Need For Greater Israel - Diaspora Understanding Editorial Page 4 THE JEWISH NEWS 1=3 NI F=2 C> - r A Weekly Review of Jewish Events The Never - Ending Progress of Israel Commentary Page 2 Michigan's Only English-Jewish Newspaper—Incorporating The Detroit Jewish Chronicle xxxvi I I, No. 19 1001ZingilonSLp 17100 W. 7 Mile Rd.—VE 8-9364—Detroit 35, January 6, 1961 $5.00 Per Year; Single Copy 15c Distortion of Prime Minister's Zionist Speech Creates Furor (Special to The Jewish News) Eshkol Fights to Mend Rifts in. Israel Over Lavon Case (Direct JTA Teletype Wire to The Jewish News) Israel's Finance Minister Levi JERUSALEM — Eshkol spent this week pleading with members of the Israel Cabinet and with leaders of the Mapai Party to prevent the resignation of Prime Minister David Ben- Gurion over his rift with Pinhas Lavon, Secretary- . , General of the Histadrut- Israel's Federation of Labor — by adopting a solution . which would be satisfactory to all sides involved. Eshkol's effort seems to go in the direction of satis- fying the Prime Minister— who does not recognize the exoneration by the Cabinet of Lavon as responsible for the failure of a 1954 action by the Defense Department —but at the same time not to reverse the Cabinet de- Levi Eshkol • cision which exonerated Lavon. The proposed compromise seems to be that an Investigation Committee be established which should (Continued on Page 3) JERUSALEM — The severity of criticisms of Prime Minister David Ben- Gurion's World Zionist Congress speech by American Jewish leaders amazed American and other delegates here. The feeling was prevalent among delegates that the critics made a mountain out of a molehill. The extremism of the attacks shocked even many religious leaders. The general viewpoint concurs in the view of Dr. Nahum Goldmann, presi- dent of the World 'Zionist Organization, that Ben-Gurion's attitude was distorted. The emphasis on minor challenges by Ben-Gurion on Aliyah was magnified out of proportion to their significance. After a week of long speeches the spokesmen of all parties at the Congress are settling down to the major aims of the movement. The composition of the World Zionist Executive created a minor crisis, but the Congress is expected to con- clude amicably Monday. Ben-Gurion, in an interview given to the Associated • Press, said that his speech at the Zionist Congress which provoked criticism on the part of the Jew- ish organizations in the United States because of his reference to Orthodox Jews who do not settle in Israel, was in no way meant to be offensive to American Jewry. He emphasized that his words and his intentions have been "distorted" in reports which appeared in American newspapers. . "It appears that the totality of what I had to say on the subject has got lost through quite improportional stress that has been laid on some passages which were themselves not properly related abroad," the Prime Minister stated. "In fact, in my speech I put the emergence of the American Jewish com- munity as a positive development in Jewish life on a par with the miracle of Israel's rebirth which helped Jewry to withstand the great blows of the isolation and para- lysis of Soviet Jewry for the last 40 years and the holocaust in Europe at the hands of the Nazis. "It is true I am deeply concerned that Judaism in the free lands may gradu- ally be weakened unless positive action is taken. But truly you know that this concern I share with Jewish leadership everywhere, including the United States. (Continued on Page 32) _Fear Outbursts Before Eichmann Trial By PHILIP SLOMOVITZ JERUSALEM—Fears are spreading that there will be a worldwide outburst of. anti- Semitic manifestations before the opening of the Eichmann trial here on March 6. "We are terrified by the possibility of a new wave of swastika-smearing," Dr. Mau- rice Perlzweig, chairman of the World Jew- ish Congress foreign affairs department, stated here. , Perlzweig left Jerusalem today to present his accumulated facts at a meeting of the United Nations Subcommission on Human Rights, in New York, scheduled for Tuesday. The UN commission may take steps to deal with an impending crisis that is expected to develop on the eve of the trial of Eichmann. This correspondent was told in Rome, last week, by leaders of the Italian Jewish community, that anti-Semitic manifesta- tions may occur again, similar to those that took place last year, as a protest of Jew-baiters against the trial of Eichmann, Nazi hangman charged with the execution of 6,000,000 Jews. "We especially expect trouble in Argen- tina," Perlzweig said. "Wherever there are Nazi, Fascist or other anti-Semitic cells, there may be attempts to revive hatred against Jewry, and the Eichmann trial may prove the pivot for them." Strict security measures are being set up in Jerusalem preparatory to completion of arrangements. The understanding reached with Dr. Robert Servatius, of 6Cologne, Germany, that Israel will pay the $20,000 sum needed for the preparation of defense data, now indicates that there will be no delays in the scheduled official opening of the trial on March 6. There is feverish activity for the com- pletion of the Beth HaAm, the • Jerusalem Community Center that will be used for the first time for the trial. The Beth HaAm—the literal meaning of which is "the people's hall"—is located on Bezalel Street, next to the Menorah Club- house, near the corner of Henatzi street. Maximum security has been set up during the final construction of the building, and only the laborers who have been thoroughly briefed are being permitted to see the inside of the hitherto unused Center. Beth HaAm is in an old area of the New City of Jerusalem. There are a number of synagogues nearby and a row of new apart- ment houses is being completed in the two blocks surrounding the projected court- house. Special power lines already are being set up for the broadcasting aad televising of the trial proceedings. It is now considered a certainty that the 350 newsmen who have been accredited to cover the trial may not be admitted into the courtroom itself, but will be seated in an adjoinina room into which the proceedings will first b be brought via a special television screen and loud speakers. The reason for such an extreme security measure is obvious. Israel iE anxious to pro- vide fullest protection to Eichmann, and even the most unimaginable attempt at vengeance is being guarded against. The attitude of the Israeli government reflects the viewpoints of most of the people of the Jewish State. While there are hun- dreds of thousands of survivors from Nazism who have found haven from Hitlerism, and many hundreds of them were personal wit- nesses to Eichmann's actions, there are very few who advocate the death penalty for him. The consensus of opinion is that capital punishment will not be enforced even in Eichmann's instance. The death penalty is outlawed here—except for treason and for Nazi crimes—yet there is the feeling, countrywide, that Israel should not have it on its conscience that it had condemned to death even an arch criminal. The deep resentment that was originally felt here over the decision of the Israel government to cover the $20,000 cost for Dr. Servatius in conducting the Eichmann defense has vanished. It is now generally recognized here that even a "mass murder- er"—as the charge relates to Eichmann—is entitled to an attorney, and coverage of defense costs is tantamount to providing Eichmann with counsel for defense. The prosecution now is gathering evi- dence from all over the world. The first factual documentary material has just reached Israel from Hungary and is being reviewed by the Governmental Bureau 06. Servatius, who has just left Israel for Germany, there to complete his defense, has definitely ascertained that Eichmann will plead "not guilty"; that while he will "admit the fact" of the death of millions of Jews, he will deny that there were six million dead and will claim that the number was considerably less. He will also deny that he was primarily responsible for the mass extermination. Eichmann, according to Servatius, has no intention of expressing "regret" over the Nazi crimes, but will instead say "I am sorry." Servatius also has ascertained that Eich- mann thus far has written 4,000 pages of his life's story, signing each page. (See Related Story Page 3)