Purely Commentary Recalling the Clossic Martin Buber Assertion Defining Israel's Right to Live in Its Ancient Homeland ... Expose of Detente and USSR Tactics By Philip Slomovitz Martin Buber: 'Something Even Higher Than the Life of Our People Is Bound Up With This Land' Many countries have combined their political strength to suppress Israel. They are numerically in evidence in the United Nations. Even those involved in seeking freedoms for themselves and their people joined the would-be squelchers of Jewish rights. The battle waged against Israel dates back to the time when Jews were strug- gling to establish their roots in the ancient homeland. Then it was against Zionism—now it is against--the entire Jewish people whose links with Israel are inseparable: we believe them to be indestructible. Now those who would destroy Israel are turning back the pages of history. They would have Israel reduced to the ghetto status of 1947. Some would even expel Jews who settled in Israel from the year 1948; others would turn the clock back to 1917— the year of the Balfour Declaration. One such eminent suppresser of Jewish rights was Mohandas K. Gandhi. His daughter, Indira Gandhi, who heads the Indian government, now is aligned in the ranks of Israel's antagonists. "We are not anti-Jewish," she has told her people—but she is certainly anti-Israel, and has been in that role from earliest Israel experiences. Mohandas K. Gandhi opposed Jewish settlement in Palestine in 1939. He propa- gated against the Jewish libertarian movement. An eminent Jewish scholar, the distinguished philosopher Martin Buber, wrote a classic reply that is one of the significant chapters in his writings. Dr. Buber was a pacifist. He wanted Jews and Arabs to live in harmony. He was among the leaders of the Ihud movement which counted among its supporters in Palestine such personalities as Dr. Judah L. Magnes and Henrietta Szold. Dr. Buber stated his case. He submitted that two peoples_ areinvolved, that "two vital claims are opposed to each other, two claims of a different nature and a different origin which cannot objectively be pitted against one another and between which no objective decision can be made as to which is just, which unjust. We considered and still consider it our duty to understand and to honor the claim which is opposed to ours and to endeavor to reconcile both claims." Then, in 1939, he defined Jewish rights, in the famous essay in which he dealt with the conflict between Jew and Arab,. declaring: "We could not and cannot renounce the Jewish claim; something even higher thin the life of our people is bound up with this land, namely its work, its divine mission. But we have been and still are convinced that it must be possible to find some compromise between this claim and the other; for we love this land and we believe in its future; since such love and such faith are surely present on the other side as well, a union in the common service of the land must be within the range of possi- bility. Where there is faith and love, a solution may be found even to what appears to be a tragic opposition. "In order to carry out a task of such extreme difficulty—in the recognition of which we have to overcome an internal resistance on the Jewish side too, as foolish as it is natural—we were in need of the support of well-meaning persons of all nations, and hoped to receive it. But now you come and settle the whole existential dilemma with the simple formula: 'Palestine belongs to the Arabs.' "What do you mean by saying that a land belongs to a population? Evidently you do not intend only to describe a state of affairs by your formula, but to declare a certain right. You obviously mean to say that a people, being settled on the land, has so absolute a claim to that land that whoever settles on it without the permission of this people has committed a robbery. "But by what means did the Arabs attain to the right of ownership in Palestine? Surely by conquest and in fact a conquest with intent to settle. You therefore admit that as a result their settlement gives them exclusive right of possession; whereas the Suppression and Detente • • • Russian Tactics Reviewed in Light of Latest USSR Manifestations Soviet Life, beautifully illustrated and well written but with contents subject to suspicion, has finally been ex- posed. A New York Times editorial writer has courage- ously presented facts that may have been ignored but need to be known, especially in view of the repetitive emphasis being given to detente. The Russian magazine that is circulated in official American quarters consistently carries Jewish articles intended to exonerate the Soviet Union and to give the impression that Jews live in a paradise in the USSR. Much of what that magazine has published needs to be exposed. Only a month ago - it carried a long feature on the basis of which all who demand exit visas would be branded as liars. The Sakharovs and their associates in the protesting group of intellectuals who have condemned Russian oppressions would be tarred as disloyal. Only the Kremlin is sacred and truthful. But the recent incident of medievalism, in the case of the Panovs, inspired the exposure in the New York Times editorial, Dec. 24, under the heading "Detente for the Panovs." In its intercession for the Jewish couple, the