iJudaism and Israel Pavilions at Expo '67 Depict Historic Aspects of Jewish History z Detroit and South. Oakland County Hadassah Merge Into One Chapter 5 Detailed Story. Page 22 Must Eliminate Jewish I II iteracy HE JEWISH NEWS Anniversaries in Coming Year Irresponsible Bigots Editorials Page 4 Detailed Story. Page .10 1=7) -T"I=2 01 —1— A Weekly Review I I C 1 ■ ./11 C I-11 GA ■ Jewish Attitudes of Soviet Writer Eh renburg Commentary - Page 2 of Jewish Events Michigan's Only English-Jewish Newspaper — Incorporating The Detroit Jewish Chronicle VOLUME LI—NO. 26 de 17100 W. 7 Mile Rd., Detroit—VE 8-9364—September 15, 1967 27 $6.00 Per Year; This Issue 20c D UN Envoy's Jerusalem Report Affirms nstitution ,of Normal Rule by Israel Administration Old City Restores Hebrew Street Signs JERUSALEM (JTA) — H e b r e w street-signs are up again in the Old City, now East Jerusalem. municipal officials in the re-united city h a v e restored the tri-lingual street-signs — in Hebrew, Arabic and English — which were used in Jeru- salem prior to 1948, when the city and all of Palestine were under the British Mandate. After the War of Independence in 1948, when Jerusalem was divided be- tween Israel and Jordan, the Jordan- ians tore down the Hebrew name- plates in their portion of the city. These have now been restored. An order vesting ownership of the Old City's Jewish quarter in the State of Israel is due to appear in the gov- ernment's official gazette and to be signed by Finance Minister Pinhas Sapir. The acquisition will facilitate a planning survey of the quarter. so that it can be reconstructed as a major national site of religious and Direct JTA Teletype Wire to The Jewish News NATIONS, N.Y. — Secretary-General U Thant reported here Tuesday that his personal representa- tive who gathered factual information regarding Israel's unifigation of Jerusalem has found the outward conditions fairly normal in. East Jerusalem, the section known as the Old'.City before Israel captured that area from Jordan , during the Six-Day War. Thant made his report to the emergency special session of the General Assembly, which recessed in July and is scheduled to reconvene Monday for its final meeting. The special body, comprised of all members of the United Nations, is expected to pass on the report, after Monday's debate, to the Refugees' Return to Resume regular assembly to open the following day. (Direct JTA Teletype Wire to The Jewish News) UNITED JERUSALEM — Some 7,000 West Bank Arab refugees. whose return from Jordan was approved by Israel but who missed the Aug. 31 deadline, will start returning to their homes Sunday. The Israel Ministry of the Interior announced Tuesday that the refugees will be able to make their return without any time limit. Crossing of the Jordan River will be per - mitred three times weekly, over the Allenby Bridge. The ministry is expected to announce details next week regarding resumption of a family reunion plan. Israel is also due shortly to announce its reply to a note by Secretary of State Dean Rusk, in which he re - iterated the United States position supporting the return of all West Bank refugees to their former homes. The Israel reply is expected to reformulate the basic position that, on the return of refugees as well as on other matters. direct talks must be initiated between Isiltel and the Arab nations involved. It has been learned that two friendly West European ' states have informed Israel that their position on refugees at the UN General Assembly, opening Monday, will be formulated in accordance with that of Israel. historical interest. Thant's report—a lengthy '781-page document—was based entirely, except for a formal introduction, on a report filed with him by his personal representative for Jerusalem fact-finding, Ambassador Ernest 0. Thalmann, a Swiss diplomat, who spent two weeks in Jerusalem. While observing that the outward appearance of Jerusalem was calm and appeared normal, Thalmann reported that many Arab personalities had given him petitions, memoranda and statements indicating serious opposition to Israel's civil rule over East Jerusalem. He also reported there was wide accept- ance of Israel's principles, granting free access to all holy places in Jerusalem to all religious persons. However, he found Moslem religious leaders totally dissatisfied, and he reported that, on the whole, the Catholic Church. as embodied in the Vatican, still insists that Jerusalem must constitute a "corpus Thalmann Th a lmann reported that most of the Arabs who presented him with grievances were either former members of the Jor- danian administration or former leaders in the Palestine Liber- ation Organization, the Anti-Israeli fighting arm of the Arabs. (Related Story, Page 'I) (Continued on Page 14) How USSR Affected Jewish Life in Georgia and Uzbekistan Editor' Note: This is the fifth install- meet of the selections from Ben Arm's revealing expose of conditions in Russia. appearing in his book "Between Hammer and Sickle." published by the Jewish Pub- ligation Society of America. Next week's installment will indicate how Bukhara?? and the youth are affected by USSR Jews and anti-Semitism. By BEN AMI earliest times, the Georgian nation absorbed tury, Georgian Jews began to settle in tumi, Sukhumi, Cori, Suram, Kulashi (a little town mainly populated by Jews), and its Jews without any trouble and regarded