Goldmann Tells ZOA Zionist Movement Is Far From Goal; Torezyner Denies Dem Jewish Vote NEW YORK (JTA)—Dr. Nahum often the reason for the impact Goldmann said here that the Zion- made by Arab propaganda." ist movement, far from having ful- Warning that "efforts" are filled its mission, "has at best being made to show that the Jew- reached half-way to its goal, and ish vote went overwhelmingly to maybe less." the Democratic Party, Torczyner declared that "leading Jews par- He defined that goal as mobiliza- tion of the support of world Jewry ticipated in the election activities for Israel and furthering of large- of both political parties." scale immigration by Jews from He charged that "the propa- the free nations who would go to ganda" that Jews voted overwhelm- Israel not because of necessity or ingly for Democratic standard persecution but for idealistic rea- bearer Vice President Hubert H. sons. Humphrey was being "spread" by Dr. Goldmann, president of the periodicals and people who protest- World Jewish Congress and former ed President-elect Richard M. president of the World Zionist Or- Nixon's statement that Israel must ganization, was principal speaker have military superiority in the at the annual dinner of the Zionist Middle East. Organization of America attended "The truth is," asserted the ZOA by about 1,000. He was presented president, "that while the Jewish with the ZOA's Theodor Herzl vote went overwhelmingly to the Award, highest honor bestowed by candidate of the Democratic Party that organization. in New York and Massachusetts, He received a message of the Democratic vote of Jews in greetings from President Lyndon many of the major states, like Illi- B. Johnson, who offered congrat- nois, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Florida ulations and called the award "a and California, was far below the fitting symbol of a career of figures of 1964 and even 1960, magnificent achievement in the meaning that a much larger pro- cause of Jewish freedom." portion of the Jewish vote went to He said that "even if one does the Republican Party than previ- not negate the Diaspora as a form ously." of life in Jewish history . . . the Torczyner also asserted that it is actual situation wherein only a "important for Jews to be in both minority lives in its own country political parties because no poli- endangers the future of the sur- tical party should believe that it vival of the -state." According to has the Jewish vote in its vest Dr. Goldmann, "the greatest res- pocket." ervoirs of those who needed to * * come to Israel to start a new life have been more or less exhausted. Future aliya has to come from the free countries as a voluntary im- migration." Dr. Goldmann said that for the solution of the two central prob- Wire (Direct JTA Tel lems of Israel's future —security to The Jewish News) and immigration—"a strong Zionist NEW YORK—Israelis are gener- movement dedicated primarily to the mobilization of the Jewish Di- ally pleased by the election of aspora around Israel, to its uncon- Richard M. Nixon and believe his ditional solidarity with Israel, is "traditional" anti-communism will bolster their security against Soviet absolutely essential." expansionist aims in the Middle Earlier, Jacques Torczyner, ZOA East. president, told the organization's But most Jews in other countries national executive committee that the Zionist movement must devel- have adopted a "wait and see" op an educational program on attitude toward the President-elect. American campuses to help Jewish These findings were the result of a youth combat growing Arab propa- survey of Jewish opinion overseas recently completed by the Ameri- ganda activities." can Jewish Committee and re- He said there were about 400,000 leased here Tuesday. Jewish students on American col- According to the survey, ana- lege and university campuses, but lysts in Israel see the Mediter- "unfortunately, a large number . ranean area as having been are not prepared to counteract this converted into "a genuine and propaganda, and their ignorance and lack of interest in Israel is too legitimate area of cold war con- Nixon's Anti-Red Stand Good for M.E., Israelis Feel Mourn Death of Cardinal Bea cern," but believe "that the USSR will be disinclined to test Mr. Nixon in the Middle East as Khrushchev once did with Ken- nedy in Cuba." Flowing from this widely held premise, the report said, "is Is- rael's acceptance of Mr. Nixon as being a logical and forceful indi- vidual who will not hesitate to stand up to the Soviet Union and thereby insure Israel's survival." Much is made in Israel of Nixon's campaign statement that the balance of military power in the Middle East should be tipped in Israel's favor as a deterrent to Arab aggression. The Israelis are also pleased by Nixon's "luke- warm" attitude