B-G, Hailed in Three Cities, Returns Compliment to U.S. Jewry; Given Award, Degree in New York (Direct JTA Teletype Wire to The Jewish News) NEW YORK—Declaring that he was "never more impressed with' the deep Jewish commitment of the American Jewish community" than on his present tour, David Ben- Gurion, speaking at a meeting Tues- day of the American Section of the Jewish Agency Executive, ex- pressed his deep conviction that American Jewry will for many years continue to play an important role in the development and growth of Israel. Speaking here at a meeting at which Mrs. Rose L. Halprin, chair- man of the Jewish Agency, Ameri- can Section, presided, the former Israel prime minister, who for many years was chairman of the executive of the Jewish Agency, laid down three priorities as the pressing tasks for American Jewry: 1. The teaching of Hebrew. 2. The study of the Bible. 3. The promotion of Aliya. Ws. Mortimer Jacobson, na- tional president of Hadassah, the Women's Zionist Organization of America, announced Tuesday that the main entrance court of the Hadassah -Hebrew University Medical Center in Jerusalem is to be known as "Ben-Gurion Square." The announcement was made at a special Hadassah Bible study seminar attended by more than 1,000 members. Mrs. Jacobson also presented Ben-Gurion with a check for $1,800 for his Institute of Negev Research. Certification that the medical center court is to bear his name was contained in an illuminated scroll presented to Ben-Gurion. Addressing the seminar, Ben- Gurion paid tribute to the freedom and equality Jews enjoy in America but saw in it a danger of assimila- tion. The Israeli statesman called up= on American Jewish parents to send their children to Israel, conceding that "it is not so easy" for the older generation to emigrate to the Jewish state. He stressed the importance of Hebrew in the lives of Jews. "A Jew who doesn't know He- brew doesn't know what is a Jew," Ben-Gurion said, adding that "the key to Jewishness is knowing He- brew." He paid tribute to Hadassah for its contributions to the advance- ment of the state of Israel, not- ing that his association with the organization dates back to World War I. The United Jewish Appeal pre- sented Tuesday night a birthday gift of $1,200,000 to Ben-Gurion to build a secondary school as part of the Institute of Higher Studies at Sde Boker. Some 400 people at- tended the event. The gift was announced at the dinner given in Ben-Gurion's honor by the public committee for the celebration of his 80th birthday, at the Hotel Pierre. Detroiter Max M. Fisher, UJA chairman, is also chairman of the Public Commit- tee. The Israel Education Fund had originally sought $1,000,000 for the high school and that its oversub- scription by $200,000 represented a 50th wedding anniversary gift to the Ben-Gurions. The funds were raised at two dinner meetings in Miami and in New York. Among the donors was Mrs. Emma Schaver of Detroit. More than $10,000,000 in giving was announced here Monday night by the United Jewish Appeal of Greater New York at a dinner formally launching its 1967 cam- paign with Ben-Gurion as honored guest. About 1,200 leading contributors to the UJA attended the dinner, at which Ben-Gurion was presented with the Herbert H. Lehman Me- morial Award for his "prophetic vision" and leadership. Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller made 18—Friday, March 170 196Z the formal presentation of the medallion which symbolizes the New York Jewish community's tribute to Ben-Gurion at age 80. Ben-Gurion made a plea on be- half of one group of those over- seas depending on the help of UJA- supported agencies — the immi- grants who come to Israel from backward lands "without skills, without knowledge of life in the 20th Century and without educa- tion." . Immigrants from North Africa and Asia are the equal of any of Israel's citizens, when they are given the opportunity to develop their potential, he said. "Hundreds of thousands of them have already taken their places as full partic- ipants in Israel's modern, rapidly industrializing, democratic soci- ety," he stressed. There must be a great expansion and intensification of educational and cultural programs, social serv- ices and economic assistance to en- able these immigrants and their children to achieve full citizenship in Israel, Ben-Gurion stated. Two old friends—former Presi- dent Harry S. Truman and Ben- Gurion— were reunited by long- distance telephone Monday. Ben- Gurion, who had placed his call earlier in the day, received the call during a meeting with 75 members of Mahal, an organiza- tion