Zionism Vindicated Nasserism Exposed Chilling German Survey Editorials Page 4 Vol. XLI I I No. 26 HE J EWISH E CDI"T" A Weekly Review I New Edition of Conservative Prayerbook Emphasizes Traditions of Jewish Events Michigan's Only English-Jewish Newspaper—Incorporating The Detroit Jewish Chronicle Printed in a 100% Union Shop 17100 W. 7 Mile Rd. — VE 8 - 9364 — Detroit 35, Aug. 23, 1963 Reviews Page 4 $6.00 Per Year; Single Copy 20c Syrian Attacks, ad Combine Endanger Security of Israel • • • • Detroiters mill Participate tn Aug. 28 Washington March with 14 Co-Sponsoring Organizations A group of local Jewish leaders will join the August 28 March in Washington, Walter Klein, executive director of the Jewish Community Council, stated this week. Local organizations affiliated with the Council and a number of leaders who head local movements are joining with hundreds of Negro and other leaders to participate in the demonstration in support of the Kennedy-sponsored legislation for civil rights now pending in Congress. The March already has been endorsed by the Jewish Com- munity Council. Detroiters who will join the March include Rabbi M. Robert Syme, Leonard Gordon, of Jewish Community Council staff; Harold Dubin, local American Jewish Congress execu- tive director; Sol Littman, director of the local Bnai Brith Anti-Defamation League office; Joseph Shore, of the Jewish Labor Committee; Mrs. Shmarya Kleinman, Mrs. Mollie Tend- ler and Nancy Ratner. NEW YORK, (JTA)—Fourteen major American Jewish organizations joined in a statement endorsing the August 28 March on Washington. They said they "vigorously support" local affiliates throughout the United States planning to par- ticipate. The signers represented the rabbinical and congrega- tional bodies of the three wings of Judaism, labor and union groups, community relations groups and others. The joint statement asserted that, on the centinnial year of the Emancipation Proclamation, "the pledge of first-class citizenship and freedom for the American Negro remains tragically unfulfilled. This enormous gap between promise (Continued on Pages 5 and 6) Israel's request for United Nations Security Council hearings of her charges against Syria may be delayed and a decision on calling a meeting of the Council may not be made until Monday. Complications are due to the absence from New York of Council members and the attempts of Syrian spokesmen to drum up charges against Israel. (Direct JTA Teletype Wire to The Jewish News) TEL AVIV—Syrian gunners penetrated into Israeli territory Monday night and killed two settlers of the .Almagor settlement in an ambush in the latest of a series of border incidents. Israel again lodged•a protest with the United Nations Mixed Armistice Commission. The Israeli army spokesman said in a communique Tuesday that the latest attack occurred when three settlers drove a tractor to a water tap irrigating the plantation of the settlement which is north of Lake Tiberias in the central demilitarized zone: After closing the tap, they started to drive back to the settlement and were attacked by the Syrians. The third settler escaped. Experts on Arab politics here said Tuesday that Both Iraq and Syria view the arrival of an Iraqi military delegation in Damascus Monday as a token of the armed support Iraq has promised Syria in the event of a Syrian clash with Israel. Heading the Iraqi military group now in Damascus is air Brigadier Hardan Takriti, head of the Iraqi air force. The visit of the delegation came against the background of weeks of Syrian attacks against workers in the demilitarized zone on the Syrian- Israel border. The attacks evoked warnings from Prime Minister Levi Eshkol that Israel would not permit the provocations to continue unchecked. President Arif of Iraq arrived Wednesday on a visit to Egypt, accom- panied by six ministers and the army chief of staff. Tensions continued to mount along the Israeli-Arab borders, as more shootings took place on the southern- border near the Gaza Strip and in the north where the Syrians attacked again. Along the Gaza Strip, the shooting was done by the Israelis, one of their border patrols discovering a group of infiltrators armed with sub- Purely Commentary—The Red Cross Centennial Celebration (Continued on Page 32) The Role of Its _Founder, Jean Henri IfInnant, One of the Christian _Forerunners of Herzl By PHILIP SLOMOVITZ In 1863, representatives of 14 European nations gathered in Geneva, Switzerland, to plan the forma- tion of an organization of societies for the relief of men wounded in war. It was as a result of that meeting that an agreement was signed "for amelioration of the condition of the wounded in armies in the field." Thus, the Red Cross was founded. It was inspired by a 31-year-old Swiss banker, Jean Henri