THE JEWISH NEWS Flying to Israel? Incorporating the Detroit Jewish Chronicle commencing with issue of July 20, 1951 Member American Association of English-Jewish Newspapers. Michigan Press AS'sociation. 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 M. Entered as second class matter Aug. 6, 1952 at Post Office, Detroit, Mich., under Act of March 3, 1879. PHILIP SLOMOVITZ Editor and Publisher SIDNEY SHMARAK Advertising Manager CARMI M. SLOMOVITZ • FRANK SIMONS Circulation Manager City Editor Sabbath Scriptural Selections This Sabbath, the twenty-third day of Adar, 5718, the following Scriptural selections will be read in our synagogues: Pentateuchal portions, Vayakhel-Pekude, Ex. 35:1-50:58; Num. 19:1-22. Prophetical portion, Ezek. 36:16-38. Licht Benshen, Friday, March 14, 5:53 p. VOL. XXXIII, No. 2 March 14, 1958 Page Four Fantastic Arabian Feuds and Rumors Fantastic Arabian Nights stories are being circulated from the Middle East. One tale charges the Saudi Arabian king with having plotted to assassinate Gamal Abdel Nasser. In another report, the Egyptian dicta- tor is accused of having plotted to murder President Habib Bourguiba of Tunis. In the midst of such confusion, the Western world is making feeble attempts to create order out of chaos, and one won- ders whether realism has yet gained a foothold in the area, where political tur- moil affects the security of the world. * * * There is no doubt about the genuine- ness of some of the stories that come from the Middle East. Assassination often is the accepted policy among dictators, and one would have to be most unrealistic to ignore some of them. But the coloration of the tales com- pels doubt about some of them. Rumors from that area often are spread to accom- plish certain purposes, just as the scores of tales that have been spread against Israel in the course of the Jewish State's existence have been aimed as trial bal- loons in efforts to destroy the small and struggling Jewish community. At the moment, there is a rumor in Cairo that an "independent" Arab state of Palestine will be declared today, the anniversary of the withdrawal of the Is- raeli troops from Gaza, the intention being to establish Gaza as such a state. This rumor is -reported in the London Times, whose Cairo correspondent stated that adherence of the Arab - refugees now living in Syria and Lebanon to the envis- ioned "independent state" would be pro- claimed speedily after the "state" comes into being. The correspondent states that it is anticipated that Gaza-Palestine will be offered membership in the United Arab Republic, the move being intended to arouse the half million Arab refugees in Jordan to rioting, in order to embarrass tile - Arab Federation composed of Jordan and Iraq. The background of the situation must be understood for realization of the facts. The original United Nations decision of 1947, for the partition of Palestine into Jewish and Arab states, was sabotaged and eventually destroyed by the war waged against the new state of Israel by the combined Arab nations. If there were to be any sort of solution of the Arab refugee problem on the basis of indepen- dent statehood, those who are now in Jordan would have to be given indepen- Mo'os Hitim Fund The approach of Passover brings to us the perennial need to provide a fund for less-fortunate families in our midst for whom we must provide the holiday's necessary food products. Our traditional Mo'os Hitim Fund ful- fills this need. Once again, the local Mo'os Hitim Committee is soliciting the com- munity's cooperation to assure a pleasant festival for the impoverished in our midst. The need obviously is greater this year than it has been in more than a decade. A larger sum of money will be needed to provide the Passover neces- sities for the needy and the unemployed. It is urgent, therefore, that the re- sponse to the Mo'os Hitim Fund should be more generous than ever. The contri- butions should be made as speedily as possible to facilitate the Mo'os Hitim Committee's efforts. dence in the area originally envisions as an independent Arab territory but which now is part of Jordan. * * * Thus, the new Nasser scheme is an- other attempt on the part of the Egyptian dictator to threaten Jordan's existence and to create increased chaos in that area. Recognized authorities who have made a thorough study of the refugee situation, even those who are none-too-friendly to Israel, now admit that the only solution to the Arab-created refugee problem is to settle them in Arab countries, especially Iraq which could absorb half a million workers in her lagging economy. Unfortunately, the world's great pow- ers, instead of calling the bluffs of such dictators, have encouraged them by ap- peasing them and by yielding to their blackmail threats. This is the root of the Middle East's major problems: the failure to defy small men who create big prob- lems for all. The problem involving the refugees could have been solved long ago. The question of an "independent state" had been shunned because Jordan desired to retain autonomy over acquired territory. It was only when Israel was involved that false charges of aggression and territorial expansionism were raised. But since such an issue now can bene- fit the Egyptian dictator, the proposal for an "independent state" is being revived. Apparently it is the only way Nasser can fight Hussein of Jordan while, at the same time, appeasing his own disgruntled Gaza population. * * * Does all this point to a possible new war threat? Israeli circles believe this to be unlikely. It is believed in Jerusalem that a battle between the United Arab Republic of Egypt, Syria and Yemen and the Arab Federation of Jordan and Iraq is inconceivable at this time. A JTA re- port from Jerusalem explains it by offer- ing the following comparative figures: "On the basis of informed estimates, it was reported that the Cairo-Damascus axis has 190,000 troops under arms, including five infantry and