of Americans who fought as volunteers in the Israel army, during the War of Independence. "I couldn't leave the United States," Ben-Gurion told President Truman, "without expressing the gratitude that our people and Jews throughout the world feel for what you have done to help establish the Jewish State. Our heart is with you and I know yours is with us. You have become an immortal in our country." Ben-Gurion closed with a "Shanim Rabot"—may you have many years—and with "Sha- lom." Returning to the meeting, he ex- plained to the Israel war veterans that Truman did more for Israel than any other man, noting that Truman was the first head of state to recognize Israel and made pos- sible Israel's first grand-in-aid, which amounted to $100,000,000. Earlier in the day Ben-Gurion ad- dressed an audience of 300 students and faculty members at the He- brew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion, and appealed to them to encourage American Jewish youth and Jewish scientists to spend at least some part of their careers studying and working in Israel. Ben-Gurion agreed to serve as quizmaster on the Bible to 200 young Americans, between ages 12 and 16, finalists in the national Bible contests sponsored by the Jewish Agency for the past seven years, at a reception in his honor on Thursday. Ben-Gurion met the children fol- lowing his return from Princeton University, where he delivered a lecture at the Woodrow Wilson School of Public Affairs. Ben-Gurion will be the guest of Brandeis University this weekend when he visits the campus to par- ticipate in the - university's pioneer- ing audio-visual program, which is designed to make the memoirs of world figures oral and visual his- torical documents. Among the topics which Ben- Gurion will discuss for the "Dret- zin Living Biographies Program," during his three-day stay, will be his recollections of the turbulent World War II era and the move- ment to establish Palestine as an independent stat.:, and the Suez crisis. The interview will be conducted by the director -of the Institute of Contemporary History at the Wiener Library in London, Walter Laqueur, a visiting professor dur- ing the spring semester on Bran- ,.THE DETROIT JEWISH ,NEWS. deis' faculty of Contemporary Jew- ish Studies. Ben-Gurion, who last visited Brandeis in 1960 to receive an hon- orary degree during a special con- vocation held in tribute to him, will be honored at a dinner on the Brandeis campus today with his wife. The couple will celebrate their 50th wedding anniversary at that time. Ben-Gurion was awarded an hon- orary doctor of laws degree by New York University Wednesday, at a special convocation held at Wash- ington Square, Manhattan. Ben-Gurion then delivered a lec- ture, "Isaiah's Prophecy for World Peace," before an audience of 750 students, faculty members, and civic leaders. Dr. James Hester, president of the university, called Ben-Gurion a "student and thinker as well as a man of action," and noted that "his scholarship in the Bible and in comparative religion is notable." "Visionary, fighter, scholar, this young son of the lion, now in his ninth decade, is a great leader of his people and one of the leading citizens of the world," Dr. Hester said. In Chicago, Ben-Gurion de- voted the entire 12th day of his visit to the opening of an Ameri- can branch of the World Jewish Bible Society. Ben-Gurion, who is president of the Israel Society for Bible Re- search, made four appearances at the founding conference at the Palmer House of an American Jew- ish Bible Society, one of which was his participation in an intensive 90-minute Bible study group dis- cussion on three chapters -from the Book of Exodus. Declaring that the "greatest re- ward of his American tour will be the successful establishment of an American Jewish Bible Society," Ben-Gurion proudly reported , the "key position achieved by Bible study in Trael" and expressed the hope that hundreds of Bible study groups will be founded in the Unit- ed States. That his dream may come true, was indicated by a simple one-sen- tence resolution unanimously ad- opted by more than 2,000 partic- ipants saying: "The modern Jew must reestablish a close connection between his deep self and his Bible, so that together, he can find iden- tity and strength for Jewishness, and the Bible can become vital in his life." Dr. Hahn M. Gevaryahu, of Jeru- salem, director of the World Jew- ish Bible Society Foundation, an- nounced that the new American group has already made arrange- ments for the establishment of the B-en-Gurion Institute for Advance- ment of Group Bible Activity at the College