THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
10—Friday, August 7, 1970
You Are Cordially Invited to
Attend the
OPEN HOUSE
of
CAMP GAN ISRAEL
of Linden, Michigan
on
Sunday, August 16, 1970
1:00-4:00 p.m.
Tour of Camp Grounds
and
NEW DINING HALL
& DORMITORY
Under Construction
U.S. Jews Urged to Stay,
Build Up Neighborhoods
Memorial Tribute to Haim Moshe Shapiro Sunday
TEL AVIV (JTA) — The ex-
ecutive director of the Crown
Heights Community Council of
Brooklyn called upon American
Jews to stop running but to con-
tinue building and strengthening
their neighborhoods.
David Farber s a id American
Jewry and Israelis share the same
problem: both wish to exist and
live harmoniously together with
their neighbors.
lie said American Jews should
emulate thei r Israeli brethren.
"On the one hand, we should en-
deavor to find the right formula
for peaceful coexistence and har-
mony between the different kinds
of people. On the other hand, we
should resist with all our deter-
mination any effort to encourage
us to run away."
Tributes to the memory of Haim community - wide meeting 8 p.m.
Moshe Shapiro will be paid at a Sunday at Young Israel of Oak-
Woods with all congregations and
Zionist organizations participating.
The memory of the department
Israel minister of the interior who
was the head of the National Re-
ligious Party will be honored by
local leaders and appropriate pray-
ers will be chanted.
Sponsored by the Mizrachi with
the cooperation of the Detroit Zion-
ist Federation and the Council of
Rabbis, the evening's program has
received the cooperation of many
of the Detroit communal men's and
women's groups.
The late Minister of Interior
Shapiro was one of the signers of
r
HAIM MOSHE SHAPIRO
Britain's Richard Crossman Warns
Eban on Military Dangers to Israel
Refreshments
Entertainment
by Campers
LONDON (JTA) — Richard
Crossman, minister of social serv-
ices in the Wilson government and
now editor-in-chief of the weekly
New Statesman, has warned Is-
raeli Foreign Minister Abba Eban
and the Israel
government that
Israel cannot sur-
vive a "decade of
Jewish military'
domination."
It is the "simple
fact" that "with-
in a day Israeli
forces can be in
Amman, in Bei-
rut, in Damascus"
that has "driven
the Arabs to seek
Russian assist-
ance a n d com-
pelled the rulers
of the Kremlin to
intervene on their lk
Crossman
side more exten-
sively and dangerously than they
wished, because intervention breeds
counter - intervention," Crossm an
declared.
He made his comments in a
front-page open letter that marked,
he said, the first time in six years
"that I can write to you freely"
without having to consider "hostile
Arab reactions."
Crossman, 63, was minister of
housing and local government prior
to his social services post, and was
Chairman
Irwin I. Cohn
No Solicitations
R.S.V.P.
398-2611
CHARLES E. FEINBERG
Camping Chairman
The New Building
Under Construction
Huge Bar Mitzva
Will Be
for War Orphans
Dedicated By:
in Israel
Mr. & Mrs. Robert Ruch Held
KFAR HABAD — An emotion-
ROBERT RUCH
Sponsors Luncheon
12:00 Noon in New
Dining Hall
BY INVITATION ONLY
Directions to Camp:
Go North on Northwestern
Highway; turn left on 696 to-
wards Lansing; turn right on
U.S. 23 until Fenton Exit.
Take Owen Road left for 1.5
miles; turn right on Eleanor
St. bearing to the right, until i
Camp Gan Israel.
filled communal Bar Mitzva for 22
boys orphaned during the Six-Day
War or by military actions since,
took place in this Lubivitcher vil-
lage near Tel Aviv, in the presence
of more than 4,000 guests, includ-
ing the families and friends of the
Bnai Mitzva and numerous digni-
taries, government and military
officials.
The chief of staff of Israel's
defense forces, General Chaim
Bar-Lev, presented each of the
boys with gifts and mementos.
Other military officials accom-
panying him were Generals
Avraham Adan, Shmuel Eyal and
Yitzchak Hofi.
President Zalman Shazar, who
had previously tendered a private
reception for the boys, gave each
a personal gift, as did Prime
Minister Golda Mein Gifts for the
young boys also arrived from sev-
eral private companies, and bank
accounts with undisclosed sums
were opened in their names by the
bank of Leumi.
This was the third affair by the
Israeli branch of the Lubavitch
Youth Organization, since the war.
A special message for the Bar
Mitzva was received from New
York by cable from the rebbe, and
was read before the crowd.
A doctor should have a falcon's
I eye,
a girl's hand and a lion's
I heart.
—Dutch Proverb. I
assistant editor of the New States-
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VIRTUOSO
ISRAELI CELLIST
Yehuda Hanani
man and Nation from 1943 to 1955.
"Not once," he noted, "could we
confide in each other as we used to
do in the terrible exhilarating
years when the issue hung in the
balance whether the great powers
would allow the Jewish nation to
be reborn in Palestine or stifle it
at birth." Israel's military ascend-
ance" is "a wasting asset," Cross-
man contended, "just as the terri-
tories you have occupied become
heavier liabilities the longer you
hold them.
Crossman stated: "I know you
did not want this military ascend-
ancy. I know that your occupation
of the West Bank was unpremedi
tated, that you recognized that the
Suez Canal is not your natural
frontier. I also know that any
peace initiative you now take in-
volves military risk. But in a year's
time the risk will be even greater
and you will be even more reluc-
tant to take it." At that time, he
added "the vision of Arab-Jewish
accord which was so fervent in
1948 and which has grown so dim
today will grow dimmer still."
Crossman charged that Israel
"feels compelled by military ne-
cessity" to maintain settlements in
Hebron, "an area which could not
possibly remain Israeli in any
Peaceful solution," even though
the occupation of the West Bank
grows "more oppressive the
longer it lasts." Israeli leaders in
criticizing Eban's "failure to per-
suade those soldiers to see that the
greatest military risk they face is
not the dangers of the peace initia-
tive but certain consequences of
continuing without one." Referring
to Israeli youth he remarked that
the young people "have not forgot-
ten the other half of the Zionist
vision," the role "of Israel in the
Mideast renaissance."
Crossman added, "there will al-
ways be a powerful minority in
Israel" that will prefer "a peace
initiative which involves some
military considerations." He con-
cluded by stressing to Mr. Eban
that "I only hope and pray that
you will not disregard the growing
dismay of that minority until the
doorway to peace, forced open by
your military strength, is irrevoc-
ably closed. The Arabs can survive
a decade of Jewish military domin-
ation. The Israel you and I believe
in can't."
the Israel Declaration of I de-
was a pioneer in
pe Israel
world Zionist affairs and a leader
in major Israeli functions for more
than three decades.
Long Distance
CRATING • OFFICE M
353-1300