Friday, January 24, 1964—THE DETR OIT JEWISH NEWS-2 Purely Commentary By Philip Slomovitz 'Magic Carpet': Dramatic Beginning and Successful Evolution of a Mass Migration In 1949, when this Commentator first visited Israel, he had occasion to witness the arrival of one of the first groups of Yemenite Jews in what was soon to develop into a "Magic Carpet" migration that resulted in the virtual rescue of 50,000 Jews from Yemen. Always the genial and smiling folk, no matter how much they had suffered — as they did in their native land where they were treated as pariahs — we had occasion to see the new arrivals as they blessed their arrival as if "on eagles' wings," because they applied to themselves literally the Biblical prophecy: "You have seen what I did to the Egyptians, how I bore you on eagles' wings and brought you to Me." (Ex. 19:4). They came with the aid of the Joint Distribution Committee whose efforts of rescue continued both for the Yemenites and for escapees from persecutions in many other lands with the cooperation of the Jewish Agency for Israel. We greeted the children in their new attires which, interestingly enough, since the Yemenites know no Yiddish, bore tags reading: "A Matoneh fun Joint" — "a gift from the Joint." It seemed as if these tags were an inheritance from the days when JDC assisted Polish and other Yiddish-speaking East European Jews. They did, however, speak volumes in acclamation of a great task that was begun by JDC, that continued "on eagles' . wings" from many lands and which is currently being marked so glori- ously on the 30th anniversary of the commencement of the "Magic Carpet" miracle of rescue. While the results are a tribute to a great JDC act, they are occasion for joyful affirmation that Israel thereby gained a wonderfully constructive element in the Jews of Yemen. * * * and exorbitant in its puritanism, deserves to The Intermarriage Problem be quoted. Miss Arendt states that the noto- Prof. Erich Rosenthal's visit here this week- rious Heydrich and Hans Frank, the Governor end, and his major address at the Jewish Center General of Poland, were thought to be by on Sunday evening, provide opportunities for origin half-Jews, and goes on to say that both closer acquaintance by our community with one of them repented of their misdeeds before of the most serious problems facing Jewry — their deaths. This Miss Arendt finds 'an un- that of intermarriage. comfortable fact,' for,' we are solemnly in- Dr. Rosenthal's research into the question formed, 'it is difficult not to suspect that has indicated that there is a vast increase in what they repented of was not murder but mixed marriages. It is because of such a wide- that they had betrayed their own people'! spread condition that many in our midst fear How does she know, and what if they did?" to discuss the issue frankly. Many rabbis, be- There is a related comment in "Heroes and cause so many members of their congregations Heretics: A Social History of Dissent," by Bar- are affected by it, avoid discussing it. Com- rows Dunham, published by Knopf. In this chal- munity leaders, because nearly every Jewish lenging work in which are reviewed "the lives home now has either closely or remotely asso- and ideas of the men who challenged conven- ciated with it an intermarriage, prefer to shun tional wisdom," the author refers to the im- discussing it. prisonment of Johann Reuchlin, the Christian But it is out in the open, and Dr. Rosen- student of Hebrew, who, in the 16th century, thal's study, published in the American Jewish "became the founder of Hebraic studies for Year Book for 1964, has brought it to the fore. modern Christian scholars" but who aroused The discussion here on Sunday evening will the wrath of the Inquisition which burned his afford an opportunity for frank review of the books. Reuchlin was hounded, among others, by issue. Allied with it are many problems — those the Jewish apostate, Johann Pfefferkorn. In that of mixed dating by youngsters and teen-agers, connection, Dr. Dunham wrote: conversions, family acceptances of the diffi- "Meanwhile the monks, and in particular culties entailed, the problem of child rearing the Dominicans, had long taken refuge in that and their education in conflicting religious hostility toward knowledge with which reaction- spheres and other challenges. aries always surround themselves, defensively, It was wise to bring Dr. Rosenthal here like the cuttlefish with its ink. They desired under the sponsorship of the movements that enlightenment neither by Reuchlin nor by any- made his study possible and the co-sponsoring one else. The weapon of anti-Semitism lay ready, organizations. Authoritative- reports like .Dr. as so often happens, to hand: the monks could Rosenthal's lead to a better understanding of denounce all study of a language used by Jesus' issues that face our people and affect our rela- executioners. (By Jesus, too, of course, along with tionship's with our neighbors. the Aramaic, reads a footnote.) Moreover, as so 4, * * often happens, there appeared a Jew to assist The Late Dr. Nehemiah Robinson the anti-Semitism, one Johann Pfefferkorn, a late convert to Catholicism. All converts like to World Jewry lost a