Dunant, who set out on a mis- sion of mercy after wit- nessing the horrors on the battlefield of Solfer- ino, in northern Italy. M. Dunant had coined a watchword: Tutti Fra- telli—which, in Italian, means All men are brothers. It was a watch- word for those who aided the 40,000 men who were wounded in M. Dunant that battle, in 1859. With 89 nations preparing to mark the Red Cross Centenary this year, the Dunant saga emerges as one of the most fascinating stories in humani- tarianism. M. Dunant not only has earned a place in history as the founder of the Red Cross: he also has gained an imperishable place in Jewish history as an advo- cate of Jewish settlement in the Holy Land and as one of the great forerunners of Dr. Theodor Herzl among the Christian supporters of the Zionist idea. The idea of a Red Cross was born at Solferino in 1859. The International Red Cross came into being as a result of the Geneva Conference in 1863. In 1901, M. Dunant was the first recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize, in recognition of his great humanitarian ideal. At the same time. M. Dunant was nourishing in his heart another dream: for the rehabilitation of the dispersed, sorely tried and persecuted Jews. Extraordinary Memorandum In an impressive biography, "Dunant—The Story of the Red Cross," (Oxford University Press-1938), Martin Gumpert wrote about Dunant: "His prophetic glance did not yet see into the distance not even as far as the misery that was waiting just around the corner. Dunant had a new idea. In March, 1866, he divulges his plan for a `Universal and International Society for the Revival of the Orient.' Did he see so clearly in advance the evil that was brewing in aged and fanatic Europe and which could degenerate at last into an incon- ceivable race hatred? Once more it was a touching mixture of the apostolic spirit, the humanitarianism of the century and a sense for business speculation that made him the legitimate forerunner of Theodor Herzl and Zionism and finally led his plan astray. In the Biblioteque Nationale is a single copy of his extraordinary eight-page memorandum on this sub- ject. Palestine was to be neutralized in the interests of a great colonial society. And in the following year the International Palestine Company was actu- ally founded, with Dunant as president; it proceeded to make contacts with Jewish societies until the enterprise broke up. "Nevertheless. the Palestine project has flour- ished so far that by 1867 Dunant could discuss it with the Empress Eugenie in the presence of the French Ambassador to Constantinople, M. Bouree." It is possible that Dr. Herzl may have been totally unaware of the activities of M. Dunant; else he might have attempted to enlist his services in behalf of the Jewish National Home in Palestine toward the end of the last century. Much needs to be said about Dun•nt's interest in Palestine and his famous statement. It is neces- sary to understand Dunant to be able to appreciate his concern for the Jewish people. His Spirit of Mercy Dunant began his movement for the injection of a spirit of mercy in the cruelties of war with a practical act of his own. At Castiglioni, another vil- lage in the center of the French position in the colli- sion of the armies of Austro and Franco-Sardina, in 1859, he personally urged the French women and girls to follow him to the fields that were covered with the bodies of the dying and dead and to offer drink to the thirsty, food to the hungry and what- ever care was possible to the wounded and maimed. When Dunant's volunteers began to make a search for the French and Italian wounded and turned their backs on the unfortunate Austrians, the found- er of the Red Cross pointed out to them that Aus- trians were human beings too. "Tutti Fratelli,"—all are brothers—he said to them, and with that phrase on their lips they helped all and in reality estab- lished the foundation for the humanitarian idea that was called into being by Jean Henri Dunant. It must have been this spirit of "Tutti Fratelli" that motivated Dunant's "Open Letter." in 1866, appealing for the colonization of Palestine and the resurrection of the East, "which uniting with the rise of religious sentiment, will be aided by the cooperation of Israelites, whose valuable qualities and remarkable aptitudes cannot but prove very advantageous to Palestine." Dunant's letter was published a year after the publication of Moses Hess' "Rome and Jerusalem," but it is clear that his theories were worked out by himself and were not motivated by earlier writ- ings. In the plans that he worked out, and for which he appealed to the Jewish and non-Jewish worlds, , he is one of the foremost forerunners of Dr. Theodor Herzl, and is one of the greatest Christians of the '(Continued on Page 2)