`Palestine Equity' Opposed by Jordan, Israel BY ELIAHU SALPETER (Copyright 1970, JTA, Inc.) There is one area in which there seems to be an identity of views between Israel and Jordan: both are opposed to the idea of a "Palestinian entity" that could be the nucleus or the basis of a Pales: tinian Arab State. For King Husse- in this would mean the detachment of the West Bank from his king- dom by the Arabs themselves rather than by the present and contested Israel occupation. Israel dislikes the idea for short-term and long-range reasons: an em- erging and recognized Palestine en- tity could identify itself and even support the Fatah; such a Pales- tinian State would be less willing, in any negotiations, to concede territories; the new State could well add yet another hostile voice at any international forum. "There are enough Arab countries against Israel as it is," Golda Meir re- marked some time ago. Yet, in Israel there are people —not necessarily leftists or de- featists—who believe that ulti- mately peace will come from an agreement between the people of Israel and the Arabs of Palestine and not from negotiations between Israel and the existing Arab States. They urge the government, mostly in newspaper articles, to take a less rigid attitude on this issue. They include former Minister of Police Eliahu Sasson, the top Arab expert on the pre-independence Jewish Agency and himself at home in the budding Arab nation- alist movement in , the early twen- ties. Ironically, it may well develop that it was the Jordanian govern- ment that set the Palestinian entity into motion. The event that may go down as the turning point is the meeting in the second half of March of the "Public Affairs Com- mittee" convened by the Mayor of Hebron, Sheikh Jabbari, and already spoken of by Arabs in the West Bank as "The Hebron Par- liament" Sheikh Jabbari is the uncontest- ed leader of Hebron and practically the entire southern half of the West Bank. He was a minister in several Jordinian cabinets before the 1967 war, head of one of the Italians Offer Plan for Limiting M.E. Arms ROME (JTA) — Details were made public here of a so-called "Italian plan" for a Mid East settlement that would start the ball rolling toward peace by set- ting up an international commis- sion to limit and control the inflow of heavy arms to the area. The proposed commission would be made up of the delegates of the four Big Powers — United States, Soviet Russia, Britain and France —and a further six members, three from the West and three from the Eastern bloc. It would keep an eye on the 1929 pogroin that destroyed Heb- ron's ancient Jewish community and neighborhood, most Hebron Arabs expected the Israeli occu- pation forces to exact the "blood debt" of 40 years with a vegence and wanted to flee before the ad- vancing troops. However, Jabbari argued that the Israelis were not like that, and that whatever hard= ships they might impose would be better than life in refugee camps in Jordan. The correct and coop- erative attitude of the Israel troops surprised even Jabbari himself, and Hebron has ever since been the most tranquil of the occupied fluence among the population was reinforced considerably in June 1967 when his counsel proved to be very smart. Remembering the most respected and important families in the area—and an old fox in politics. His position and in- Hasidic Jews Trained for Auxiliary Police Work in Brooklyn NEW YORK (JTA) — Fifteen Orthodox Jewish men, including several Hassidic Jews, are mem- bers of a group of residents of the Boro Park section of Brooklyn completing 10 weeks of training as auxiliary police. The 15 Jews were recruited by the Boro Park Coordinating Coun- cil, a group created in June 1969, by a number of "concerned citi- zens" of the section seeking to maintain the Jewish identity of Boro Park, which has about 100,000 Jews, as well as to prevent street crimes, mainly burglaries and muggings. The coordinating coun- cil is headed by Rabbi Chaim Auerbach, a yeshiva teacher. The council organized a first auxiliary patrol, comprised of 30 Orthodox Jews, which began patrol activi- ties last Oct. 8. He also reported that the coor- dinating council had insisted that a number of Puerto Ricans and Blacks serving on the auxiliary po- lice of the precinct before the 30 Orthodox Jews were trained for such service should be integrated with the Jewish auxiliary police. He said this had been put into ef- feet. He reported also that the precinct station was now pro- viding the auxiliary police with auxiliary police in their use, in- creasing the effectiveness of their patrols. He said there was clear evidence that the patrols were effective. Areas patrolled by the auxiliary teams on Wednesday nights are almost totally free of disturbances and incidents. Resi- dents of the patrolled areas seek to schedule after-dark travel for Wednesday nights. The presence of the auxiliary police, as with regular police, is in itself a deter- rent to crime, said the rabbi. Friday, April 10, 1970--7 women's division of the Israel Miss Israel a GI Army and received a special cita- towns—despite repeated efforts by TEL AVIV (ZINS) — Michal tion and the rank of captain from El Fatah to stir trouble by throw- ing hand grenades at Jews making Straus, reigning beauty queen of the chief of staff, Haim Bar-Lev. Israel, earned top honors in the The colorful ceremony was attend- the pilgrimage to the Tomb of the officer training course for the ed by all prior "Miss Israels." Patriarchs in Hebron. Jabbari professes full loyalty "to my King Hussein" but main- tains that it is up to the Arab gov- ernments and not to the population of the occupied areas to make war or peace with Israel, and is very sharply critical of the "venial ministers and counselors surround. ing .His Majesty." He convened the Hebron meeting when the Jo,•dan government decided it would not accept Palestinians wishing to visit Jordan on the identity cards and travel documents issued by the local (Arab) municipalities on the West Bank but would insist on passports issued by the Jordan i authorities. This created consider--; able restraints on the traffic across the river and was presumably aimed at demonstrating that resi- dents of the West Bank are still Jordinian subects. But Jabbari turned around the argument: they being loyal sub- ects of Hussein, what right does the Amman Government have to prevent them from entering Jor- dan? And he warned at the con- ference: "If the Amman author- ities do not change their attitude, we might have to change ours. The king must decide whether he wants us as his citizens or not." And the implication was clear: under our own terms and not those of the Amman government. The hundred or so notables at the conference applauded unhesitatingly. Next, the conference approved Jabbari's ruling that families of El Fatah terrorists arrested by Israeli police for the murder of several villagers whom they ! charged with "cooperation with the enemy" must pay blood money to the families of the victims. Again everybody applauded heart- ily. There is no question who is the boss there. i. Own a Cadillac? Of course you can ! SEE ANDY BLAU OR CALL fle'll show you how you can oum a CADILLAC and how it will cost you less to buy. WILSON-CRISSMAN CADILLAC 1350 NORTH WOODWARD, BIRMINGHAM 646-1930 Res. 642-6836 MAKE BORENSTEIN'S Your Headquarters ct3iover Matzo Covers Books Records Matzo Holders Hagadahs Seder Plates Salt Wafer Dishes Wine Decanters Israeli Nut Crackers Afikomen Holder Horseradish Dish Wine Cups . China Egg Plate Holds 10 5 99 77 c Eggs 4 T-H.Grant INCORPORATED We Have Passover Cosmetics, Lipsticks, Toothpaste, Aspirin, Saccharine, Mouth Wash, A r:tistryF: n T 1 . 20010. 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