Journalist Writes Comprehensive Book on Human Side of '48 War By CHARLOTTE DUBIN The human side of Israel's first war with the Arabs emerges in a new book, "Genesis 1948," whose author says he sought to reach the "Exodus" audience. Dan Kurzman, a journalist and author, was in Detroit Wednesday to promote his book, published by the World Publishing Co. The Anti- Defamation League of Bnai Brith is assisting in the promotion effort. issuing brochures and arranging talks with Christian leaders. Kurzman, a former correspond- ent for the Washington Post, has authored three earlier books, one of which, "Sub- version of the In- nocents," won the Overseas Press Club Award in 1963 for the year's best book on foreign affairs. Boston University has established a Dan Kurzman Kurzman Collection in recognition of his "im- portant contribution to 20th Cen- tury journalism and historical literature." For "Genesis 1948 — the First Arab-Israeli War," Kurzman con- ducted some 1,000 interviews in Israel, the Arab states, Europe and the U.S. Among the hundreds of secret documents to which he was allowed access were the 1948 me- moirs of the then Capt. Gamal Abdel Nasser. "In them, he revealed his utter frustration and the feeling that his government, under Farouk, was sending the army down a garden path, using the men as cannon fodder," said Kurzman. "Nasser wanted to go to war with the Jews for two reasons: be- cause he felt a war in Palestine would be an easy war with the so- called 'Zionist bands,' and because it would permit him to place his free officers in key positions with the government. This actually hap- pened in 1952." Kurzman relates how a close friendship developed between Nas- ser and Yeroham Cohen, an Israeli officer, during 1948 truce talks. "They would sit on the grass under the trees and discuss politics." The writer insists that "Nasser is no out-and-out anti-Semite. The Jews who know him don't feel he ever was. In fact, the Israelis were delighted when he first came to power. They thought he , would bring about reforms. "At the beginning, he did have ideas of peace, but gradually his social revolution didn't come off. Israel was a good external threat, and he wanted to consolidate his influence in the Middle East. So Israel became useful for his own political ends. He just carried things too far." Nasser. whose "charisma will make the Arabs support him wheth- er he wins or loses," nevertheless will not be able to control the guer- rilla element, Kurzman believes. "I met a lot of them. They're not rational people. They say, 'If we die, we die.'" The "only comprehensive book ever written on the 1948 war"—in the a utho r's words — "Genesis 1948" pursues other little-known facets of that period, when peace seemed much closer than it does today. As the Egyptian officers were leaving for home following the war, Nasser's superior, Col. Taha, met with his Israeli counterparts, in- cluding Capt. Cohen and Itzhak Rabin. Taha turned to Cohen and said: "You've done a wonderful job, and I hope you'll be the first ambassador to Egypt." Kurzman said that during his research, he was supplied with heretofore-unseen papers that re- flected the sharp dispute between the State Department and Presi- dent Truman over recognition of the state of Israel. The papers were made available by Clark Clifford. who had served as Truman's top adviser and later 16 Friday, August 7, 1970 — was secretary of state under Presi- dent Johnson.. "Truman felt he was double- crossed by the State Department." said Kurzman. "Clifford, more than any other man, influenced Truman to recognize Israel." According to the author, the man most opposed to recognition of Is- rael was Dean Rusk, then assistant secretary of state. "He felt Israel would become Communist and would be overly influenced by the Soviet Union." Stressing that his illustrated book is a "human document about the war." Kurzman related inci- dents among the little people, like the Jerusalem couple— he Jewish and she Moslem—whose five sons were reared as Jews and five daughters as Moslems. "In the war, the tension was unbelievable. The Arabs murdered one of the sons as a traitor." One of the most interesting narratives in the book relates to the Rhodes peace conference, which set a precendent for cur- rent talks between Israel and Egypt. "The Arabs say they've never met Israelis face-to-face before, but that's not true," said Kurzman. "It happened in Rhodes: I have verbatim conference papers." The talks started coolly, but gradually became warm and direct "They argued and joked. When the chief Egyptian delegate became ill. the Israelis visited him and brought roses. They played billiards with each other. After the armistice talks