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November 23, 1973 - Image 43

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1973-11-23

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
Friday, Nov. 23, 1973-43

ZOD Balfour
Fete Sunday

Jaime and Ruth Laredo,
violin and piano virtuosos,
will be the featured artists at
the annual Balfour Concert
of the Zionist Organization of

Terrorism Exposed: Tada een' Are Defined

An end to the Yom Kippur
War has not enlisted a cease
fire in the ranks of the ter-
rorists. Fedayeen and El Fa-
tah are threatening even
more horrible vengeance on
Israelis and Jews. A study of
the terrorists' aims is there-
fore vital to an understanding
of the Middle East crises.
"Fedayeen —The Arab-Is-
raeli Dilemma" by John Laf-
fin, published by Macmillan-
The Free Press, offers one of
the best available definitions
of the threatening Arab guer-
rillas, their aims, their per-
sonalities, their strength.

The confusions and the pre-
judices, the dilemmas, the
hidden aims—all are given a
thorough airing in a splendid
compilation of facts.

THE LAREDOS

Detroit, 8:30 p.m. Sunday at
Ford Auditorium.
They will appear together
with the Detroit Symphony
Orchestra, Leon Fleisher con-
ducting.
Proceeds will be converted
into Israel Bonds, eventually
to be used to finance the
Zionist cultural activities and
the tasks of the Zionist Or-
ganization of America in Is-
rael — primarily the ZOA
House cultural programs in
Tel Aviv and the Mar Silver
agricultural school in Ash-
kelon.

rorists fighting the British.
The Arabs are not capable of
implementing such methods.
Sir John Glubb has said, 'The
guerrillas cannot, of course,
drive out the Israeli army
but they can make peace im-
possible.' This is tragically
true, though if Egypt made
peace there would be peace,
regardless of the fedayeen.
All the fedayeen can now do
is to withhold peace from
their own people who have so
long craved it.
"Gen. Carl Van Horn, the
Swede who commanded the
UN peace-keeping force in
the Middle East and who is
no friend of the Israelis, de-
scribes fedayeen activities as
`political masturbation'. He
would mean, in part, that the
Palestinian organizations are
poor substitutes for a real
revolutionary force. To exist
and operate they must make
their peace with the Arab
powers that be, in ways that
a real revolutionary, such as
Castro, would never do.
The observer is finally left
with the conviction that the
Palestinian fedayeen organi-
zations—the force that never
was—could more benefit their
own people by going out of
business altogether. But this
will not happen. Resistance
has become an industry; the
fedayeen organizations have
become entrenched bureau-
cracies in which the hier-
archy are reluctant to elim-
inate their own authority.

Laffin, aiming at objectiv-
ity, has delved into the posi-
tions of the two embattled
nations. His compiled facts
will be subject to great scru-
tiny and are certain to call
for added reserch into a most
serious subject.
Reviewing in detail the sub-
jects related to "Fedayeen,"
Laffin concludes his analyses
and studies by stating:
"A leading Israeli general
told me that if he were a
Palestinian fedayeen leader
fighting Israel he could make
life intolerable for the Israe-
lis. His statement was dis-
passionate and matter-of-fact
and was intended to empha-
size Arab inefficiency rather
than his own or Israeli clev-
"In any case, `fedayeenism'
erness. What tactics he would
use he did not specify; pre- is exportable and has be-
sumably he would apply the come part of world violence.
methods of the Jewish ter- A Roman Catholic priest in

Ulster denounced Vietna-
Installation Slated
mese, Algerians and Pales-
tinians working for the IRA
by Detroit Club
who gave themselves a cred-
The Detroit Club, a group
ibility cover by hanging cruc-
of former Detroit residents
ifixes around their necks.
living in Miami Beach, will By RABBI SAMUEL J. FOX Frustrated by failure in their
hold its annual installation
(Copyright 1973. JTA, Inc.)
natural theater—the eastern
of officers Jan. 15 at the
Jewish law prohibits eat- Mediterranean area—the fed-

Eating Blood
Prohibition

Seville Hotel here.
Officers to be installed are
Irving Lyons, president; Dr.
Edward Stern, Morris J.
Friedman and Joseph Mil-
grom, vice presidents; Philip
Cameron, Honey Magid and
Gordon Kozda, secretaries;
Joseph Siegel, treasurer; Al
Lipman, parliamentarian and
chaplain; Nathaniel Gold-
stick, associate chaplain;
William Krochmal, sergeant-
at-arms; Mitchell Goldstone,
honorary president; and Jack
Wasserman, treasurer emer-
itus.

Trustees include Rose Belinsky,
Sadie Cornfield, Rose Kling, Saul
Kling, and Elaine Milgrom. Mem-
bers of the board are David
Brown, Louis Corman, Joseph
Ainbinder, Max Goldhoff, Leon
Magid, Sherman Porvin, Dr.
Julian Webber and Dr. Lee
Weinstock.

umorist to Be
onds Entertainer

Entertainer Emil Cohen
will perform at the Bay City
Country Club, 6:30 p.m.
Sunday in behalf of the State
of Israel Bond Drive.
Dr. Milton J. Miller is Bay
City chairman.
Since establishing himself
as a humorist, raconteur and
vocalist at Grossinger's
Hotel and Country Club,
Cohen has appeared in major
night clubs, hotels and the-
ters throughout the country.
He has been seen on tele-
vision and radio.

