From Athens to Thessaloniki: THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Greece Rich in Mementos of Jewish History Hebrew U. Research Basis of Jerusalem Industry Greece and Israel may seem to be linked together largely by the demands of modern air transpor- tation: a flight from the U.S. to Israel is often made with a re- fuelling stop in Athens. But that fact is that Greek and Jewish history have been linked together for 2,500 years, stretching back into the classical past, and the ties have continued through every epoch of Greek history — Byzantine, medieval and modern. The Greek National Tourist Of- fice records that in every era, the Jewish role in Greece was a vigor- pus one, and the evidence of this can still be seen on the Greek mainland and on the islands, where ancient monuments and syn- agogues form a storehouse of Jew- itih history and cultural develop- ment. Traces of Jewish colonies in the Greek islands have been found which date back almost to Homeric times, to 586 BCE. On the tiny island of Delos, birth- place of the Greek god of light Apollo, the ancient remains in- clude what is probably the old- - est synagogue in Europe. Dating back to the 3rd Century BCE this large structure, now in marble fragments, was divided in- to two oblong halls, the larger for the men, the smaller for the wom- en, with three portals between. A fragment called the "Seat of Moses," is believed to have been the chair of the head of the syna- known throughout the world for its rabbinical scholars and semi- naries, Hebrew printing presses and Jewish libraries. By the end of the 19th Century, two-thirds of Salonika's population of 120,- 000 was Jewish. Ladino, the Spanish-Hebrew dialect, w a s heard everywhere. Jews played vital roles in the city's shipping trade, industry and the arts. pecially interested in Thessalon- iki (Salonika), as it contains three synagogues surviving from the Nazi occupation (out of an original 19). Athens has several synagogues and community centers, mostly built after World War II, but in addition has a Mart;Ts Memorial in its Jewish cemetery. A scroll on its marble altar lists the num- bers of Jews killed by the Ger- Even up till the eve of World mans in each Greek city. This is War II, Salonika (or Thessalon- flanked by two large menoras iki, as it is now called) remained mounted on marble pedestals. the prime center of Jewry in Even on a short trip or cruise, Greece. However, with the Nazi sites of Jewish interest can be invasion of Greece in 1941, the visited. Corinth, the richest city Jewish community of Salonika, as of ancient Greece, contains a well as most other Jewish centers synagogue dating from 300 CE. in Greece, was virtually wiped out Delphi, perhaps the most scen- in the death camps. Sixty thou- ically interesting of all Greek sand Jews were killed in concen- sites, also has inscriptions listing tration camps or at forced labor; Jewish visitors to the ancient 4,000 emigrated to Israel. shrine of Apollo. A stirring monument still re- The Greek Islands, one of to- mains to these martyrs in Salon- day's great vacation playgrounds, ika. The Jewish Cemetery, in the also contain sites of Jewish inter- suburb of Stayrouplis, contains the est. On Corfu, Greece's most fer- graves of many Nazi victims as tile island, the old Jewish Quarter well as an imposing marble monu- attracts many visitors. The syna- ment commemorating their hero- gogue and other buildings here ism. A special mausoleum also a r e mentioned prominently in contains the bones of several Jew- Lawrence Durrell's book on Corfu, ish scholars from past eras. "Prospero's Cell." The heroic Greek resistance to The Cyclades island group in the the Nazis also included the shelter- ing of many Jews, particularly in central Aegean, famed for its Athens. Much of the Greek capi- whitewashed houses a n d sentinel tal's Jewish community survived windmills (Mykonos is the best due to the efforts of the Greek known of the group) were once Underground and the Greek Ortho- ruled by a Jewish "king." From 1566 to 1579 a Portugese Jew, Jo- dox clergy. A Greek captain of Jewish ori- seph Nasi, was declared ruler of gin, Colonel Mordecai Frizis, was these islands by the Sultan of one of the great heroes of the Turkey. It was the custom in those Italian-Greek war in Albania in days to bestow kingdoms on fa- 1940-1941. Famed for this leader- vored aides, and the prosperous ship