most distinguished attack the organization they have abandoned, leader and a great scholar in the death of and not a few converts, who perhaps always Nehemiah Robinson, who headed the World lived nearer to fantasy than to fact, give ac- Jewish Congress Institute of Jewish Affairs. counts in which very little fact can be found. We are in the habit of thinking that no Pfefferkorn could speak as one who had been a one is irreplaceable. This is hardly so in the Jew; he could profess himself `ptirified'; he case of Dr. Robinson, who was the noted author- could squeeze out the last bitter nonsense from ity on the conditions that were created by that dreary, often-repeated, and mendacious rou- Nazism, who was an expert on German repara- tine. It was Pfefferkorn's fancy that all Hebrew tions and under whose direction the basic facts books except the Bible ought to be destroyed." have been gathered on the war crimes and on There is a perplexing element here. Why a the destruction of the Jewish communities in scholar of note, who is otherwise fair in handl- Europe. ing the issue we are now touching upon, should The basic facts about the holocaust, those infer that the Jews were Jesus' "executioners" gathered by YIVO, the World Jewish Congress is difficult to understand. After all, only the and their allied movements, were those gathered Romans resorted to crucifixions. Dr. Dunham by Dr. Robinson or under his direction. They should have spoken about Jesus' kinsmen. were records that were gotten together scrupu- But the general question at issue is most lously, with the utmost care that they should interesting. There is no doubt that apostates, be accurate. many who betray their Jewish heritage, are, He will he greatly missed. It is to be hoped more often than not, among the first to abuse that his associates learned enough from him to their ancestors. Dr. Dunham wrote wisely when be able to continue the work of a great expert. he stated that "all converts like to attack the Blessed be his memory. * * organization they abondoned." Similarly, there are Jews who, having been rejected by some The Converts Who Attack organizations, often attack those movements. Movements They Abandoned This has been true of Jews who could not rise In an excoriating review of Hannah Arendt's in Zionist ranks and immediately began to attack "Eichmann in Jerusalem," in Listener and BBC Zionism. What an interesting study this is in Television Review, published in England, Elie human relations! Kedourie concluded: * "The book resembles in tone nothing so Pillars of Courage much as those ridiculous polemics which The women of the Jewish National Fund `thinkers' and nrofessors conduct in learned hit upon an interesting way of linking names journals, , and in which the insignificance of of Detroiters with Israel. By means of Pillars the issues debated is matched only by the of Courage which will be erected on the site intemperateness with which they are main- of a development area to be financed by Detroit tained or rebutted. Miss Arendt, for instance, contributors, at Mishmar Hayarden-Gadot in launches an attack on Pastor Gruber, a Lu- northern Galilee, the names of those participat- theran clergyman who gave evidence at the ing in the project will be recorded and will trial. Before the war Pastor Gruber had cour- reflect honor upon groups and individuals who ageously interceded with Eichmann on behalf assist in providing security for Israel in an of Jews, and for his pains had been sent to a area located strategically. concentration camp. His conduct, it now ap- Israel's land reclamation project thus 'is pears, was 'morally disastrous' and meant being aided in a dramatic fashion through the 'involuntary complicity': what the Pastor Jewish National Fund. By means of this action should have done was, not to intercede for supplementary to the major funds for Israel's certain individuals, but to preach to Eich- redemption, additional means are provided to mann the categorical imperative! assure afforestation and reclamation. The JNF "This pedantic and unpleasant moral rigour Women's annual event thereby continues its —which Eichmann himself affected—runs special gift to Israel and to the fund that through the whole book, but one other in- served as the foundation for the upbuilding stance, monstrous in its claim to omniscience of Eretz Israel. Euromart to Consider Proposals for Extended Trade With Israel BRUSSELS (JTA)—The Coun- cil of Ministers of the Euro- pean Economic Community, key policy-making body of the EEC, will take up proposals for wider trade with Israel by countries of the European Common Mar- ket at its next meeting, Feb. 4. The proposals are now being prepared by a special EEC com- mission following the adoption last weekend of a resolution by the consultative assembly of the EEC, at its meeting in Stras- bourg, urging the Council of Ministers to call on their gov- ernments to reach quick agree- ments with Israel on its export trade. The resolution was offered at the 17-nation assembly by A. Vos, rapporteur, a Dutch Social- ist who visited Israel last Octo- ber. The political commission of the EEC, at a meeting in Stras- bourg, approved a report on the political aspects of trade