were concluded, they had a gay party." Among the Israeli principals in those talks, which were spread over a few weeks, were Yigal Yadin, then acting chief of staff of the Israel Army, and Itzhak Rabin, today the ambassador to the U.S. but at that time a high-ranking army officer. As for secret talks in Amman between Jordan and Israel, at which Moshe Dayan and Golda Meir were present, "Abdullah (Jor- dan's king) treated the Israelis like his sons. He kept rushing in, dressed in his nightgown, asking 'Has there been an agreement yet? Has it come yet?'" Kurzman de- scribed the proceedings as a comic- opera. `Genesis' Marked by Thoroughness Few books on Israel are as vital to current comparisons and to an understanding of what had occur- red in the Israel-Arab conflicts as "Genesis 1948—The First Arab- Israeli War" by Dan Kurzman, published by World. The great value of this immense study by a former Washington Post staff member lies in the thoroughness with which his work covers the negotiations that were conducted by Israel's representa- tives with King Abdullah, whose assassination prevented an im- mediate peace agreement; the Rhodes negotiations; the talks be- tween Nasser and Israeli military leaders; and a score of other in- cidents that now indicate how peace could have been attained and how it was scuttled by unforeseen circumstances. The Rhodes talks, under the direction of Dr Ralph Bunche, are r e c o u n t e d here in such thoroughness, that the Kurzman "Genesis" book could well serve as a guide to current negotia- tions about to be initiated under the direction of Dr. Gunnar Jarring. Kurzman's recapitulation of the events at Rhodes. the debates be- tween Arabs and Jews, the pro- posals and counter-proposals, the bargaining over positions to be re- tained by Israel and Egypt, reads like a romance. There is fascination in every ac- count offered here of what had I transpired, and there is the inter- esting story of a friendship between THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS I and Hebrew. We wish to speak , said they had information that the with you only about an agreement I Mufti planned to provoke a con- I frontation between the Jews and based on such a resolution." The King then asked: "What! the Arab Legion, as the Transjor- would your attitude be to an at- danian army was called, by attack- tempt by Transjordan to take con- ing the Jews with his own fighters trol of the Arab part of Palestine?" masquerading in Legion uniforms. "I appreciate the information," Mrs.Meir looked more at ease. Abdullah said, with an amused "We would view such action in a smile, "but such a confrontation. favorable light," she said, "especi- or any other, is utterly impossible. ally if Your Majesty undertakes You can remove that possibility not to interfere with our efforts from your minds. I will give the to set up a state and not to foster appropriate orders. As for the confrontations between your forces Mufti, he is our common enemy. and ours. We would be particular- He should be removed to an isolat- ly happy if you declared that such ed area . . I would suggest that action was taken in order to main- he be transferred to Transjordan. tain law and order and keep the . him!" peace until the United Nations We would take care of When the meeting came to a could set up a government in that close, Abdullah escorted the Jew- King Abdullah glanced furtively area." It was the King who frowned ish representatives to the door and at the tall, matronly woman with urged rather sheepishly that they the black hair who was chatting this time. "But I want to annex use their influence on the Jewish with another Transjordanian at the the area to my kingdom. I don't press not to "discuss" him so meeting, which took place at a want to create another Arab State Jewish rest house in the Jordan that would ruin my plans. I want much. "Don't pay any attention to my to ride, not to be ridden!" River village of Naharayim. Mrs. Meir suggested that he hold public statements," he grinned, "I "But Ezra, I thought Mr. Sher- have to make them, you know." tok would be leading your delega- a referendum in Arab Palestine, tion," the king whined in a soft, which he presumably could con- 1/4 The assassination of Abdullah, trol. That would enable him to concerned voice. Ezra Danin, a ponderous Iraqi annex the area without United King Hussein's grandfather, pre- vented conclusion of a sound peace Jew who had long been a close Nations interference. Abdullah's intelligent dark eyes agreement. personal friend of Abdullah, smiled All of Kurzman's "Exodus .1948" with a casualness that suggested narrowed in doubt. Then the sub- he had expected the question. After ject switched to a