throughout the whole Greek Nasi was chief financial advisor force, he was machine-gunned by to Sultan Selim II. Some of the most prosperous of Italian strafing planes near the Albanian village of Bessantchi. The the Greek islands were ruled di- rectly by a Jew who received the Greeks renamed the village in his title "Duke of the Archipelago" honor—Frizisville. and even entertained (for a time) Visitors to Greece should be es- the neo-Zionist idea of settling Jewish communities on some of the Cyclades. Accordionist Ariel gogue. The Jewish community on Delos flourished from the 4th to the 2nd Centuries BCE, when the island became the crossroads of all trade between Greece, Egypt and Asia Minor. For 800 years—from the 3rd Cen- tury BCE to 500 CE—the Jews of Greece lived in peace and pros- perity under Greek and Roman rulers. Under the Byzantines. though, suppression occurred. This lifted somewhat during the 12th and 13th Centuries, when Jews in- troduced the silk and dyeing in- dustries to Greece. A period of great Jewish pros- Will Play for LZO perity coincided with the Turkish Meir Ariel, shaliakh for Detroit conquest of Greece in 1453. Large Habonim Labor Zionist Youth, will groups of Jews from Europe set- be guest artist at the meeting of tled in Salonika, which the became Branch Seven Labor Zionist Or- the second city of the Ottoman ganization, 8 p.m. Sunday, at the Empire, after Constantinople. The home of Mr. and Mrs. Elbert Dia- Jews of Salonika, who were main- mond, 19766 Snowden. Ariel, an accordionist and com- ly Sephardic from Spain, were giv- en full religious freedom by the poser, will honor Jewish Music Turks and played an active role Month. In Israel, Ariel, his wife in the city's development as the and son, are members of Kibutz greatest port and trading center Mishmarot. Friends are invited. For infor- of the Balkans. Salonika in time became the mation, call Mrs. Irving Green- berg, 537-7497 or Mrs. Louis Slabo- focal point for Greek Jewry. The city prospered a n d became sky, 341-3814. ;Chaplain Singer's Midnight Burial Friday, January 31, 1969-17 JERUSALEM—One of the first science-based industries to be set up as a result of the Prime Minis- ter's Economic Conference held in the spring of 1968, opened Jan. 16 in Jerusalem when Ames-Yissum Ltd. inaugurated its new premises in the Givat Shaul Industrial Quart- er of Jerusalem. Ames-Yissum is jointly owned by the Ames Company Division Miles Laboratories, Inc., of the U.S., and the Yissum Research Development Company of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. The objective of the new compa- ny is to utilize the research talents of Hebrew University faculty mem- bers in making available to clinical laboratories and physicians new systems used to aid in the rapid identification of disease and the monitoring of their treatment. Free . TV All . Private .Alr Cond. Pool Beach Patting Rooms S UN 'N FUN VACATION DAILY Mar. 22-Apr. 3 $6543• per pers. dble. occ. - 25 of 117 rms. $111• Mar. 8-22 KITCHENETTES AVAILABLE Visual Arts to Help Teach College Judaism Class SOUTH ORANGE, N.J. (JTA)— A rabbi will introduce a new course on "Jewish Ideology Through Vis- ual Arts" at Roman Catholic Seton Hall University on Jan. 29, the uni- versity announced. Conducted by Rabbi Reuben R. Levine of Temple Beth Ahm, Springfield, N.J., it will offer three credits and will be open to visitors and nonmatriculated students as well as to regular students at the university. Rabbi Levine described the course as "a captivating pictorial journey through the artifacts, sym- bolism and structures which sur- round our observance and wor- ship." 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Shown here at the midnight burial in Jersualem of U.S. Army Chaplain Morton H. Singer, who was killed in Vietnam while enroute to conduct a GI Hannka service, are (from left) Rabbi Maurice Lamm, director, chaplain personnel of the National Jewish Welfare Board commission on Jewish chaplaincy, who accompanied the body from the U.S. as a representative of JWB and the U.S. army; Chap- lain Zimels, Chaplain Dov Shachor and Lt. Col. Aryeh Levi, all of the Israeli army; and some of the members of Hevra Kadisba. Also present but not visible in the photo was Lt. Col. Hershel Former, . - lion 4M IrIstint resrVitions`Via 15eitamafies; __deputy military attar' he • ' - • VAF6r4 inferma Delfa at WO 5-3606 or see yo it Travel Agent. •