editorial showed the propaganda aspect of Soviet Life and the defects in detente and stated: "The current issue of Soviet Life, which is distributed here by reciprocal agreement between the United States and the Soviet Union, is devoted to 'Constitutional Rights and Freedoms.' This magazine pictures life as the Soviets would have us believe it exists there. But this particular issue is cruelly ironical when its lofty ideals are measured against just one current episode in 'Soviet life' — the case of Valery and Galina Panov, the dancers with Leningrad's Kirov Ballet whose feet have been tied by their govern.. ment ever since they applied for exit visas to Israel. . "After waiting for nearly two years, Valery Panov has been told that he can leave but that his wife must stay behind. This inhuman offer has of course been refused by the couple. The Soviets were not simply holding her hostage; this was government trying to break up a mar- riage despite all the statements that anti-Semitism is nonexistent in the Soviet Union. A police inspector has been quoted as saying to Galina Panov, 'Why do you Want to stay with this Jew? We will find you another husband.' "And so one can turn the pages of Soviet Life this month and read the articles boasting of constitutional rights for all citizens regardless of 'their race or nation. ality,' of 'cultural equality,' of 'freedom of religious worship.' One can read of the 'international ballet com- petition' with photographs of smiling dancers — but not 2—Friday, January 4, 1974 .• ' •' • THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS , subsequent conquests of the Mamelukes and the Turks which were conquests with a view to domination, not to settlement, do not constitute such a right in your opinion, but leave the earlier conquerors in rightful ownership. "Thus settlement by conquest justifies for you a right of ownership of Palestine; whereas a settlement such as the Jewish—the methods of which, it is true, though not always doing full justice to Arab ways of life, were even in the most objectional cases far removed from those of conquest—do not justify in your opinion any participation in this right of possession. "These are the consequences which result from your axiomatic statement that a land belongs to its population. In an epoch when nations are migrating, you would first support the right of ownership of the nation that is threatened with dispossession or extermination; but were this once achieved, you would be compelled, not at once, but after a suitable number of generations had elapsed, to admit that the land 'belongs' to the usurper. "It seems to me that God does not give any one portion of the earth away, so that the owner may say as God says in the Bible: 'For all the earth is Mine' (ExodvQ 19:5). The conquered land is, in my opinion, only lent even to the conqueror who settled on it—and God waits to see what he will make of it. "I am told, however, I should not respect the cultivated soil and despise the desert. I am told, the desert is willing to wait for the work of her children; she no longer recognizes us, burdened with civilization, as her children. The desert inspires me with awe; but I do not believe in her absolute resistance, for I believe in the great marriage between man and earth. This land recognizes -us, for it is fruitful through us; and precisely because it bears fruit for us, it recognizes us. "Our settlers do not come here as do the colonists from the Occident to have natives do their work for them; they themselves set their shoulders to the plow and they spend their strength and their blood to make the land fruitful. But it is not only for ourselves that we desire its fertility. The Jewish farmers have begun to teach their brothers the Arab farmers to cultivate the land more intensively; we desire to teach them further; together with them we want to cultivate the land—to 'serve' it, as the Hebrew has it. "The more fertile this soil becomes, the more space there will be for us and for them. We have no desire to dispossess them; we want to live with them. We do not want to dominate them, we want to serve with them." It remains a timely message to the prejudiced against Jewry, and the New York Times saw fit to reprint that essay. New conditions have arisen since 1939. There was the period of partition, when Jews were granted a small strip of land, not even sufficient for a ghetto. The Arab potentates even begrudged the Jewish people that mite. They waged war. The Jewish state expanded a bit. They waged other wars, and Israel sought protection and security a bit farther away from Egyptian, Syrian and Jordanian guns. The aim to destroy Israel has remained an objective of a kindred people that already rules 19 countries, and has the support of the international community, mostly under pressures from the Moslem world and from the Communist bloc. Now, at last, there are renewed discussions that may—should!