possible Arab is narrated by similar fashion, re- constructing scores of similar con- all, Abdullah was an Arab king. invasion of Palestine. "I have notified the Arab pow- versations, providing records that He didn't fancy dealing with any- one he thought might be of sec- ers, including Iraq, that I would turn the earlier history into one ondary importance—particularly I not allow their armies to pass of the most moving and impressive through my kingdom," Abdullah in the history of Israel and the woman. "Don't worry, Your Majesty,'-" said. "I have also given notice negotiations as well as conflicts Danin assured him, "Mrs. Myerson that I will not cooperate with any with the Arabs. Currently, t h e reconstructed (the original name of Mrs. Golda plan not centered in my country Meir) is replacing Mr. Shertok and under my jurisdiction. The stories have special value. Related and has full authority from the situation and circumstances neither to what is happening now at the Jewish Agency to talk with you." justify nor require war, but rather UN and the plans for Arab-Israel The King's tawny, wrinkled face, compromise." meetings, direct or indirect, give framed by a neatly wound white The Jewish representatives then Kuzman's work the merit of a most turban and a small, frizzly-edged expressed concern that the Mufti valuable history relating to the beard, showed guarded skepticism. might prevent compromise. They Middle East's struggles. —P. S. When coffee and refreshments had been served in the reception room, Abdullah opened the discus- sion in Arabic: "During the last thirty years, you have grown and strengthened yourselves. Your achievements are Choose from our selection of, many. We cannot disregard you Double Breasted Edwardian with and we must compromise with you. Bell Bottom trousers; Traditional There is no quarrel between you dinner jackets with slim trousers; and the Arabs. The quarrel is be- tween the Arabs and the British, full dress with white tie and tails; who brought you to Palestine; and single button morning coats with between you and the British, who striped pants; colored formal have not kept their promises to shirts; patten leather shoe rental you. and more. "Now, I am convinced that the British are leaving, and we will be left face to face. Any con- 126 S. Woodward frontation between us will be to (1st Sleek South of Maple on Woodward) our own disadvantage. I will Birmingham, Mich. agree to a partition that will not shame me before the Arab world. I would like to take this oppor- tunity of suggesting that you con- sider the possibility of a future in- dependent Hebrew Republic within NEW INEXPENSIVE a Transjordan State that would in- clude both banks of the Jordan, and in which the economy, the military, and the legislature would be divided equally." The King then emphasized, be- and fore Jewish frowns could be trans- lated into a reply, that the "He- brew Republic" would not be domi- nated by Transjordan but would simply be part of the Transjordan- Easy On and Off Your Car ian monarchy If the Jews accept- ed, he said enthusiastically, the kingdom could probably expand to embrace Syria and even Saudi Arabia, which his father, Sherif Hussein, once ruled. (Abdullah had promised Sevin at a meeting in London in Febru- ary, 1946, that he would not press for the establishment of an Am- man-controlled Greater Syria. The Introductory Discount Offer Foreign Secretary had extracted this pledge as part of the price for giving Transjordan independence.) Mrs. Meir, Russian-born librar- ian and schoolteacher from Mil- Your First Printing Job waukee who had moved to Pales- Maximum value $5.00 tine in the 1920's, wore a troubled expression that accentuated the severit y of her lined face. Finally 27315 Southfield Rd., Lathrup Village she retorted: "Your Majesty, our cause is being discussed at pres- !? ent at the United Nations and we are hoping for a resolution that would establish two states—Arab I 'Nasser and the Israeli Yeroham , Cohen at Faluja. A remarkable factor in the Kurzman volume is the factual review of the friendships that ex- isted between Jews and Arabs, the cordiality that was in evi- dence between King Abdullah and Israeli spokesmen. Dayan, Deri, Shiloah, Allon—all played significant roles. There is great importance and historic value in the description of Abdullah's meeting with Golda Meir in 1948. It was at the time when she was delegated to repre- sent in conversations with him the late Moshe Shertok (Sharett). Kurzman gives this account: Tuxedo Sales & Rental Men's Clothing 647-805 Magnet Signs Advertises Identifies Pronto * Invitations of all kinds * Programs * Newsletters *Addressing and Mailing Printing 10% OFF a CALL 354-2488