Young Democratic Radicals Fight for Truth About Israel on Campus By CHARLOTTE DUBIN Israel doesn't have an easy time of it on campus. Arab propagandists find fertile fields to sow their doctored version of the Mid- dle East conflict. A handful of Jewish students often are Israel's most vociferous an- tagonists because of their New Left leanings. Even those who support the Jew- ish state are ill-equipped to speak knowledgeably on her behalf. As for the remainder of the students — probably the majority — they couldn't care less about what goes on in the Middle East. That is why it's all the more surprising to find in a small group of young people, only a third of them Jewish, some of Israel's staunchest supporters at Wayne State University. They are aware, politically active and dedi- cated to Israel's survival as the only real democracy in the Middle East. Kathy McComsey, a 23- year-old political science ma- jor at Wayne, is local chair- man of the Youth Committee for Peace and Democracy in the Middle East. What the group lacks in finances and manpower (they have 10-12 members in the Detroit area), they compensate for in involvement. When the South End edi- tors printed a series of anti- Israel articles, superimposed with a swastika on a Magen David, Miss McComsey urged Jewish groups to bombard the campus newspaper with letters of complaint. On Tues- day, she called a mass meet- ing of individuals and or- ganizations who wish to corn. bat the South End's undem- ocratic policies. Miss McComsey said the national organization w a s founded in 1968 by 26 youth groups — mostly Gentile — to encourage a democratic foreign policy outlook and, in so doing, support a strong Israel. It arose at a time when the Jewish state was sorely in need of such backing, her former "friends" having turned into her accusers at having won the war. Particularly heatening is the listing of sponsors of the Youth Committee, which is headed nationally by Carl Gershman and Penn Kemble, co-chairmen, and Josh Mur- avchik, director. Among the sponsors are the Rev. James Black, vice president of the NAACP; David Borden of the New Democratic Coalition; Joe Burke, civic action director of the Catholic Youth Or- ganization; C. Keith Payne of the Young Men's Christian Association; and Steve Kel- man, president of the Young. People's Socialist League. The latter—the democratic socialists — offer a tenor to the organization that makes its credentials all the more important on campus. It stands for the kind of radical activism that puts the New Left rhetoric to shame. Miss McComsey, once ac- tive in the antiwar move- ment, said she became dis- illusioned with the Student Mobilization Committee. "I'm against war," she explained, "but I couldn't see advocat- ing a victory for Hanoi. That 10 — Friday, Jan. 26, 1973 group had nutty politics." Miss McComsey turned her energy to the Detroit voter registration drive, Frontlash, which resulted in the regis- tration of 150,000 under her coordination. She is active in the Democratic Party in Troy, where she lives. Detroit is one of six cities with fulltime Youth Commit- tee organizers. Others are in Boston, Chicago, Washington, Los Angeles and New York. But Miss McComsey fears that the Detroit operation will fold in six weeks unless she can come up with a funding source. She works out of an office donated by the Jewish Labor Committee in the Butzel Building, and gets clerical help from the Jewish Community Council. With a national member- ship dues of only $2, the group will never get rich. For that $2, a member may attend educational meetings, forums and debates. He re- ceives a national monthly bulletin, "Crossroads," and a weekly local leaflet, fea- turing articles on the Arab- Israeli conflict. This week, at its table in State Hall, the committee distributed an article on the various Arab terrorist organizations. Besides the effort at WSU and at the University of Michigan, there are contacts at Macomb County Commun- ity College, and Miss Mc- Comsey hopes to. expand to the University of Detroit. "But till I'm able to recruit young people, it will be im- posssible to do more," she said. She hopes to start a small library with literature on the Middle East and Soviet Jew- ry and said she would try to arrange speakers on re- quest. She can be reached at home, 643-9574, or at the But- zel Building, 163 Madison. Miss McComsey is con, vinced that the need to edu- cate the public is greater than ever. "The leaders of the antiwar movement now are trying to turn youth against Israel," she stated. "Some of the literature was saying 'No guns to Vietnam and no guns to Israel.' "With the settlement in Vietnam, the attention of po- litically-minded people will turn to the Middle East," she said. "We must encour- age a favorable attitude to Israel." Miss McComsey added that in terms of organization, the New Left is all but dead, "but the New Left attitude remains." That attitude is found, not surprisingly, among some young Jews of middle-class and upper middle-class back- grounds. Miss McComsey did not rule out self-hatred, but she also suggested another reason. "The New Left rep- resents a lot of authoritarian leanings. These kids have no respect for democracy but rather have distorted values of equality. They're a lot of spoiled kids who don't understand a government that protects the people. "When they talk about 'freeing the people in the Third World,' they refer to a distorted world. They're not supporting the freedom of the Arabs because all the Arab countries are authori- tarian. These people aren't THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS liberated, they're starving. There's no freedom of ex- pression • no free labor move. ment. There's no social re- form, Only Israel leads in these areas. And the Arab propaganda about 'Palestine belonging to the Palestinians' just isn't true. The Jews were there for ages." She would favor, however, a separate Palestine state, "as long as it isn't at Israel's expense." In November, on the first official democratic socialist youth tour to Israel through the U.S. Youth Council, Miss McComsey and her 15 com- panions found some aspects of Israeli life to criticize. She was dismayedsthat the refugee question persists. At the same time, she observed the gains being made by Arabs. The Detroiter was particularly impressed with Histadrut, Israel's labor fed- eration, and its integration of Arabs into the labor force. She also praised the work • of Histadrut's Afro- Asian Institute, which has helped many African nations achieve some technological expertise. Contributions such as these cause Miss McComsey, who herself comes from a labor background, to wonder at the failure of Israel to win the friendship of black acti- vists. Those she has met in the labor movement, of course, are pro-Israel, but young black militants on campus disalsink an "irration- al anti-Israel" attitude. "For some reason, they link the dark-skinned Palestinians to themselves." Repeating the distortions in Palestinian propaganda hand- outs, the black activists re- fuse to listen to fact, Miss McComsey said. They ignore, for example, reports of atroc- ities against the black South- ern Sudanese by the Moslem government. Thus, the Youth Commit. tee for Peace and Democracy in the Middle East has a tough job ahead. Miss Mc- Comsey doesn't criticize Jew- ish organizations on campus, but she points out that they look upon Israel from a dif- ferent perspective, dealing with it as a religious rather than a political issue. "I remember when Carl Gershman and Peter Ruch (a radical anti - Zionist) were here for a debate. Some Jews got into an argument with a group of Arabs, and their arguments literally got slaugh- tered because they didn't have the facts at hand." The Youth Committee hopes it can reach such well-mean• ing young people with its strong commitment to Israel as a democratic movement for national liberation. "Israel is one of the best examples of a country under- going radical change with a progressive social outlook," said Miss McComsey. "The nature of Israel and the so- ciety it is building are such that no democratic radical can help but support her." Six Black American Civic Leaders Take on Tour of Israel JERUSALEM (JTA) — A foreign and education minis- places, the Lachish region six-man delegation of black tries and with Histadrut lead- and the Arab villages of Tire American civic leaders was ers. and Taib. 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