18—Friday, December 24, 1971 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Participants in Reform Temple Dinner Honoring Samuel Hambuger Present at the annual Israel Bond dinner sponsored by the Metro- golitan Detroit Federation of Reform Synagogues, which honored Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Hamburger and resulted in over 11,350,000 in Israel Bond subscriptions are (from left), seated: Maxwell JosPoi; Samuel Hamburger; Shimon Peres, minister of transportation and communi- cations in the Israel cabinet, guest speaker; Mrs. Hamburger; Harry Modell; Leonard N. Simons, who gave the tribute to the Hamburgers; Rabbi Leon Fram; Rabbi Milton Rosenbaum; and Albert M.' Colman, who announced the Israel Bond subscriptions: standing, Irwin Green, Archie Katcher, Morton Wolin, Bernard E. Linden, Robert N. Can- vasser, Cantor Harold Orbach, Rabbi Morton M. Kanter and Samuel Frankel, who brought a message from the Jewish Welfare Federa- tion. Peres presented Miriam and Sam Hamburger with the Israel Prime Minister's Medal. Potok Stresses Hasidic Background By STEVE RAPHAEL "Why does a man with a Hasidic background want to write fiction stories when Jews are getting killed in Nazi Germany or in Communist Russia or in the Sinai desert?" The man asking the question was noted author and editor of the Jewish Publication Society, Chaim Potok, and he was asking it of himself. Author of "The Promise" and "The Chosen," Potok supplied his own answer Wednesday night as the featured speaker at the annual Hanuka Hasidic Concert honoring the liberated Russian Jews. Also on hand to entertain the nearly 1,500 persons in Ford Audi- torium was Cantor Berele Saltz- man, the. Russian cantor who re- cently left the USSR. The Hasidic Choir, under the direction of Eli Lipsker, and a citation to Univer- sity of Michigan professor, Dr. Herbert Paper, also were program features. Potok viewed the evening as completion of a circle in his Hasi- dic life. He said he came from an Hasidic family. His mother passed on her rich Hasidic heritage to her son. Potok said that during his for- mative years in college he had gotten away from the Hasidim, and now his appearance at the Hasidic concert symbolized his re- turn. "I always wanted to be a writer OAK PARK WATCH REPAIR • Selected fine Jewelry and Diamonds Large Selection of tine Opal Jewelry Wok' , and Jewelry Repair LI 7-5068 Neer Post Office Mile 73720 W. of fiction. As a young boy I would go to the New York Public -Li- brary and read novels—novels that changed my life and encouraged me on to my future career." Potok recalled during his college days at Yeshiva University, a rabbi had heard of this young man who wanted to write stories. The rabbi said to me 'fiction is not truth, do you want to write lies?" And, in fact, Potok noted, this Jewish negativism toward writers. "Judaism emphasizes Torah, study and scholarship, but fiction writ- ing? You can put a plant, a glass or anything on a book, but what can you put on a Torah? "My mother," he added, "never introduced me as 'my son the nov- elist." "So why does a man, grown up in the system, committed to it and who loves it, choose to write fiction," Potok asked. "Why does a cantor sing or the student study the Torah? Because he loves it," Potok answered. "I write about Hasidism because it is a world more real than any other reality—the world I know best." Court Restrains Ministry From Deporting Group of Black Israelites JERUSALEM—The interior min- istry was restrained by a High Court order Tuesday from deport- ing a group of so-called Black Israelites, whose tourist visas, valid for one month, expired in Novem- ber. The Black Israelites, Americans who say they are direct descend- ants of the -12 Tribes of Israel, originated in Chicago. Their status as Jews is unclear. The High Court ordered Dr. Yosef Burg, interior minister, to explain within 30 days why be should not r es c i n d deportation orders be signed a few days ago. Will New UN Chief Be an Improvement on M.E. Issue? UNITED NATIONS (JTA)—Is- raeli offciials have declined com- ment on the Security Council's selection Tuesday afternoon of Kurt Waldheim as the United Nations' new secretary-general. It appeared however, that while Waldheim, 53, was not likely to be as "bad" for Israel as U Thant of Burma, who retires Dec. 31 after a decade as secretary-gene- ral, the Austrian chief delegate might not be as sympathetic to Israel as another candidate for the job, Max Jakobson of Finland, son of a Jewish father and a converted mother. But, interestingly, Wald- heim and Dr. Jakobson, each re- presenting a "neutral" nation, both voted for last week's General As- sembly resolution, heatedly opposed by Israel, stressing that Israel- "respond favorably" to interme- diary Gunnar V. Jarring's request for a commitment to withdrawal, before negotiations to the former international boundary with Egypt. Equally interesting was the vote by Dr. Jarring's - Swedish delega- tion on that resolution: It abstain- ed. Although the U.S. reportedly would have preferred the activist Finn to the more cautious Austrian, the Soviet view was just the op- posite; furthermore the Kremlin is believed to be still smarting from a book Dr. Jakobson wrote about 10 years ago in which he criticized aspects of &iviet Policy. It was not immediately known if Dr. Jakobson's religion had any bear- ing on the Soviet's attitude toward hint. Waldheim, on the other hand, had soviet backing. Despite his Austrian background, Waldheim appears to bear no Nazi taint. According to the UN- Charter, the secretary general must remain scrupulously neutral in the conduct of his office. He "may" under his authority "bring to the attention of the security Council any matter which in his opinion may threaten the maintenance of international peace and security." 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Smelsey Accounting, Bookkeeping- & Tax Service • • • • • • sources said the Austrians have been "extremely careful, bland and vague"_publicly, although they are "privately sympathetic." But they indicated that no- secretary- The PRINCETON The latest fashions for men 6 to - SOL 20072 W. 7 Mile svg:r•en KE 34310