TOY SAFETY CAMPAIGN

The U.S. Consumer Pro-
duct Safety Commission has
kicked off a two-fold toy
safety campaign to help con-
sumers choose toys carefully
and to remove hazardous
toys from the marketplace.

ing blood.
A number of reasons are
offered for this prohibition.
The Bible itself, which cites
the prohibition, (Leviticus
17:11) explains that "the soul
of the flesh is in the blood."
This showed that some com-
mentaries view the prohibi-
tion against eating blood as
an indication that man must
have reverence for any life
— even that of an animal.
The fact that the Almighty
has given man the license to
use animal flesh for food
does not mean that man has
to have no regard for animal
life. He has to, at least, re-
frain from eating the blood
since blood is the carrier of
life. Man was, therefore, re-
quired during the days of
the Temple of Jerusalem to
sprinkle blood on the altar
as a symbol that life, char-
acterized by blood, belongs
to God. Some commentaries
feel that, if one consumed
the blood of the animal, in-
stincts of the animal would
be transferred to his per-
sonality.
It is also claimed by some
authorities that blood was
such an awesome entity that
early man attached many
strange idolatrous practices
to the blood. There were a
number of cults that con-
sumed and used blood in cult
worship. In order to keep
Jews away from such prac-
tides, blood was prohibited
as human food. Somehow,
Jewish tradition looked upon
the consumption of animal
blood as a barbarous prac-
tice which displayed a lack
of feeling and concern. Jew-
ish tradition wanted man to
be concerned with the sanc-
tity of life, no matter what
kind of life it was.

Nursery Library Day

"By the end of 1972, ra-
tionality was no longer a fac-
tor in fedayeen thinking, ex-
cept to the extent of reason-
ing that as nothing else
worked in gaining their ends
they would try havoc, and
that any methods were justi-
fiable. Fedayeenism is a way
of life, a trade, and a state of
mind, and in groups or as in-
dividuals fedayeen are likely
to become more involved in
the growth of urban guerrilla
activity in other countries.
Because of their experience,
they are desirable collabora-
tors and instructors.
"Israel, and Israelis at
home and abroad, will no
doubt remain prime targets,
and inevitably more Israelis
will be killed—as will others
o f different nationalities.
Anybody who gets in the way
is expendable. In Nicosia on
April 9, 1973, a Cypriot police-
man on routine guard outside
the residence of the Israeli
ambassador to Cyprus was
shot in the back and killed by
terrorists who then threw
nearly a dozen bombs at the
building. Three of the Pales-
tinians—members of yet an-
other group, the National Or-
ganization of Arab Youth—
were wounded and captured.
Almost simultaneously at Ni-
cosia Airport, a group of five
fedayeen in a car crashed
through a barrier and opened
fire on an El Al plane which
had just disembarked its pas-
sengers from Tel Aviv. An
Israeli security officer shot
and killed one of the attack-
ers and the other four were
captured. A few days later,
another Palestinian agent,
Ahmen Aboussan, was killed
by a bomb tossed into his
Athens hotel room.
"The casualty list will get
longer but the real victims
are, and must remain, the
ordinary Palestinians who
want to live in peace."

an earlier date due to the
Mideast crisis, has been re-
scheduled for 9 a.m.-noon
Dec. 16 at the Jewish Center.
The seminar, under the
auspices of the Jewish Com-
munity Council and the De-
troit Action Committee for
Soviet Jewry, will bring par-
ticipants up to date on re-
cent events and outline ways
in which every Jewish organi-
zation can assume a role in
support of the struggle to
free Soviet Jews.
Representation from all or-
ganizations was urged by Hu-
bert J. Sidlow, council presi-
dent, who noted that Glen
Richter, national director of
the Student Struggle for
Soviet Jewry. will be speak-
er.
The registration fee in-
cludes continental breakfast oak
and resource book. For in-
formation , call the council,
962-1880.


Action Urged
to Fight New
Wave of Bias

ORIN ROSS

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Member organizations of
the Jewish Community Coun-
cil have been urged to pay
immediate attention to the
plight of Soviet Jews.

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It is in fact ignorance, or a
kind of madness, to weary
our minds with striving to
discover things which are be-
yond your reach. — Maimo-
nides.

398-2727

MAGNA SONIC

8 Track Head Cleaner

NEWEST HARDBACK &
PAPER BACK BOOKS

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Reg. $1.95

NOW

"There are now signs,"
said a Council bulletin, "that
the Soviet Union is planning_
to use the confusion following
events in the Mideast and the
Jewish community focus of
attention on Israel in order
to renew a harassment cam-
paign aimed at Russian Jew-
ish activists."
News from the USSR indi-
cates that new trials and
judicial repression against
Jewish activists is forthcom-
ing, the bulletin said. Im-
mediate targets are Alexan-
der Feldman, Alla Myasoye-
dova and Leonid Zabelishen-
sky.
Letters and wires of pro-
test against their arrest and
resumption of show trials
should be sent to Soviet_ Am-
bassador Anatoly Dobrynin
in Washington.

andre

Shaarey Zedek Beth Haye-
led, nursery school and kin-
dergarten, will host Susan
Koslowsky of the Southfield
Public Library 1:30 p.m.
Tuesday at the synagogue.
She will speak on how to
select, find and use children's
books. Interested persons are
invited. For information, call
Mrs. Rosaline Gilson, 357-
5544, director.



Seminar on Soviet Jewry Set

The Soviet Jewry Seminar-
ayeen will increasingly turn
to targets in all continents.
Workshop, postponed from

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