Hebrew Without Tears — Ulpan Akiba an Israeli Melting Pot (Editor's Note: The Shulamith tugese, French, Yiddish, Japanese, referred to in the article is Shula- Polish, Russian, German and even mith Katznelson, ulpan director,' —Hebrew. After the first week or two the who attended the University of Michigan and Wayne State Univer- .mixture starts bubbling, islands disintegrate, Hebrew emerges sty. Another Ulpan Akiva staff member is Asher Tarmon, former triumphant. The motives for coming to head of the Hebrew department at learn Hebrew at Ulpan Akiba Detroit's Jewish Center). • • • are as varied as the pupils. Not all, by any means, are new im- By SONJA OSTER migrants. Some are, some plan "It's sad to admit, but Israel is full of little ghettos. We must to be some day, maybe. Some are just tourists, somi are stu- break them up!" The women who dents, some profess rs. Some has been running Ulpan Akiba in have lived in Israel for 30 years Natanya according to her own and want to learn spelling. Some principles for the last 18 years is can read the Talmud but can't a rare character: a dreamer-real- talk to the cleaning woman. ist. She knows what she wants and how to get it, without sacrificing Some want to find a husband, some want to start a new life. her dream: to run a truly Inter- national Hebrew Study Center, tE Some want to prepare for a new blend in her pressure-cooker a career, and some come at the end of theirs, after being pen- rich Jewish-Israeli "cholent," with the ingredients even more motley. sioned off. They meet in class and in the queerly assorted and varied than is usual for the Jewish Agency- intervals, during meals, on the sponsored ulpanim for new immi beach, and in small groups bent over their homework in the eve- grants. Before the heat of the study nings. They share rooms. They are course is turned on, pupils aged caught up in the swift current of 18-88 turn the peacefully remote communal studies and living, and outskirts of Natanya into a modern almost visibly barriers fall, pre- Babel, misunderstanding each judices dissolve, friendships are other in more than a dozen lan- struck up. Of the approximately 12,700 guages with accents ranging from 30 to 40 countries. For a short pupils who have passed through while, at the beginning of each Ulpan Akiba, more than 7,000 have new study course, English rules eventually settled in Israel. Shulamith, the woman who put the waves, flowing around hapless islands of Spanish, Swedish, Por- the stamp of her personality on this not so small little world, is proud of two unique achievements: of admitting Arab students to the Hebrew Ulpan, and initiating courses in Arabic for Israeli stu- dents; and of introducing a special advanced Hebrew course for vet- eran Israelis whose presence, she thinks, adds special Israeli flavor ; to her stew. "Absorption," she says, "means meeting local people, liking them, liking their homes. We must break down the walls of prejudice, divid- ing clique from clique, if we want to be a nation! Her own house is open to stu- dents and visitors from all over the world. Singularly devoid of luxuries, it is filled with mate- rial evidence of a life and a spirit devoted to meeting, under- the standing and absorbing manifold streams of culture, naionalities and epochs which go to make up what is manifestly a specifically Israeli home: anti- que Arabic copper vessels, in- laid chairs, handwoven rugs, naghilas, Yemenite silverware, bamboo curtains, a nostalgic Bible landscape, some abstracts, old Jerusalem etchings, latest Maskit handicraft, tinkling shep- herd-bells, African wood-carv- ings, Druse basketwork, old Ger- man Meerschaum pipes, lots of books—and dolls. Dozens and dozens of dolls in national cos- tumes from all over the globe. Shulamith smiles when we ask Jewish Defense League Petitions Justice Dept. to Oust Arab Students WASHINGTON (JTA) — A Jew- ish group which has proclaimed it- self the defender of Jewish lives and property in urban ghetto areas has petitioned the Department of Justice to oust Arab cultural ex- change students for allegedly vio- lating laws pertaining to resident aliens. A five-member delegation repre- senting the Jewish Defense League of New York presented the petition to J. Walter Yeagley of the inter- nal security division of the attor- ney general's office. They said the petition contained 18,000 signatures which they claimed to have gath- ered during the preceding 10 days. The delegation was headed by Meir Kahane, an Orthodox rabbi who identifies himself as JDL na- tional director. Presented with the petition was "documentary evi- dence" purporting to expose close ties between Arab students, Trot- skyites, Cuban revolutionaries, pro-Peking and Black militant groups who allegedly want to over- throw the U.S. government. According to the petitioners, the Arab students "have violated the statutes that regulate their condi- tions of entry, and we respectfully call upon the Department of Jus- tice