THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, Nov. 30, 1973-11 Mormons Seen Backing Israel JERUSALEM—In a letter to the editor of the Jerusalem Post, a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (Mormon) defended the "trustworthi- ness" of his coreligionists against criticism. Describing the history of Mormonism, John A. Tvedt- nes, said the religion was born of a "Zionist spirit," *lereby the immigration of __.ws to Israel was not only regarded as a right but as a duty. He said that a Mormon prophet, Joseph Smith, in 1841 delegated one of the Apostles, Orson Hyde, to Jerusalem to "dedicate the land for the return of the Jews. This he did, calling upon God to restore the land to its 'rightful heirs' and to inspire the powers of the earth to aid in the establish- ment of a Jewish 'nation.' " Tvedtnes said that during the Yom. Kippur crisis, Mor- mons from all over the world were meeting in Salt Lake City, and that many publicly announced their concern for Israel. Many already living in Israel volunteered their services. Following one Sha- bat service, a congregation went en masse to Magen David Adom to donate blood. He said he put off writing the letter because "it might be viewed as bragging or as an attempt to 'prove' some false loyalty to the Zionist cause." However, he said, "I have deemed it necessary to state the reasons for which our Jewish brethren may rest as- sured that we are their good friends, in both good and bad weather." Judges Moonlight as Taxi Drivers TEL AVIV — Hall of jus- tice judges have organized a volunteer taxi service for members of border agricul- tural settlements. A number of judges go out every day with their cars to taxi volunteers sent by the agricultural center here to the settlements needing them. mainly on the Golan Heights and in the Galilee. Another service tendered by the judges is special rides in emergency situations, in answer to calls from the city's emergency staff. The rides are given from the hall of justice where judges are •TI duty day and night for h cases. - Chief Justice of the Peace, Ya'akov Segal, said that a questionnaire has been cir- culated among Tel Aviv judges and in all courts in the country regarding mobil- ization for night patrol at border settlements. Judges also are part of the special teams sent to bring words of deaths to war victims' fami- lies. , ; Is This Your Problem, Too? The dimensions . . . and the consequences . . . of the Yom Kippur War are almost beyond our imag- ination. It was an indescribably brutal conflict, in which a greater military might was thrown against Israel's people than Hitler committed to the invasion of Russia in 1941. Despite the surprise of the initial attack, the tremendous weight of Arab military force, and the in- difference or hostility of almost every nation in the world except ours, Israel won a great victory on the battlefield. Her civilian army not only stopped the Egyptian and Syrian advances but now sits inside Egypt and is farther into Syria than in 1967. The price of victory in this unwanted war was high: its cost, in life and resources, is incomprehensible. Since Israel is one family, almost every home was touched by the grievous number of dead and wounded. The entire nation sat shiva, and mourning her dead with Israel, Jews all over the world sat with her. The cost of the war, in dollars, is staggering. It approaches the gross national product of the entire country. For almost two months, since Israel's manpower mobilization, the economy has been virtually halted. Although some factories ran shifts day and night, the production went to aid the war effort. It did not advance, or even maintain, normal economic growth. Even now, after the ceasefire, there is no peace. Israel's labor force is dug in on the military fronts. Her economy grinds slowly and with great difficulty. Already under the burden of tremendous taxation — the highest tax rate in the world — the people of Israel face additional financial struggles. An increase in taxation, a voluntary loan program, the loss of in- come from exports: all are results of the war. Her new difficulties are compounded by Israel's determination that her life and prog- ress continue. With the advent of the war, problems which existed on October 5 .. . those of housing, education, refugee absorption needs, poverty ... did not disappear. New immigrants continue to arrive daily. Last month, even during the fighting, more than 5000 immi- grants arrived, most of them from Soviet Russia. The number of newly liberated Jews increases weekly, and so does the demand upon overburdened absorption facilities. Immigration centers and hostels are filled to overflowing. Three thousand families are today doubled up with previous arrivals in apartments barely adequate for one family. Temporary quarters to house new arrivals are imperative. A crash program must be undertaken. Additional help must be given to hundreds of deprived large families and aged persons particularly hard hit by war and economic dislocations. Irrigation systems, destroyed by war, must be rebuilt. Kib- butzim whose crops were lost during the war must be aided. How? There is a Jewish balance sheet. Those in Israel gave lives of sons, husbands, fathers, and brothers: we, whO cannot be in Israel, must give money. We must give expression to our determination that Jews will have a homeland; to our desire that the absorption of immigrants should not cease; to our conviction that education, health, welfare, housing should not be neglected. To lick these problems, the Jewish people must stand behind Israel . . . must join together with the same spirit exhibited by the young heroes who went to battle, by the families who accepted their losses, by the orphans, the widows, the grieving parents. The kind of Israel that will be depends on the Jewish people of Israel, of the world, and particularly the Jews of the United States. This is not 1967 . . . this is not the same war . . . not the same world . . . but neither are we the same. We have maturity and strength and commitment. And if we grasp the significance of Yom Kippur 1973, we will accept Israel's problems as our problems. We are asking the Jews of Detroit to respond and to help solve those problems. We cannot be on the battlefronts. We cannot work in the factories to replace the young Israelis on the fronts and those who will not return. We cannot be there physically. But we must be there in another way: we must proclaim that the problems of Israel are not her problems alone: we must tell the world that they are our problems. We are mindful, too, that while aiding our brethren in Israel, we must also maintain the source of our own communal strength: those local agencies and domestic beneficiaries which consolidate our com- munity. Programs which enable Detroit children to grow in Judaism, which shelter our homeless and de- pendent, which enrich the quality of our own Jewish lives in America, must be safeguarded as part of our solidarity with Israel. All this is the challenge to the Jews of Detroit. Our 1974 Campaign is already underway. Obviously, we could not wait. Initial meet- ings have seen a tremendous response to the compelling needs. Pledges have trebled and quadrupled. We have thus far exceeded the total dollar achievement of the 1973 AJC-IEF. These gifts have been made in the spirit of generosity and sacrifice without reference to donations of the past. They are given for today's needs. Accept the problems of Israel, not only emotionally as we did during the great shock wave following the attack. When your Campaign volunteer calls on you, respond with deliberation, with depth, with corn- mitment . . . with the knowledge that we are buying the future of Israel, the future of the Jewish people, yes — our own future, too. We can and we must make these our problems. Arabs Help Out "Any attack against Israel is an attack against every single Israeli Arab. Bombs and rockets don't make any distinction . . . If we don't volunteer to help, who will replace our soldiers at the front?" Sharif e-Tibi, an Israeli Arab electrician was volun- teering for emergency work during the war. .."-) William M. Davidson General Chairmen • tie Lewis S. Grossman 1974 Allied Jewish Campaign — Israel Emergency Fund 163 Madison Avenue • Detroit, Michigan 48226 • WO 5-3939