of Jewish Studies in Chicago, which will also house the national offices of the American organization. He said the American organiza- tion also hopes to establish 12 sem- inars at colleges and universities for the purpose of training discus- sion leaders of Bible groups. More than 1,200 Jewish leaders, the largest group ever to attend a Jewish fund-raising function in Chi- cago, jammed the ballroom of the Pick Congress Hotel Saturday night to hear Ben-Gurion. The occasion, the dinner launch- ing the 1967 drive of Chicago's Combined Jewish Appeal, netted the record sum of $2,552,000 in contributions. This sum represented a 27 per cent increase over the gifts these 1,200 contributors gave in 196d. The drive is seeking $6,750,000. The state of Israel and Ben- Gurion were praised by Fisher, who called the creation of Is- rael, in which Ben-Gurion played a major role, the fulfillment of a dream that summed up the longings of 100 Jewish genera- - , • •••••,, tions. "It was a hope which repre- sented th'e deepest desire of a people oppressed and dispos- sessed for 2,000 years," he said. Earlier, Ben-Gurion went to the Circle Campus of the University of Illinois to speak to the Bnai Brith Hillel Foundations of Chicago. Some 1,000 students attended. Representatives of Chicago's City Council presented Ben-Gurion with an embossed scroll reproducing a City Council resolution, hailing Israel's eldest statesman as "the giant of the 20th Century" for his achievements on behalf of the state of Israel. Contrary to these remarks, Ben- Gurion earlier told 1,000 volunteer workers at the inaugural dinner o fthe Los Angeles campaign that no one man was the architect of pres- ent-day Israel. Lauded by chairman Albert Spie- gel, campaign and dinner chairman, as the "architect of Kesent-day Israel," Ben-Gurion said that at least six outstanding men had con- tributed to the modern state. He listed these as including Chaim Weizmann, Theodor Herzl, and such unknowns as Charles Netter, who established the first agricultural training school in Palestine in 1870, as well as Baron Edmund_de Roths- child, who established the first colonies. At the dinner the volunteers were told that a record $2,685,000 in advanced gifts had been pledged to the welfare fund drive. Earlier in the day, at the Uni- versity of California at Los An- geles, Ben-Gurion found himself in the midst of a spirited exchange with Arab students when address- ing an audience of some 500 at the college. Asked by one Arab "if God asks you a long time from now why you took the land of the Arabs in Palestine—and kicked them out against their will, what will you reply?" Ben-Gurion said: "Well,. if God asks me this question, I will answer him, you promised this land 4,000 years ago to Abraham and his chil- dren." The audience broke out in cheers at Ben-Gurion's r e s p o n s e. He added to the Arab student "We were there, I think you will agree, long before you came there." Ben-Gurion held a number of private interviews with outstanding figures in the Los Angeles Jewish community, with 150 members of the UJA Young Leaders Cabinet and Community Service Committee and other Jewish youth groups in the Greater Los Angeles area. The former premier delivered an address in Hebrew to some 400 stu- dents and faculty members of the Hebrew Union College-Jewish Insti- tute of Religion, University of Juda- ism, the Hebrew department of UCLA and other Hebrew-speaking organizations in the Los Angeles area. In the evening, he spoke to 3,000 persons gathered inside the Los Angeles Palladium at a com- munity-wide tribute to him. A group of leaders of the Las Vegas Jewish community told Ben- Gurion that they would contribute $100,000 toward the construction of the high school in Sde Boker. Seventy-five members of Cali- fornia Mahal, and some 50 Jewish Legionnaires who fought with Brit- ish forces to liberate Palestine in World War I welcomed Ben-Gurion at separate meetings following his arrival in Los Angeles. The Mahal members, most of them in their 40, hailed Ben- Gurion as their former com- mander-in-chief. The L e g i o n- naires, most of them in their late 60s and early '70s, welcomed him as their former comrade- in-arms. Both groups presented checks to the former premier to be used for schoolbooks and school materials at his Midrasha at Sde Baker. But the enthusiasm of both groups was turned into embar- rassed silence when the former premier asked each in turn "Since you fought to give an independent Israel, why haven't you come to settle among us or send your chil- dren to Israel?" 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