to begin the legal moves nec- essary for deportation of these dangerous students from these shores." Announcement of plans for creation of a Cleveland area chapter of the Jewish Defense League was denounced by the community relations committee of the Cleveland Jewish Com- munity Federation as a "mis- guided" and unneeded "intrusion into the community by outside forces." The editorial said the "respec- table Jewish organizations" assail- ed by the JDL "have unanimously rejected and repudiated the League and its hyperthyroid raison d'etre - not because they love the Jewish people less, but because they know human relations more. • "In Cleveland. the community relations experience has been an intimate, intensive and highly ef- fective story going hack at least a quarter of a century." In dealing with the Negro community, the editorial said, "we need no coach ing from musclemen; the Jewish person who sits down with a Negro youth to teach him of his skills, to impart knowledge, does not need 10. .Friday, October .17, 1969 - to be fortified by expertise in ka- rate." The JDL plans to set up a chap- ter in Montreal, according to Ka- hane. Speaking at Waterloo, Ont.. he said that he--pliips to discuss formation of the chapter with some 25 interested potential mem- bers after he speaks at McGill University in a few weeks. The league, which has inaug- urated a campaign to defeat incumbent Mayor John V. Lind- say in this year's mayoralty campaign, drew a terse criti- cism from Lindsay campaign headquarters. In the wake of a press confer- ence in which the JDL told why it opposed the mayor and how it sought to get him defeated, and an anti-Lindsay advertisement it placed in the New York Times, Lindsay headquarters said that "the JDL has been denounced by nearly every responsibile organi- zation. They are unworthy of an answer." A representative cross-section of the New' York City Jewish com- munity, led by Arthur J. Gold- berg, resoundingly denounced the Jewish Defense League. The cen- sures were voiced by religious and secular Jews at a press conference called by an ad hoc group of leaders opposed to the self-defense group. Stanley Lowell, a vice chairman of the National Jewish Community Relations Advisory Council, pre- sented a position of his organiza- tion which rejected the "paramili- tary operations" of the JDL as "destructive of public order and Argentine Jews Protest Arab Propaganda Tour BUENOS AIRES (JTA)—Argen- tine Jews have protested to the government over an anti-Israel propaganda tour by the Syrian ambassador, Cot Jawdat Atassi. w h o visited several provincial cities which have large populations of Arab origin. The DAIA, central representa- tive body of Argentine Jewry. lodged a protest with Alvarez de Toledo, undersecretary of the for- eign ministry. They charged that Col. Atassi exceeded his diplomatic! prerogatives and was attempting to divide communities in which Jews and Arabs lived in harmony. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS contributory to divisiveness and terror." The NJCRAC, composed of nine national and 82 local Jewish com- munity relations agencies, asserted that "Jewish security,--,..indeed, the security of any ethnic or racial group—does not lie in taking the law into one's own hands. That kind of simplistic approach to the' complicated problems of our time can only produce warring groups, not solutions." how the collection got started. "The first home I was invited to, when studying in the States," she tells us, "was that of a Presby- terian family. My host was charm- ing, but when I entered the house I was suddenly overcome by that intense Jewish consciousness which all of us, I think, have felt at times. I braced myself for a showdown. I would not quietly re- ject pork, I decided. I would assert my Jewishness and my right to observe my traditions, even as their guest. When we were seated round the table my host introduced me to his children, pointing out that this was the first time they had a Jewish guest from Israel. Then he turned to me. "Will you do us the honor of saying grace in your way, the Jew ish way, and in your language, in Hebrew, before we eat?" When I left the States, my host who had meanwhile become a close friend, had a small request. An Israeli doll, to add to his inter- national collection of which each piece was a tribute from a visitor he had entertained. She smiled ruefully: "I'm afraid I still owe it to him. But I owe To him far more than that. He taught me to be truly tolerant, bread- minded and humble, too. These," and she points at her dolls, mare • the evidence of my attempt, at least, to emulate him!" Ulpan Akiba is evidence that the spirit of the lesson is being passed on to thousands of newcomers from almost every country under the sun, from all walks of life, of all creeds, races and religions. MILT LEVIN is now on the sales staff d Packer Pontiac, America'S largest Pontiac dealer. 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