Writer Advises on Terrorism Rise; Rebukes Leftists for Position on Israel In an article entitled, "The Age of Terror," appearing in the Nov. 29 issue of New Statesman, writer Paul John- son admonishes his reader- ship on the rise of terrorism while rebuking the leftists- socialists who he says "claim the name of socialist, though it is characteristic of them that they regard with pecul- iar detestation the world's most advanced social democ- racy, Israel." His article reads in part: Step by step, almost im- perceptibly, without anyone being aware that a fatal watershed has been crossed, mankind has descended into the age of terror. While we have taken infinite pains to avoid the catastrophe of a thermonuclear war, the inter- national community has al- lowed itself to be corrupted into accepting something scarcely less horrible: the in- discriminate murder of the innocent in the pursuit of political ends. posed himself on the Palestin- ian refugees by fear and violence is ignored. He had the indispensable pass-key to an Assembly mesmerized by racialism and force: the abil- ity to kill with impunity. According to its rules, Ara- fat has no more place in the UN than the head of the Mafia, who can match him in successful crime and perhaps has a wider constituency. But Arafat fits more con- vincingly in the mythology of the modern world, which has replaced negotiation and de- bate by guns and explosives. South Africa but applauded in Uganda; and the fruits of aggression are denied or blessed according to the race and political leanings of those to whom they accrue. Thus the UN has become a kind of kangaroo court; far from protecting international order, it undermines it. Not even the wretched League of Nations gave a welcome and a platform to Hitler. But it is futile to lavish abuse on the UN; it has no corporate existence; it is merely the sum of its parts. Lawless and tyrannical re- gimes — and there are now many scores of them in the world—will naturally seek to remold in their own image any international forum of which they are members. Their object is not to uphold law but to eliminate it. It is rubbish to suppose that an organization of over 100 states, each with an equal vote, will reflect civi- lized standards. There are very few. communities in the world where democracy and the rule of law still flourish. And in the UN, of course, he finds many agents of his peers: military gangsters and expert racists, men skilled in the politics of torture and butchery, who have devoted their lives to the destruction of democracy and the courts. More and more, the UN be- gins to resemble, and sound like, a thieves' kitchen: Arafat should be at home there. More to the point is the question: why do the powers still attached to civi- lized standards continue to Today the civilized powers give it their countenance? Here we come to the es- are no less pusillanimous. sence of the argument. No They have watched impas- It is now part of the rou- tine duties of heads of gov- ernment to negotiate person- ally with killers, with the ob- ject of releasing convicted criminals as expeditiously as state throughout history has sively while the UN has be- it can be arranged. Worse still, terror has been accorded recognition and honorable status. The United Nations, theoretically the chief custodian of interna- tional order and - civilized standards, has extended a welcome and privileges to the most active, ruthless and successful of the terror gangs, as a preliminary to giving it full membership. Its spokesman, the architect of a thousand crimes, has been received with howls of rapture. Few question the creden- tials of Arafat and his kill- ers; the fact that he has im- had completely clean hands. What marks the -progress of civilization is the systematic recognition of laws, the iden- tification and punishment of crime, and the reprobation of the offender. The tragedy of the UN is that the distinctions have been first blurred, then wholly abandoned; and that its judgments are now deliv- ered not according to any recognized set of principles, however inadequate, but sole- ly in response to the pres- sures of political and racial groupings. Racialism is condemned in trayed its aims and torn up its charter. They have made no effort to ,construct collec- tive defenses against inter- national terrorism, to punish those who practice it and deter those who give it sanc- tuary. The Arab decision to use the oil weapon to further ter- rorist aims—the first direct and unmistakable threat to the interests of the civilized powers themselves—was met with blatant cowardice, total disunity and panic attempts to strike unilateral bargains. There seems, at present, no principle that the West will not willingly sacrifice to re- tain the illusion of economic security. There has also been a be- trayal by the Left. What should distinguish the Left is an all-embracing human- ism, which places the highest possible value on life and identifies itself with those so- cieties striving to preserve and enrich it. The Left abandoned its principles in the 1930s by deliberately ignoring or dis- counting the Stalinist terror, and by defending the debased form of government which made it possible. Now it is committing