toward the nuclear nonproliferation treaty which Prime Minister Levi Eshkol has said Israel should not "rush" into the AJCommittee report d. noted. The Israelis fear the treaty would require them to dismantle their experimental reactors and pilot plants under Soviet-Arab supervision, while the Arabs would have nothing to dismantle or submit to inspection. In Europe, the report indicated, the main Jewish reaction was "wait and see," but some believe that "because of Mr. Nixon's more pronounced anti-Communist line, he might be more active in seeking to check Soviet expansionist efforts in Eastern Europe and elsewhere, and this may also have direct bearing on Soviet use of anti- Semitism as a weapon of its for- eign policy." According to the survey, Jews in Latin America appeared less con- cerned over what Nixon might do than with the fact that 13 per cent of American voters cast ballots for George Wallace, which they regard as "a dangerous symptom of cer- tain political trends . . . and a menace for democracy." * Nixon and Agnew Briefed by LBJ on Middle East WASHINGTON (JTA) — Presi- dent-elect Richard M. Nixon and Vice President-elect Spiro T. Ag- new have been briefed by Presi- dent Johnson on current United States policies in the Middle East and State Department moves in the Arab-Israel conflict, it was learned here. The State Department is known to be seeking a more flexible Israel response in peace moves in line with U.S. efforts to avoid a Middle East confrontation with the Soviet Union. State Department officials have also made it clear that they are determined to avoid an iden- tification of American policy with Israel to such an extent that U.S. influence may not be regained in Egypt and other Arab states. Boris Smolar's 'Between You ... and Me' (Copyright 1968, JTA Inc.) JDC CONFERENCE: Geneva is the city where the Joint Distribu- tion Committee keeps an eye on Jewish communities overseas in need of American Jewish aid. There the needs of these communities are examined and analyzed for presentation to the JDC leadership in New York. There a finger is kept on the pulse of Jewish life in Europe, North Africa and wherever else Jewish relief is required. Once a year, JDC directors gather in Geneva from countries where they are stationed and report on their activities and on the needs of their respective Jewish communities. The gathering is at- tended by the top JDC leadership from New York. At the parley, the basis for JDC aid programs for the coming year is laid. It is at this conference that experiences are exchanged by the experts from each country and one gets a real picture of what is going on in Jewish life. POLISH ECHOES: In the forefront of Jewish tragedies in Europe today stands the tragedy of Polish Jewry. No doubt was felt at the conference about this, after participants listened to a stirring report on the present situation of Jews in Poland. The Warsaw government is determined to get rid of what is left of Polish Jewry after the mass- annihilation of more than 3,000,000 Jews in the country by Hitler's occupation army. There are hardly more than 15,000 Jews left in Poland today and even this pitifully small number now is an "un- wanted element." Embarking on a policy of making Poland "Judenrein," the Polish government this year ousted the JDC and ORT which operates in Poland for a number of years, bringing aid to Jews. Since the Six- Day War, the regime has missed no opportunity to assert—in the press and over the radio—that the Jews are "enemies" of the country because their sympathies were on the side of Israel, with whom Poland broke off diplomatic relations. Jewish institutions are being "liqui- dated" one after the other and every day the situation of the Jews becomes more and more hopeless. Emigration is their only salvation and they leave Poland now in waves, after paying unprecedented high fees for exit permits. They flock to Vienna—their first stop from Poland—and they over- flow offices there of the Jewish Agency, JDC and United Hias, seeking immediate relief and transportation. The great majority proceed to Israel with the aid of the Jewish Agency; but others—especially those who have relatives in the United States and Canada—remain in Vienna in the hope that they will get American or Canadian visas. They become the responsibility of the JDC which has so far spent on them —and on Jewish refugees from Czechoslovakia—more than $200,000 over and above the normal budget. As time goes on, the influx of Jewish refugees from Poland will continue and probably will grow. * TUNISIA AND MOROCCO: The situation of Jews in Tunisia and Morocco is far from normal. Special attention must now be paid by the JDC to needs of Jews in Romania where the government permits JDC aid to be rendered through the Federation of Jewish