TM DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, January 31, 1969-15 A Kiss for Grandpa Salo Baron • Jewish historian Salo W. Baron gets the best kind of congratula- tioas=hugs and kisses—from granddaughters Sharon, 8 (left), and Elisabeth, 6, at a Bnai Brith luncheon in New York where he re- ceived the organization's 1969 Jewish Heritage Award for "excellence In :- Jewish literature." Dr. Baron was presented the $1,000 literary prtsebefore a gathering of more than 200 scholars, academicians and Je*ah communal leaders by Dr. Harold Weisberg (left) of Brandeis IlaUgrsity, chairman of Bnai Brith's adult Jewish education commis- ifi(101. The 73-year-old Columbia professor is the fourth recipient of the award, given annually by Bnai Brith to a writer who "makes a posi- tive„contribution to contemporary literature by his authentic inter- pretation of Jewish life and values." Prelate Hits U.S. Christians for Indifference to Israel cial prediliction of the Church (Direct JTA Teletype Wire to The Jewish News) NEW YORK—A priest active in interrtlligious relations was on rec- ord:Wednesday as critical of the Am tan Christian community for a gIieralized indifference to the welfare of Israel that shades off into hostility toward Israel. The charge was made by Rev. Edward H. Flannery, executive secretary of the U.S. Catholic Bis- hops Secretariat for Christian- Jewish Relations, during a confer- ence on the Middle East crisis and its effect on interreligious relations held Monday under auspices of the National Conference of Chris- tians and Jews. A summary of the discussion was made public Wed- nesday- Participants in the conference subsequently signed a telegram to President Nixon calling for con- demnation of Iraq for the hang- ing of 14 alleged spies, denounc- ing the action as a matter for men of Conscience of all creeds and beliefs' to decry. Fr. Flannery told the participa- fmg' clergymen that the central issue in the Arab-Israeli confront- ation was whether the State of Israel has a right to exist and grow. Commenting on the fragility of Iewish-Christian relations, the priest noted an over-expectation go the Jewish community of what tO expect from dialogue held thus fire and complained that some &Nish spokesmen tend to over- littarge the Christian community Ili these crises. On the Christian strej he said, the community has ti) Contend with the fruit of agtrangement and alienation that has +been going on for 2,000 years. *Idle it is not acceptable to for the Jews. Rabbi Balfour Brickner, direc- tor of the commission on inter- faith activities of the Union of American Hebrew Congregations, told the conference that the Jewish community was driven toward a posture of withdrawal and dis- agreement because of growing animosity between blacks and Jews and the apparently continu- ing Christian inability to under- stand the Israeli plea. He warned that if the voices of Christianity treat the anti-Semitic invectives of the blacks with the same dispassionate aloofness with which the Jewish community feels the Christian community has re- sponded to Jewish cries of support for Israel, it may discover—hope- fully not too late—that it has un- wittingly and inadvertently aided the growth of a more generalized anti-Semitism, crippled the cause of black progress and indirectly contributed to the souring of the American mood. Speaking critically of the Christian attitude on the Middle East situation. Rabbi Brickner said that Christians has failed to distinguish between tactics, the question involved in the Israeli raid on Beirut and the fundamental morality of Israel's right to exist. Had the voices of Christendom made even this elemental distinc- tion between tactic and morality, the rabbi asserted, Jewish-Chris- tian relations would not be as badly bruised as they are now. "Had the voices of Christian con- science been raised even in recog- nition of Israel's feeling of inter- national isolation or in sympathy with the nation's need to respond Da' anti-Semitic, he said, and- to the growing frustrated anger of Stmitism comes out In veiled her beleaguered populace, Amer- *airs. The affirmed that the long ican Jewry would have better $tstory of Christian charges of understood all the advice Chris- Betide must give way to the tians have to share regarding the Pauline tradition that there is plight of the Arab refugees or the a special bond and tie and spe . City of Jerusalem.?' he - of Tali ilA..,REA UHIVIBIE MAE Next to Montgomery & Ward Come see Chatham's newest pride and joy...complete with wall-to-wall low prices on all your food needs. Nice specialty departments too...an in-store bakery, a gourmet foods section, a fancy appetizer counter and a big Family Center. Plus Kosher foods, both packaged, canned and frozen. The three leading Kosher wines are here, too. 0010 PAv to4044-s 965 Open Daily 9 AM to 10 PM 11111111'1%111111•1111,s ., •