22—Friday, May 4, 1973 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS El Al Employe May Have Been Wrong Man Killed by Terrorists ROME (JTA) — Vittorio Olivares, an Italian employe of El Al, shot to death by a self-styled Black September agent here, may have been the wrong man, police said. They said the intended victim could have been Moshe Adad, 40, the El Al office manager, who bears a slight resemblance to the murdered man. Olivares, 35. was a prac- ticing Catholic and was in no way connected with Middle East politics. The accused killer, arrest- ed after a chase, was identi- fied as Zakariah Kamel Abou Saleh, 23. He was carrying an Egyptian-made Halwan 9- caliber pistol equipped with a silencer when he was ar- rested. Olivares was shot twice in the abdomen and once in the chest in front of one of 'Rome's busiest department stores during the evening rush hour. He died on the way to a hospital. The accused reportedly told police interrogators that he was sent to Rome by the Black September to execute Olivares whom he knew only by photograph, not by name. He said the killing was revenge for last Oc- tober's murder of Wail Adel Ouaiter, believed to (have been an El Fatah representa- tive in Italy. Zuaiter's killers have not been apprehended and are believed in some quarters to have been Israeli agents. Abou Saleh reportedly told police that Black September had sent an investigative team to Italy and established that Olivares was the man behind Zuaiter's death. Police noted, however, that both Olivares and Adad drove the same make of car which they parked in the same garage. They said those facts and the slight resembl- ance between them may have caused the killer to stalk and shoot the wrong man. People Make News Rabbi H. PHILIP BERKO- WITZ of Temple Beth Jacob, Pontiac, will represent the Jewish Chautauqua Society as lecturer at Macomb County Community College in Warren, Mich., 11 a.m., Tuesday. He will lecture on the subject "The Function of Religion in Modern Society." * * WILLIAM FELDMA N, president of Consumer's Pe- troleum Company, in De- troit, has been named a member of the 1973 National United Nations Day Commit- tee of which Donald S. Mac- Naughton, president of Pru- dential Life Insurance of New Jersey, is chairman. The program will culminate on UN Day, Oct. 24. Am- bassador John Scali, U. S. representative to the UN in- vited the National UN Day Committee to hold its first meeting May 1 at the United Nations Plaza in New York. Mr. and Mrs. Feldman at- tended a private reception sponsored by Secretary-Gen- eral Kurt Waldheim follow- ing the meeting. The murder caused deep shock in Italy and created another dilemma for Italian authorities. Although the murder and capture of the gunman took place before dozens of witnesses, it re- mains to be seen whether the Italian government will run the risk of Black Sep- tember reprisals by sentenc- ing him to prison here. Abou Saleh reportedly talked freely to investigators about the killing which he called a "victorious mission." He told police that Black September leaders in Beirut gave him money, an airline ticket, a pistol and details of the victim and that he ar- rived here April 19. Police are trying to estab- lish whether he made con- tacts with local Arab groups. Abou Saleh said he acted alone and he had intended to return to Beirut after the killing. Olivares had been a coun- ter clerk for BOAC. fie joined El Al two years ago, but was seeking an other job because of the tension and security measures at El Al. Meanwhile, in La Bolivia, police said they de- fused a letter •b3inb address- ed to Ambassador Moshe Avidar of Israel. An Israeli military attache became sus- picious of the envelope post- marked Sept. 18, 1972 in Amsterdam, and notified authorities. A rummage sale apd Mother's Day boutique fea- turing handmade items will be held by the RETINITIS PIGMENTOSA FOUND A- TION of MICHIGAN 10 a.m.- 4 p.m. May 10 and 10 a.m.