—lead to peace, in the best interests of Arabs as well as Jews. Basically, the ethical, moral, historic and biblical defense of Prof. Buber keeps re-emerging as a definition for justice to the Jew without harm to the Arab neighbor. Will it be taken seriously? Will theologians of all faiths, ethical culturists among the nations of the world, recognize the right of Israel to live and to enjoy the fruits of labors aimed at elevating the standards of a people that refuses to remain homeless and seeks to stay in the ancient homeland it is reviving? Can a positive answer to the tragic needs and the urgency of the situation come from Geneva? of the Panovs, who were dismissed from their company and are now called 'parasites.' A final irony—an article on freedom of Jewish culture and religious practice. "Detente is a welcome and necessary ideal between the superpowers. But unlesi it is translated to the human level—to rights and freedoms that are not merely internal matters but must leap across borders to achieve reality— hypocrisy and distrust will remain. Human lives and marriages cannot be traded; the Panovs should be freed." This manner of tackling the aggravated issue that affects the freedoms in Russia is a measure of courage in journalism. It does not accept without challenge the claims to detente. It gives credence to the challenges by Senator Henry M. Jackson and others who are cautious in dealing with the approaches to detente by President Richard M. Nixon and Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger. In his address at the function of the American Jewish Committee in New York, Dec. 17, when UAW-AFL Presi- dent George Meany was honored, Senator Jackson had this to say on the crucial subject: "Just six months ago, on June 22, Secretary Brezhnev and President Nixon signed an 'agreement on prevention of nuclear war.' In Article II of this document the Soviet Union agreed to 'refrain from the threat or use of force against the other party, against the allies of the other party and against other countries, in circumstances which may endanger international peace and security.' In ex- plaining the agreement of June 22 at a press conference following the signing, Dr. Kissinger emphasized that it was part of an effort to 'calm the atmosphere and replace purely military measures by a new attitude of a coopera- tive international system.' He called it . . . a milestone in the achievement of self-restraint by the major countries, a self-restraint which is, by definition, the essence of peace and which we intend to observe, which we expect the Soviet Union to observe.' He described the agreement as 'a formal obligation that the two nuclear superpowers have taken toward each other, and equally importantly, toward all other countries, to practice restraint in their diplomacy, to build a peace that is permanent, to pursue a policy whose dedication to stability and peace will be- come' — and here Dr. Kissinger quoted Brezhnev — 'irreversible.' "I leave it to you to decide whether the alerting of seven fully mobilized divisions of Soviet airborne troops along with a brutal and threatening note from Secretary Brezhnev that was delivered the night of Oct. 25 is in keeping, with the, agreement as Dr. Kissinger described it. . • • • • I don't know whether the agreement to pursue peace and stability is irreversible, but on the night of Oct. 25 it became, like so much, else in Washington these days, inoperative. "The agreement of June 22, like the euphoric descrip- tion of it by the secretary of state — indeed, like much of the as yet unfulfilled promise of detente — has turned out to be mere words: well said, perhaps, but mere words — nonetheless. If you will forgive me for quoting King Henry — Henry the VIII, that is, from Shakespeare: 'Tis a kind of good deed to say well; and yet words are no deeds.' "If there is to be hope for a peaceful settlement at the Geneva talks, we must have deeds as well as words, performance as well as promise, substance as well .as atmosphere. "It is all very well for the Arabs to say that they are prepared to make peace with Israel. Those words have been a long time coming, and I welcome them. "But peace must be more than a word, more than a mere document that can be torn up when it suits the convenience of aggressive governments to go to war again. It must be something concrete. It must exist in the dail- - lives of men, for only then can it eventually come to exl, in men's minds as well; and only then — finally — can it be secure. It is naive to imagine that the enmities of decades will vanish with the stroke of a pen. But for a peace treaty to be more than just a scrap of paper, it must do more than simply move the walls that separate Arabs from Israelis to a new location. It must permit Arabs and Israelis to work together, to trade with one another, to talk with one another, to see for themselves the truth about their neighbors. "One of_the most hopeful developments of the last six years in the Middle East, in my opinion, has been the progress that has been made in relations between Israelis and Arabs on the West Bank and in the Gaza Strip. Thousands of Arabs work and travel in Israel — in spite of the efforts of grenade-throwing terrorists to stop this by attacking Arab civilians waiting for buses to take them to work in Israel, Thousands of Israeli citizens now visit Arab towns which for almost twenty years they were permitted to see only across barbed wire fences. This progress has been truly remarkable. It has been made under the inevitably imperfect conditions of a state of war. It will continue unless we create artificial political entities that deliver the Palestinian Arabs into the hands (Continued .on Page, 5)