A nachlah is being estab-
lished in Israel in honor of Dr.
Aaron Dubnove, prominent De-
troit physician, scholar and
Zionist, it was announced here
this week by the local Jewish
National Fund Council.
The nachlah, which will pro-
vide land for agricultural settle-
Jews in the 50th State
Cheer U.S. Admission
The Jews in the Hawaiian
Islands—there are less' than
1,000 of them in the entire 50th
State of our Union—joined - with
their fellow citizens in rejoicing
over their admission to State-
hood.
There are approximately 250
Jewish families in Hawaii, and
nearly all of them are in
Honolulu.
Jews first came to the U.S.
Charge France
Fails to Protect
gyptian Jews
DR. AARON DUBNOVE
ments and offer farming op-
portunities for new settlers, will
be known as Nachlath Dr.
Aaron Dubnove.
It is being created by the
JNF Foundation, which seeks
to acquire and reclaim land on
a large scale through the assign-
ment of insurance, bequests or
gifts of Israeli Bonds.
Dr. Dubnove, born in Russia
of a family that traces its line-
age back to the Great Maharall
Rabbi of Prague, who lived
from 1512 to 1609, came to
Canada in 1913.
In 1917, he graduated from
the University of Manitoba, and,
in 1921, he received his medical
:degree. He has been in private
-practice in Detroit since 1922.
• Only recently, Dr. DubnoVe
established a student loan fund
at his alma mater and also at
the Bar-Ilan University in Is-
rael. He is a founding member
of the Jerusalem Academy of
Medicine.
$500 Million Plan
-to Develop Negev
. JERUSALEM (JTA) — A
five-year development plan for
the southern section of the
Negev desert, involving ex-
penditures totalling 900,000,000
Israeli pounds ($500,000,000),
was considered by- the govern-
ment, after submission of the
plan to the entire Cabinet.
The plan envisages an in-
crease of the area's popula-
tion . by 80,000, and the pro-
vision of 35,000 additional jobs
in the region.
Of the newly employed,
13,000 would be given jobs in
new industries connected with
development of the Negev's
natural resources, processing
or otherwise preparing for ex-
port many of the raw materials
found in the desert.
• These materials would be
exported through the Port of
Elath to countries in Africa
and Asia.
Many other workers would
be employed in a growing pro-
duction of consumer goods for
the Negev's increased popula-
tion. One part of the program
calls for settlement of 5,000
nomadic Bedouins on agricul-
tural lands, making farmers
of the Bedouin tribesmen.
PARIS (JTA)—A represen-
tative of the French Jewish
refugees accused the French
government of flagrant anti-
Jewish bias in "failing to re-
act" to discrimination by the
United Arab Republic • against
French Jewish nationals in
Egypt.
Henri Cohen, in a letter to
the influential Paris daily, Le
Monde, asserted that French
Jews, who formed- 90 per cent
of the French colony in Egypt,
had been barred from return-
ing to their homes after the
Suez - crisis.
Cohen said this action was
taken by UAR authorities de-
spite an article of the Franco-
Egyptian financial agreement
signed in Zurich last August.
Declaring that the French
Jewish refugees have been
placed' on a black list by the
Cairo authorities, Cohen stated
that the French government
had reacted "only feebly" to
this discrimination because "it
wants to renew its commercial
ties with Egypt even if it must
sacrifice French citizens of the
Jewish faith"to do so.
He added that the situation
of the French Jewish refugees
was tragic. He reported that
they were mainly former mer-
chants, industrialists and land-
owners who have usually
passed the normal employ-
ment age and must live on
small government subsidies.
He said that if their property
in Egypt were transferred to
France, it would enable them
to resume a productive life.
The Cohen statement con-
tended that not a single French
Jew had been granted the visa
needed to enable him to return
to Egypt to settle the issue
of his property there.
It was learned from the
World Jewish Congress, how-
ever, that a very small number
of French Jews had returned
to Egypt but they have met
with consistent bad faith on
the part of Cairo authorities.
The returning French Jews
have been unsuccessful in ef-
forts to obtain return of their
sequestrated or confiscated
properties.
.
Territory of Hawaii in 1856.
Many of them have intermar-
ried. It was in the last 30• years
that a semblance of a Jewish
community has begun to func-
tion in cooperation with leading
American Jewish - movements.
Thus, in 1935, a church build-
ing was leased and Holy Day
services were conducted by
Rabbi Kenneth Carlton ZWerin.
In 1939 this leased church
building was acquired by the
community and became Hon-
olulu's first synagogue.
A Bnai Brith lodge was
formed in Honolulu in 1930 and
its members conducted a drive
in 1937 and sent the JDC con
tributions of $2,500.
The Jewish Welfare Board
has been active there and in
1941 its representative, Rabbi
Harry R. Richmond, U.S. Army
Chaplain, conducted services.
It is told that a man by the
name of Israel Rosenberg was
popular among the natives 70
years ago and was affectionately
called "Rosey" by them. He was
on intimate terms with King
Kalakana who gave him a
Torah as a gift.
In a report to the World Jew-
ish Congress in New York, Dr.
Israel Goldstein, Chairman of
the WJC's Western Hemisphere
Executive, who recently visited
Hawaii, stated that local Jewish
leaders predict the community
will triple its numbers within
the next three years.
Dr. Goldstein said that the
community was deeply interest-
ed in Jewish affairs in the Uni-
ted States and throughout the
world, and conducts an annual
campaign for the United Jewish
Appeal.
About 200 members of the
community attended a meeting
in which Dr. Goldstein convey-
ed the greetings of the World
Jewish Congress. In a subse-
quent discussion, community
leaders assured Dr. Goldstein
that Hawaii is free of anti-Sem-
itism.
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List of Zionist Prisoners
Given to Czech Envoy
LONDON (JTA) — Barnett
Janner, president of the Board
of Deputies of British Jews,
gave the Czechoslovakian Am-
bassador here a list of Czech
Jews who have been impris-
oned by the government in
Prague on charges of being
"Zionists" or having been in
contact with members of the
Israel legation in Czechoslo-
vakia.
Janner had met previously
Philanthropist Gives
with the Ambassador to com-
$100,000 to Haifa Technion plain against the imprisonment
BOSTON (JTA) — A gift of allegedly "Zionist" Jews,
of $100,000 by Harry Rogal, appealing for their release.
Boston philanthropist, toward
The Ambassador had asked
the Compton Chemical Insti- for a list of such prisoners.
tute at the Haifa Technion, was When he received the list from
announced here by the local Janner, he promised to trans-
chapter • of the American mit the list to his government
Technion Society.
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3-THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS—F riday, March 20, 1959
Nachlah in Israel
Planted by JNF
for .Dr. Dubnove