-9 p.m. May 11 at the Orchard United Methodist Church. For call the foundation, 292-8216 frcirn noon to 6 p.m. The founda- tion funds res,-- arch into r nits pigmen a ,..n- erative eye LI, than has bdiided 100,000 childr''n World Jewry Recalls the Martyrs LONDON (JTA) — "We knew that we could not gain a physical victory in the long run, but we were determined to sell our lives at a very high price. Let it be said that had we received some assistance from outside, we would have inflicted much greater losses on on the enemy." Speaking in Yiddish, Stephen Grayek, one of the leaders and founders of the Jewish underground in Po- land duruing World War II, thus recalled the events of April 1943 when the Jews of the Warsaw Ghetto took arms against the German Army in the first organized resistance to Nazi occupation on the European contenent. Grayek delivered the key- note speech at the corn-. memorative assembly at the St. Pancras Town Hall mark- ing the 30th anniversary of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising and paying homage to the six million. Grayek said the official Polish underground pos- sessed huge stocks of arms and equipment but refused to provide any for the War- saw Ghetto fighters. He said that after many months of protracted negotiations they managed to obtain between 40 and 50 guns and about 30 hand grenades. "For the rest we had to buy our arms out- side the ghetto," he said. "Poles bought the arms from German and Italian soldiers and sold them to us at a good price, simply for gain," Grayek said. "We had the money from two sources: collections in the ghetto and monies smuggled to us illegally by the Jews of what was then Palestine. The ob- jective of the battle was to give the enemy an answer, to avenge the bloodshed. This objective we achieved . . . (but) the world stood by during the massacres as well as during the battle of ghetto, as we know." Israel came to a standstill Sunday during a one-minute blast of the nation's air raid sirens in memory of the Six Million. Motorists stood in silence with pedestrians as the dirge echoed throughout the land. Officially the period of mourning began at sundown Saturday with an official can- dle-dighting ceremony at the Wailing Wall. President Zalman Shazar and the armed forces chief of staff, Lt. Gen. David Elazar, took part in the serv- ice as flags were being low- ered to half-staff around the country. Restaurants, movie thea- ters and other places of enter- tainment closed for other memorial services attended by government and military officials in settlements throughout the nation. Most of the 120 members of the Knesset visited Yad Vashem, the national me- morial to those who died in the holocaust, and attended a special session of parlia- ment marking the 30th an- niversary of the Warsaw Ghetto uprising. In the Knesset, Finance Minister Pinhas Sapir likened the outrages committed by the Black September with those of the Nazis three decades ago. "There is no difference between what the Nazis did and what the Black September is doing," he said. "Both want to annihilate and to strike at the very being of the Jewish people." A brief commotion was precipitated when Communist MK Meir Wilner objected to references by Knesset Speak- er Israel Yeshayahu to the mistreament of Jews in the Soviet Union. Addressing a memorial as- sembly in Haifa, Gen. Chaim Laskov (Res.) claimed that a quarter of a million Jews from Central and Eastern Europe fought against the Nazis as partisans during World War II. He said that neither the French, the Bel- gians, the Russians nor the Poles could clain such a rec- ord. Laskov said that who- ever tried to portray Euro- pean Jews as lambs led to the slaughter was doing them and their memory a grave injustice. In New York close to 10,000 assembled in Temple Eman- Look how little it costs toe' uel for memorial services addressed by Sen. Jacob K. Javits, the largest single comemoration of the Ghetto anniversary ever held in the U.S. Javits, in his remarks, said that Senate ratification of the United Nations Genocide Con- vention which has been awaiting action for 23 years, would be a "tangible and substantive act of commem- oration of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising." He said he antici- pated that the Convention would be favorably reported by the Senate Foreign Re- lations Committee and would be voted on this summer. "Those who survived the Nazi holocaust know full well the meaning of genocide," Javits said. "A World Dictionary of Hebrew Slang," by Dan Ben Amotz and Netiva Ben Ye- huda, has been published. Reader Is Right: `z' in Nietzsche A sharp-eyed reader gets an A in spelling for spotting the missing Z in Nietzsche. The review of Dr. Wayne Andrews' "S iegfrie d's Curse!" in the April 20 issue of The Jewish News carried a misspelling—consistently- of Nietzsche's name. Thanks to a faithful reader, it was brought to our attention. Of course, it's all the printer's fault . . .?!? 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