Sa'id is a dreamer. He is a pious Yemenite whose auguries are listened to with - awe, especially by his admirer Mori Alfekah. Mori Sa'id tells stories. He relateS legends. He prophesies about the inevitable rise of the State of Israel. They are not alone in the cast of characters. There is Sa'id's son Sion who fails to support his family, whose wife and daugh- ter must do housework for the Ashkenazim., who buys a donkey and by leasing it for rides is enabled finally to earn hand- somely. But Sion does not give his family any money. He turns instead to the immoral Habiba who becomes his mistress. Even that does not last, when Habiba runs off to Jaffa with an Arab. Then there is the pathetic Naama, Sion's wife, who must work and take care of the children. Their daughter Rumyeh falls in love and later defies her family by, running off and enlisting in a kibbutz. The life of the old and of youth, the discussions of problems of the working youth, the search for a younger wife by Mori Alfekah — all combine to make a fine tale and to take the reader into the interesting Yemenite circle. This reviewer was especially intrigued by this description of the Yemenites by Mori Sa'id: "We Yemenites are the descendants of those corpses whom Ezekiel resurrected, and a hasty tribe we are! We didn't wait till we raised flesh and grew sound, -but no sooner had our bones come together bone unto bone, and the sinews came upon us, then at once—ha! ha!—we sprang and stood on our feet." "Mori Sa'id" reveals anew that Israel has a culture, that her people lend themselves to narratives and to fiction, that the new State is a normally functioning entity. Hayim Hazaz's fine literary work adds to this cultural development. Numerous other novels about Israel, and from Israel, are making their appearance. It is a revealing phenomenon of an infant state's creativeness in spite of security difficulties. It it part Of the strength of a reborn spiritual community.