Palestine. brought other cities and small to w ns. Contacts be- The Soviet regime has naturally them as a small, useful, and thoroughly ds o f the Tbilisi Jewish corn- about drastic changes in the economic situa- tween the hea loyal minority. Jewish the local and munity of the Georgian Jews. The production or communities Social and cultural contacts with other tion Jewish communities were maintained main- and sale of wine was completely taken over are much closer than those between the 1y by their merchants who traveled to Jew- by the government and became a national Ashkenazi communities in Russia. The w ves Republic. established Tbilisi community often gi ish centers in neighboring lands. In the monopoly of the Georgian Thousands of Georgian Jews managed to fin reli- maintain Middle Ages, Georgian Jews were in touch gious institutions. regime. during the early years of the Soviet and this influenced their liturgy and reli- The Georgian authorities. including the gious ritual and provided them with bibli- Most remained behind and had to struggle new Department of Religions. have a more adapt themselves to the cal and religious literature. From the eight- for years to Their synagogues were closed, lenient and humane attitude toward the eenth century onward, they began to estab- situation. Jews than do the other national republics. lish contact with Russian Jewry.. Since the their educational institutions paralyzed, their The reason is that most of the Georgian conquest of Georgia and its annexation to main sources of livelihood taken from them. ruling bodies are directed by Georgians. Despite everything, they managed some- the Russian empire this contact has been nation has managed to how to develop effective means of preserv- This small. proud steadily strengthened. The Georgian Jews are proud of their past. They claim to be the descendants of the ten tribes which were exiled from the kingdom of Israel some twenty-seven hun- dred years ago by the Assyrian King Shal- maneser 81, and which settled on the borders The economic condition of the Georgian ing their identity. And they regained their withstand Russification more successfully of the empire at "Halah, Khabur and the River Gozan, and the cities of Media." Jew was good—better in fact than that former important position in the economic than other the Soviet There nationalities are hardly any of Russians in Union. key gov- Though there is no clear evidence in sup- of other Jews within the Russian Pale of life of Gdorgia, this time within the new port of this tradition (as no serious study settlement—and this enabled them to bring national framework as state officials in wine ernment positions in Tbilisi. Georgia is per- an haps the only republic which seems—to of this subject has yet been made), it in rabbis, ritual slaughterers, and teachersproduction and trade. With regard to their religious tradition, outsider at least—to govern itself with seems probable that the Jewish descendants from the West. On the eve of the Bolshevik of the Assyrian exiles wandered as far south revolution, many of the Georgian Jewish the proud Georgian Jews have not only suc- little The interference from Moscow. handling of Jewish affairs is also in as southern Caucasia, Babylonia and Persia, communities had flourishing Hebrew schools ceeded in maintaining, as far as possible, and settled there. We learn of Jewish set- and nascent Zionist groups. Jewish nation- the respected position of their synagogues, Georgian hands. Influenced by a tradition tiers in Armenia from the Jerusalem Tal- alism developed quite naturally among the but are also trying to maintain, unofficially, of many generations, they treat Jews with mud, which mentions "Rabbi Yaakov of Jews of Georgia, for it did not clash with something akin to an over-all communal or- a great deal facts, of toleration. These together with the importance Armenia." Josephus relates that a con- their ancient communal and religious af- ganization. today in Tbilisi, Ba- of the family unit, account for the great Most of them live siderable number of Jews lived in Armenia finities. By the end of the nineteenth cen- solidarity of the Georgian Jews. They are the best organized and the proudest Jews during the days of King Tigranes (a descend- ant of Herod, first century CE). They wan- in the Soviet Union. dered northward from Armenia and settled But it must be remembered that in the in Georgia. That Jews have lived in Georgia final analysis even these Jews do not have since the early Middle Ages is attested to a single class in which Hebrew or Jewish by written documents as well as ancient The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development this week religion can be taught. They have no means of training the next generation of leaders gravestones. ounced an allocation of $2,987,000 to the Young Israel Council of Metro- announced Georgian Jews were much in evidence in politan Detroit for the construction of a 19 - story high - rise apartment build - and are unable to give open expression alm ost me ssianic exaltation regard- the Turkish empire, Persia, and the Rus- ing for senior citizens in downtown Detroit. Construction will begin early to their Stat Israel. sian empire in connection with the wine e ing the of Page 8.) next year. (Story trade and other forms of commerce. From Young Israel Awarded S3 Million Citizen Apartment r Senio d to Buil