Bedouin MD is -First
to Graduate in Israel
A Conversation Series
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ReleasuLl by:
FOR THE ADVANCEMENT OF HEBREW CULTURE
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Good morning Sarah. how are sou? It's almost noon. Time to
Good morning What made ∎ oti think that
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I was asleep? I got up this morning as usual. to take the children
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a meeting! lSol I stayed at home too I am not crap., about going
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the square neckline
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me a present a magnificent siker necklace of Be/ale{ .A t i i k 'Th in
told me that I looked ser) welt .
And Zahara. was khe as pretty and lo•l. ,is usual'
Sarah
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ineed that she is
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Frank Ellias
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of women. They won't change us
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. pleasant, in general At first a little stiff. formal. as is usual it
Sarah
JERUSALEM—Some 500 Arabs,
Bedouin and Jews gathered recent-
ly in the guest tent of Sheikh
Hamad Abu Rabeiyeh to celebrate
his nephew's graduation from the
Hebrew University Hadassah Med-
ical School. The guest of honor, 27-
year-old Yunis Abu Rabeiyeh, is
the first Bedouin ever to have com-
pleted medical studies in Israel.
He is currently an intern at the
Negev Central Hospital. Although
he is the first, he noted in a brief
speech, "I am sure I won't be the
last Bedouin to do so."
By Shlorno Kodesh
TARBUTH FOUN DATION
THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
12—Friday, May 14, 1971
JUST
Call
EAST OF MEYERS
399-6700
ry.1
likes her.
Sarah: Good
for him! What do these men knokif about beam)...
17 n'r?'? 117K1 0'141119
Help Us Celebrate Our
!7''
Excerpted from the book "Israel With A Smile", published by Tarbuth Foundation, 515 Park Ave., N. Y. C. 10022
10th Anniversary Sale
Female Rabbi-to-B e Not Taking
Canadian Jewry
Adopts Kibutz Ilot Strong Lib Stance, Writer- Complains
ILOT, Israel—A group of 100
Canadian Jewish families will con-
tribute a total of $1,000,000 to the
Jewish National Fund to be used
for the young iettlement of Ilot
in the Arava. An announcement
to this effect was made by Ber-
nard Bloomfield, president of the
JNF of Canada. During his visit
to Israel, he explained to the
press here that he had already
lined up 14 sponsoring families and
anticipates no difficulty in reach-
ing his goal. Each family will con-
tribute $10,000.
The project, which is being un-
dertaken as part of the JNF's
70th anniversary celebration this
year, is scheduled to be completed
by autumn.
Bloomfield said that most of the
money would be used for land re-
clamation, doubling on tripling the
present 125 acres of productive
land. A cultural center and other
facilities also would be built. He
emphasized that the project will be
more than a fund-raising enter-
prise. The sponsors will also estab-
lish personal ties with the settle-
ment, visiting it on their trips to
Israel and sending their children to
work there during vacations.
Bloomfield also envisages even
closer relations one day. "Some of
the children might end up marrying
people from Dot and settle there,"
he said.
Egypt's Ex-VP Sabry
Under House. Arrest
JERUSALEM (JTA) — Former
Vice President Aly Sabry of Egypt
who was fired by President Anwar
Sadat a week ago, has been placed
under house arrest, a reliable
source reported here.
The source, who was recently in
Cairo, confirmed reports that
Sabry's ouster was followed by the
detention of several members of
the Arab Socialist Union, Egypt's
only political party.
Both he and the party reportedly
took a dim view of the projected
federation of Egypt with Libya and
Syria. Their open criticism of the
move was believed to have been
the immediate cause of Sabry's
abrupt dismissal.
They recently accused President
Sadat of diverging from the policies
of the late President Nasser in
domestic and foreign affairs.
BOSTON (JTA)—The views on
Jewish womanhood of 24-year-old
Sally Preisand—scheduled for or-
dination next year as the first
female - rabbi in Jewish. history
—have been chided as retrogres-
sive by a young Jewish women's
liberation advocate. -
Miss Preisand is a third-year
student at the Cincinnati branch
of the Hebrew Union College—
Jewish Institute .of Religion, the
Reform seminary. Mary Gendler,
a staff writer on Genesis 2, the
newspaper published in Boston by
Jewish student radicals, reported
on Miss Preisand's views in the
publication. '
Miss Preisand disclosed that
she had been in a pre-rabbinic
program with several men stu-
dents but that she was the only
one in the group who had to re-
apply for formal admission for
rabbinical studies.
Her male friends were outraged
and wanted to complain in her
behalf, but Miss Preisand "did
not want to make a fuss and pre-
ferred to wait and see whether
or not she would be accepted."
She was accepted and therefore
said nothing, Miss Gendler re-
ported with evident disapproval.
Some congregations to which she
applied to serve as a student
rabbi rejected her point-blank. She
was discouraged but never made
an issue of any of the rejections.
Miss Gendler reported that Miss
Preisand said at the luncheon that
she was "not an active supporter
of women's liberation because she
does not feel she has anything to
be liberated from" and that she
believed "that a man should be
head of the household and, if she
marries a rabbi, the titles, she
says, will be Rabbi and Mrs."
A n o t h e r Preisand stance
which clearly outraged Miss
Gendler was the prospective fe-
male rabbi's response to a ques-
tion on how she could be proud
of a tradition which had denied
spiritual equality "to half of its
members for thousands of y.ears."
Miss Preisand replied that the
Reform movement had provided
equality and opportunities for par-
ticipation to Jewish women for
several years and that it was her
impression that Jewish women
had not taken advantage of them.
Miss Gendler conceded the prob-
able truth of that reply but argued
that Miss Preisand "overlooks the
condition and social pressures
upon women which discourage
them from even thinking of tak-
ing advantage of the opportuni-
ties." Miss Gendler also com-
plained that Miss Preisand "com-
pletely ignored" the continuance
of "archaic laws and discrimina-
tion" against women in the Or-
thodox and Conservative move-
ments.
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