almost two armored divisions, plus 150 MIG fighters and Hyushin bombers from the USSR. The federation, supplied by the West, has one armored division, 70 Brit- ish manufactured jets and 90,000 troops un- der arms in four infantry and one armored division. "The difference in manpower and materiel, experts here believe, does not give the UAR an edge over the Hashemite bloc. The latter has the advantage of geographic position— their borders are contiguous while Syria and Egypt are separated and Yemen isolated at the tip of the Arabian Peninsula. As a result of this 'balance' there is little likelihood of military action but a good deal of political chipping away at each other's position and the possibility of a military operation only to deliver the coup de grace." Nevertheless, Israel is in the very center of the struggle for power between the contending Arab forces. There are feuds among kinsmen in the Middle East, yet Israel is the one element against whom all the forces spout hatred. Some say that real unity among all the Arab nations would bring peace in that area closer and would assure an amicable agreement between the Arabs and Israel. At the moment, total Arab unity is an impossibility and peace with Israel remains remote. Only when Jor- dan, Iraq and Lebanon will abandon fears and make peace with Israel will the issue be resolved. If that were in the offing, we could predict happy days, soon. t- Prof. Bernstein's Enlightening Book: `The Politics of Israel- . First Decade of Statehood' Many volumes dealing with Israel and her problems may be expected during the young state's tenth anniversary. One of the first, "The Politics of Israel—The First Decade of Statehood," by Marver H. Bernstein, associate professor of politics at Princeton University, published by Princeton Uni- versity Press, surely will rank among the best books published thus far on Israel's state agencies and her development as a political entity. A profoundly scholarly book, the result of very earnest study,- Prof. Bernstein's political analyses also have the merit of forming an interesting historical analysis of early Zion- ist activities, the party system in Israel, the electoral system and a score of other issues relating to the new state. Dr. Bernstein, who was associated with the State Comp- troller of Israel, Dr. S. Moses, for two years, acquired first-hand knowledge about the workings of Israel's political system. The historically-minded reader will be enlightened by his introductory chapters on the foundations of statehood and the evolving constitutional framework. He shows at the outset how the Zionist idea grew from the hopes in the -Middle Ages when "the idea of a return to Zion was a cardinal principle of Jewish religion." He reviews the political history of Zionism, beginning with the Herzlian era, explains the fiery disputes that at times engulfed the movement in the controversies between moderates and ex- tremes, makes reference to the Brandeis-Weizmann conflict and gives a thorough analysis of the influence of the British Mandatory Government upon the Jewish activities in Palestine. There is special interest in his review of the development of Jewish self government under the British Mandate and the creation of agencies which became the foundation-stones for the State of Israel. As a "Zionist political tradition," he shows _how "the Zionist movement and Jewish self-govern- ment in Palestine bequeathed to the State of Israel a democratic political tradition that helped to mold the political institutions of the new state." Thus, Prof. Bernstein indicates that "by drawing heavily on Zionist practice and Jewish self-governing experience and by planning in advance for quick transition to statehood, Israel gained substantial advantages in establishing the constitutional framework of the new State." He declared: of the State of Israel has been "The formal structure firm and clear-cut from its inception. A strong parliament is flanked by a weak President exercising only nominal functions and by a powerful executive that has developed a capacity to dominate, within limits, the legislative process. . . . Elections are free, and ballots are cast in secret and counted and reported honestly. Nationality has been care- fully defined." He does, also, indicate the weaknesses: "The nation is firmly committed to the philosophy of the welfare state. Although the overwhelming majority of the population • is devoted to the principles of freedom of expression and association, constitutional guarantees of individual .liberty are lacking. The intensity of political action has been heightened by a multi-party system sustained by 'a system of prOportional representation. And coalition politics dominate cabinets that have not yet developed a meaningful tradition of collective cabinet responsibility." Thus, the chapters in this book on the role of parties in Israel and on the welfare state in action add to the value of the discussions inspired by Prof. Bernstein's work. The manner in which Israel budgets its finances—great burdens having been heaped upon it—is evaluated as the test of Israel's ability to govern. In spite of the serious 'strains under which Israel labors, Prof. Bernstein 'writes that "Israel has displayed remarkable adaptability in meeting the challenge of national independence." He pays the Jewish state this compliment: "The quality of political development in Israel in its first decade must be measured not primarily by the efficiency of its public services, the competence of its civil service, or the attainment of a workable degree of collective cabinet responsibility. Rather, Israel's record in the first decade of statehood rests in the main upon its demonstrated capacity to survive as a free society and to develop a substantial measure of stability in its democratic institutions." The numerous charts describing Israel's growth add im- measurably to the values of this very important and well- written book. -