rela- tions between the European Economic Community and Is- rael. The resolution adopted by the assembly noted that the difficul- ties facing Israeli exports "do not arise from the internal eco- nomic policies of Israel but from the development of the EEC, through the progressive reali- zation of the common external tariff and the implementation of the common agricultural policy." The resolution "deplored the fact that nogotiations be- tween the EEC and Israel have not been sucessful and that, following the refusal of the EEC to conclude a treaty of association which could have solved Israel's trade problems, negotiations for satisfactory trade agreements are so protracted, causing dif- ficulties in Israel,. particularly with regard to investment growth." Vos, opening the meeting, said that if the Arab states had reached the same development as that of Israel, "the situation would be quite different in the Middle East." Camille Linden of Luxembourg stressed the moral obligation of Europe to help Israel, which, he said, was in fact a European country in the Middle East. Peter Jacobs, a West German Socialist, said the strengthening of Israeli trade was not only a moral obligation but a goal also in conformity with the interests of the EEC member states. IKNIM.04•11.141!0 ■ 0 11•111:1.041.11111.001•11.411 ■ I Boris Smolar's I 'Between You ... and Me' I (Copyright, 1964 Jewish Telegraphic Agency, Inc.) Washington Views American firms are urged by the U.S. Department of Commerce to do more business with Israel . . . There is concern in Washington over the fact that the U.S. percentage share in the Israel market dropped last year while the British percentage increased . . . Attention of American exporters is drawn by the Department of Commerce to the fact that Israel's economy coninues to be prosperous and prospects for U.S. exports to Israel remain good ... However, it is emphasized that the Israeli market is highly competitive and aggressive and salesmanship is re- quired if the United States is to maintain the high 33 per cent share it attained in 1962 . . American exporters are told that the import liberalization program introduced a few years ago by the Israel government is now tending to slow down due to pressures from local manufacturers . . Nevertheless, admin- istrative controls are being removed on 23 additional commodities covering formerly protected products . . . The Department of Commerce believes that many of these items should be of interest to U.S. suppliers . . . They include irrigation pipes and fittings, plumbing fixtures, switchboards, elevators, circuit breakers, fuses and other electrical items . . In urging American firms to intensify their trade with Israel, Washington experts stress that with emphasis on effective salesmanship U.S. firms can overtake other countries in selling these items to Israel . . . They point out that U.S. suppliers have traditionally excelled in machinery and transport goods, telecommunication equip- ment, construction equipment, and manufactured goods . . . They draw attention to the fact that the Israeli market is quality- conscious and the determining factor in selling to Israel is often dependent on the quality of the product rather than the price. * * * Israel's Outlook Behind the advice of the Department of Commerce to American business firms to increase their dealings with Israel is probably the fact that Israel will no longer get any products from West Germany as reparations payments . . . Israel received every year from West Germany during the last decade machinery and goods worth tens of millions of dollars as part of the reparations payments . . . Israel's industrial development is due to machinery and equipment received from West German firms under the reparations pact . . . Machinery for Israel's copper mines and for other newly developed industries came from Germany . . The Haifa harbor was extended and modernized with equipment from Germany . . . Even private industrial enterprises in Israel succeeded in securing machinery from Germany on the account of the reparations payments . . . These payments. are now • coming to an end and Israel's market for importing industrial and other articles becomes wide open for any country that can compete in prices, quality and salesmanship . The Department of Commerce, although not referring to the end of West Germany's payments to Israel, is well aware of the fact that Israel will not buy goods in Germany on a large scale unless it succeeds in getting from the Bonn government a large long-term loan . . High officials in Washington, which included the Secretary of the Treasury and the Secretary of Agriculture, were impressed with reports on Israel's economic progress given them by Pinhas Sapir, Israel's Minister of Finance, ,Trade and Industry, who visited the United States last October . . . Sapir was deeply impressed by the high esteem in which 'Israel is held in Washington and in the American financial world . . Israel's excellent reputation in the U.S. business world stems from the fact that its per capita national product indicates its economic growth, as well as from the fact that Israel has impressive dollar reserves and its annual export is increasing.