Communities in Romania, headed by Chief Rabbi Moses Rosen. The Jewish community of Tunisia is dwindling. There are no more than 15,000 Jews left but their needs are now greater than ever be- cause those who remain are mostly aged, ill and handicapped. The younger element is leaving and the original Jewish leadership has emigrated; no longer can the JDC find the trained personnel needed for institutional work, not even personnel with a modest professional background. The gravity of the situation requires increased JDC spending, but emergencies in other countries are forcing the JDC to reduce its Tunisia programs and to merge services carefully built up over the years. The situation in Morocco is similar. King Hassan II of Morocco is friendly toward the Jews but this is not the case with the general Moslem population. Life has become dangerous for Jews in Morocco since the Six-Day War and, while not permitted to emigrate to Israel, the younger and stronger element among them are leaving. Many reach [srfael but some remain in France. Of the Jews leaving Tunisia, even a larger proportion remain in France. * * The problem of increased funds for JDC operations probably will come up in New York in the ranks of the United Jewish Appeal, of which the JDC is one of the major partners. Without an increased budget for 1969, the JDC will be forced to reduce its aid in certain fields in order to meet the most urgent needs that will continue to develop. American Jewry, always proud of the JDC record, will there- fore be expected to increase its contributions so that the JDC will receive from the UJA the funds it needs to alleviate the plight of many thousands of Jews, a large number who never thought they would be dependent on Jewish relief. Celebrating Bar Mitzva in Israel to Become Tradition ? Sorrow over the death, at 87, of Augustin Cardinal Bea (seated), architect of the Vatican Council's declaration absolving Jews of collective guilt for the death of Jesus, was expressed by Arthur J. Goldberg, president of the American Jewish Committee. This picture shows the cardinal at the American Jewish Committee's headquarters in New York in 1963, where he met with Jewish leaders, including (above) Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel of the Jewish Theological Seminary. Rabbi Marc H. Tanenbaum, AJC's inter-religious affair director, chats in background with the cardi- nal's secretary. 40—Friday, November 29, 1968 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS When Israel's "Bar Mitzva Year" (5721-1960/1) was in the offing, a suggestion was put for- ward that it would be fitting for Jewish boys the world over to cele- brate their Bar Mitzva in IsraeL Says Rabbi Shmuel Nathan, ad- viser to the Israel Ministry of tourism: "We immediately accept- ed the idea, and recognized its dual value: for the boys themselves, celebrating in Israel would give the most important day in their lives added significance and at the same time, a project of this kind would contribute to the historical and spiritual bond betWeen the youth and IsraeL" It was therefore decided to make the special mitzva and honors accorded to boys born in Israel available to Jewish youth all over the world. A call was issued to all Jewish parents in the world to make this great ex- perience possible for their chl- dren and to bring them to Israel to become Bnai Mitzva. The Israel ministry of tourism, on collaboration with the prime minister's office and the ministry for religious affairs, set up a spe- cial advisory service which helped parents and tutora in preparing the boys. Rabbi Nathan, in charge of im- plementing the project,. conducted a correspondence with interested parents, rabbis, community work- ers and Jewish organizations who wish to prepare children for the important event along the same lines that Israeli children are taught. Among the first to heed the call were Jewish film stars from Holly- wood and the Jewish community in Argentina, soon followed by others. Synagogues throughout Israel, especially in Jerusalem, cooperated willingly and admiringly, and often went out of their way to let Israeli Bnai Mitzva and those from over- seas share the mitzva. As courtesy of the Israel ministry of tourism, all boys are presented with a silk Talit. They receive a certificate on behalf of the presi- dent of Israel, which quotes the 48th (Jerusalem) Psalm, and they plant a tree in a specially created Bnai Mitzva Forest in the Jerusa- lem Frills after reciting the plant- er's prayer. It has become a new tradition— bestowing on one's son the deeper meaning of an "Aliya L'Regel" in the spirit of the biblical command on the very day he commences to perform mitzvot. Persons interested in the cele- bration of Bar Mitzva in Israel should contact -the nearest Israel Government 'Tourist Office.