a new form of the same treason by endorsing indiscriminate violence as the prime weapon of political ac- tion. Let us not mince our words about this. There is now a growing number of people on the Left, in this and other advanced countries, who de- liberately associate them- selves with international ter- rorist groups, with confer- ences held to promote the aims of terrorism, with the supply and manufacture of explosives, and, above all, with the ideology of violence. These people claim the name of socialist, though it is characteristic of them that they regard with peculiar detestation the world's most advanced social democracy, Israel. (Copyright 1975, JTA, Inc.) life in his political philosophy as well. He deplored the "big- ness" of industry. The "curse of bigness," he called it. He thought that small business was more efficient than the giant corporation. mark did it. Finishing his con- versation, de Hass remarked, casually, "Your uncle was a fine Jew." Probably no member of the Supreme Court of more re- cent times is more quoted than Brandeis. Justice Doug- las was one of his secretaries in his younger days. Brandeis had shown no Jewish interest until one day Jacob de Haas, an English Jew walked into his office. De Hass was editor of a Bos- ton Jewish paper. Theodor Herzl himself had asked • de Haas to settle in America to bring the American Jews Zionism. De Haas had come to Brandeis to inquire about some insurance matter. De Haas didn't know it, but the day he walked into that office, he was fulfilling the mission which Herzl had imposed on him. A chance re- brought to the movement great .prestige. As a leader his accent was always on the economic. The rabbis of old said, "Not the word, but the deed is important" and that was the Brandeis thought. But the world also needs the word and Stephen Wise was admittedly a great preacher, who seemed as pop- ular with non-Jews as Jews. One suspects that had he gone into politics, he might have been another Bryan. The Free Synagogue where he of- ficiated was one of the tour- ist attractions. His pulpit. was Carnegie Hall. He had plan- ned a great new synagogue but as the plans neared frui- tion, trouble developed be- tween Judge Gary, head of the U.S. Steel Corporation and the workers, and Wise Now my good friend, the erudite Harry Barnard, auth- or of the "Eagle Forgotten," the life story of Illinois' fam- ed Governor John Altgeld, He was married to a cousin has written a biography of a forgotten eagle, Judge Julian of Felix Adler, the founder of W. Mack. The book is pub- the Ethical Culture Society. She wanted him to join that lished by Herzl Press. Mack was president of the Jewish Congress. He was a member of the U.S. Court of Appeals for some thirty years. He was considered for the Supreme Court. He help- ed the immortal Jane Adams found Hull House in Chicago. He taught at the University of Chicago and at one time was one of the trustees of Harvard. He was a member of the Jewish delegation to the Peace Conference after the first World War. He was a leader in the Zionist world. He was one of that galaxy of American Jewish stars which • included Brandeis, Wise, Silver and Lipsky. Each was different, but the most different was Brandeis. Brandeis never owned a car and never even used a type- writer, writing all of his let- ters by hand. He cultivated a deliberate simplicity of life. He seemed to go counter to the whole tendency of modern Brandeis paused. The uncle of Brandeis had been Lewis N. Dembitz, after whom Brandeis was named. Dem- bitz was a Kentucky Jew, who had been a delegate to the Republican convention which group, but Brandeis would nominated Abraham Lincoln. not have it. He didn't believe, Brandeis' uncle was very he said, in preaching ethics, much interested in Jewish af- but in living it. Character, he fairs. He was the author of a said, is contagious like dis- book on Jewish prayer. ease. Brandeis turned Zionist. He 56 Friday, January 24, 1975 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS — course, the tacit approval of the Left is a direct and pow- erful incentive to push for- ward the threshold of vio- lence. The truth is that no politi- cal cause is worth the aban- donment of elementary moral- ity. Whether terrorism works varies with the case, but it can never serve an ideal. Writer Hits Arafat's Twisting of Language to Meet PLO Needs are sought and stru BAYARD RUSTIN Editor's note: Bayard Bus- tin, executive director of the A. Philip Randolph Institute, writes a syndicated column that appears in leading black newspapers across the United States. In the following col- umn, just released, he dis- cusses the distortion of lan- guage that occurs when ter- rorism is described as "lib- eration" and cites the sur- render of "political and humanitarian principles" im- plicit in the UN's recognition of Yasir Arafat and the PLO. There is complete indif- ference to the political evolu- tion of the Arab states—that is, the progressive elimina- tion of anyone with a com- mitment to democracy. Some of those who form and orga- nize opinion on the Left are preparing the ground for the One of the most distressing acceptance of Israel's destruc- reflections of the unhappy tion as right and inevitable. state of world politics is the More important, in the long ease with which words can be perverted, stripped of signifi- cance, and made to mean their opposite. took labor's side. Acts of murder and terror- "I see my synagogue going ism are transformed into ges- up in smoke," said Wise, re- tures of "liberation." Hijack- alizing now that big contri- ing and the slaughter of inno- butions from the men of cent children are carried out wealth would not be forth- in the name of "peace." The coming. word "racism," once so Abba Hillel Silver was also meaningful to the oppressed a man of eloquence. He had of the world, has lost all ob- been a founder of the first jective value as it is as often juvenile Zionist group meet- applied to democratic, inter- ing at the Educational Alli- racial societies as to those ance on the Lower East Side. which practice the most ex- Dr. Fleischman, the head, a treme forms of apartheid. German Jew hostile to Zion- The distortion of language ism, s h r i e k e d Hallelujah is, however, but a symbol of when, outraged, he heard the a fundamental surrendering boy Zionists speaking Hebrew. of political and humanitarian For once, in his indignation, principles, typified most dra- he himself had uttered a He- matically by the warm recep- brew word. tion accorded Yasir Arafat A fight developed between and the Palestine Liberation the junior Zionists and Organization by the United Fleischman but the young Nations. For Arafat to have Zionists prevailed. Abba Hil- shot his way into the General lel Silver was to close Assembly with a machine another fight — he made the gun, only to be greeted by an final speech in the fight at overture of applause, would the United Nations about the have been almost as ridicu- establishment of the state of lous — and deplorable — as Israel. the cheers which greeted his In the American Zionist tirade of misrepresentation. Revolution, the man who What is, after all, the "le- wielded the gavel longest was gitimate struggle" Arafat and Louis Lipsky, who in private the PLO are conducting? It life was president of an in- is a struggle being waged surance company. Two thous- with the tactics of calculated and years of Jewish history violence, where military tar- showed that the Jewish people gets are avoided, but women, were in constant danger. Zion- children, athletes, diplomats, ism was an insurance policy airline passengers — the de- for a homeless people. fenseless and uninvolved — Pioneering Leadership in i U.S. Zionism Recalled BY DAVID SCHWARTZ run, is acceptance that, hi the pursuit of certain vaguely defined principles of self- determination, the end justi- fies the means, however hor- rible. Once the right of the ter- rorist to kill is conceded there is no logical point at which the Left can make a stand for human life. And, of What, then, of the 'S charge that Israel is a C- ist" nation. This accUs- 1071 has been repeated so often — Arafat made numerous refer- ences to Israeli "racism" and "colonialism" in his UN ad- dress — that it has achieved a measure of acceptance worldwide, and in the Ameri- can black community. The question is what do the Arabs mean by "racism?" The standard definition is the systematic oppression of an ethnic or racial minority, very often justified on the grounds that the minority is inherently less intelligent, less clean, less pure or in some way in- ferior to the majority. Applying this measurement, it is apparent that some of the most blatantly "racist" re- gimes are in Arab lands. In Iraq, Jews were hanged in a public square, while today napalm is employed against the dissident Kurdish minor- ity. Syria rivals Nazi Ger- many in its brutal treatment of its Jewish citizens, who are confined to a cramped quarter of Damascus, pre- vented from emigrating, and from time to time murdered with official sanction. I would not pretend that the racial situation in Israel, where some 400,000 Arabs live as citizens, is perfect. But given the enormous problems confronting her, this small nation has achieved a level of racial tolerance that is in- deed remarkable. The Arabs within Israel en- joy rights and a standard of living unknown to the masses in Moslem nations. They par- ticipate politically; elect their own representatives to par- liament; receive public edu- cation; and belong to Histad- rut, the Israeli labor federa- tion. They are, in other words, a part of the progressive in- stitutions of Israeli society. I believe that the Palestin- ian people have the right to a homeland, to self-determin- ation, to the resolution of their state of uncertainty. Jewish people, historically oppressed people, have the same right. And given the rhetoric and actions the PLO, there can be litt.L .oubt that to accede to the demand of a bi-national state would result in the Jews of Israel being dealt with much like the Jews in Iraq and Syria. In her brief history, Israel has forged an enviable record of social achievement. At a time when so many appear willing to accept lies as the truth, to reach dishonest con- ciliation with terrorists, to barter away the most basic ideals of justice and compas- sion, Israel more than ever deserves the sup port of people of good will and com- mon decency.