THE JEWISH NEWS IncOrpOrating The Detroit Jewish. Chronicle commencing with the issue of July .20, 1951 JR* MVOS Member American Association of English-Jewish Newspapers, Michigan Press Association, National Editorial Association. Published every Friday by The Jewish News Publishing Co.. 17515 W. Nine Mile, Suite 865, Southfield, Mich. 48075. Second-Class Postage Paid at Southfield, Michigan and Additional Mailing Offices. Subscription :i10 a year. PHILIP SLOMOVITZ CARMI M. SLOMOVITZ DREW LIEBERWITZ Editor and Publisher Business Manager Advertising Manager i lpn apo 1 096 6 lb alt t L Lisr Enure/iv 4143Ear PREP steAlutiO Man Hitsky, News Editor . . . Heidi Press. Assistant News Editor aXWC.11 PAUL ifewirz Pie/NR/cif wAssatt44#4 Atigusr _ . SABBATH SCRIPTURAL SELECTIONS vrAvEsMAN sELMAN PERM &■ Itica I R481 ISIDORE' I SALK JONAS This Sabbath, the 22nd day of bar, 5735, the following scriptural selections will be read in our synagogues: Pentateuchal portion, Levit. 25:1-27:34: Prophetical portion, Jeremiah 16:19-17:14. Candle lighting, Friday, May 2, 8:14 p.m. NOE. I.NA II, No. 8 [so Page Four AUsEirr 41 .nm, Friday, May 2, 1975 /hf Semites as Spreaders of Anti-Semitism Forgetting Israel for a passing few mo- ments, world Jewry must view in all seriousness an attitude from fellow-Semites that has emerged into one of the most dastardly propaga- tions of anti-Semitism ever experienced. After the defeat of Nazism, which repre- sented one of the most savage anti-Semitic ac- tions in all history, the general belief was that Jew-baiting had declined, that a new liberalism was embraced by the civilized in mankind, and that in the United States especially an end was envisioned to the bias that had degraded human- kind. Then came a brief period of Black anti-Sem- itism, a most deplorable experience in view of the special interest Jews had taken, natural to their dedication to justice for all, regardless of race or creed or color. The Black leadership dis- approved of the tactics of extreme leftists and the misled in their ranks, and now there is an apparent decline in the antagonisms. A much more vicious occurrence is in evi- dence and American Jews, who are the chief tar- gets, would be conceding to the venom that is as un-American as it is anti-Jewish if the cam- paign launched against Jews by Arabs were to be ignored. The occurrence on the shores of South Caro- lina is a basic example of what is happening in the American community. It created suspicion and protest before the Arab purchase and it ap- pears to have assumed proportions that chal- lenge the sense of fairness in this country. The manner in which the Kuwait purchase of Kia- wah island affects the American way of life was described in a column by Jack Anderson who stated: It looks as if the oil sheikhs of Kuwait are bringing the politics of the Middle East to their investments here in the United States. They have purchased Kiawah, a pearl of an island with 10 miles of sparkling sand and virgin land off the South Carolina coast. They plan to construct a $250 million resort for rich Americans on the island. The Kuwaitis have chosen Sea Pines Corp., a company accused of subtle prejudice against Jews, to develop and manage the posh island resort. Kuwait, of course, is a partner in the Arab boycott against companies that do business with Israel. The president of Sea Pines, George Fraser, forcefully denied that he or his com- pany has ever encouraged an anti-Jewish atti- tude. He named high executives in his organi- zation who are Jewish. The company now runs a fashionable, subdued resort at Hilton Head, S.C. In a taped interview, a former high-level employe charged that Sea Pines' salesmen were told by their bosses: "We don't have any Jews here (at Hilton Head). We want the Jews to stay in Miami." Fraser said Hilton Head has about the same proportion of Jewish owners that would be found in the $45,000-a-year population at large. The first ocean-front lot sold by Sea Pines, he said, went to a Jew. But Fraser conceded: "I don't have the slightest doubt that we have biased people working for us." Another ex-employe, also on tape, re- called that a younger employe asked at a sales meeting: "What should I do? I have this Jew- ish customer, and he wants to come to the is- land. What do I tell him?" One of the older salesmen, according to the ex-employe, retorted: "You just tell him XL • . .111,11,1•1. WAG- a' • r • • --• - • • there is no synagogue on the island, and none is planned." Of the seven or eight houses of worship at Hilton Head, Fraser acknowl- edged, none are synagogues. Dr. Morey Lipton, a leader of the Jewish community in nearby Charleston, S. C., had nothing to say about discrimination at Sea Pines but a good deal of comment on the Kuwaitis. "We're fearful of secondary boycotting as already practiced by the Arabs in the United States," he said. "We want Kuwait to end the boycott . . . Otherwise, we don't want them doing business in South Carolina . . . It's not a Jewish issue, but an American issue." Responded the Kuwaitis in Washington: "There is never going to be any discrimination (at the Kiawah island resort) against the Jews as Jews." The world boycotting, said an em- bassy spokesman, "has nothing to do with Jews . . . It is only against Israel." The outrage that has been introduced in this country is self-evident. It is rooted in lying and cheating. It is part of the attempt to gain a financial foothold in this country, and accompa- nying that task is the introduction of misleading factors and the shameless spreading of a new anti-Semitism by people stemming from the Semitic kinship of the Jewish people. Only a fool or a knave would be misled by the denial that the Arab boycott is aimed at all Jews, not at Israel alone. But the Kuwaiti mag- nates keep resorting to the canard that it is Zionists they hate, while the weapons used are against all Jews and whoever has a feeling of justice for Jews, against Christians as well as Jews who do not yield to the prejudices that are being injected in commercial and financial ranks out of a desire and apparent determina- tion to undermine the Jewish position mate- rially as well as spiritually. The new Arab tactics, their canards, the re- sort to the fable of Zionism as an enemy when all Jews are the targets, represent the Semitic movement to spread a new form of anti-Semi- tism. Perhaps these elements that are drunk with the power provided for them by oil wealth are even aiming at destroying whatever chances there are for peace in the Middle East. Peace in the area affecting Israel would benefit all the peoples in that part of the world. Is it possible that the Arab masses will not learn the lesson provided for them in the destructive role of their effendi rulers? Is there a way of awakening their conscience to their own needs? The warning outlined here as a guide for Jewish leaders who must stop acting like shtad- lanim, who must not fall asleep on the job they had undertaken is offered in a moment of set- ting aside Israel's needs. Israel cannot and will not be forgotten or overlooked in the considera- tion of Jewry's afflictions. If Jews try to forget Israel the world will remind them of her exist- ence, the Arabs will taunt them out of indiffer- ence. In the process of keeping on the alert in Israel's behalf there emerges also the responsi- bility to defend the role of America and her Jew- ish citizens against the spread of canards, lies, venomous attacks that are anti-Semitic in na- ture but are being trifled with as if it were just a Zionist aspect. The new type of anti-Semitism must be fought by Jews. It must enroll the sup- port of all fair-minded Americans. Perhaps the latter are challenged by the new anti-Semitism even more than the Jews. 411101111.1111.........1, M,11.1/1111•411,0* • ■••■ Mar AIV-10..71..1.1,110.411.11111.4. •■ •• M. Mr.•••••••.... am, Mit A Splendid Israel Anthology Its hard cover 1971 edition completely exhausted, reissuance by Behrman House of "Israel: Its Politics, and Philosophy" 440-page pa- perback enables students of the Jewish state's developments to ac- quire a most impressive and fully annotated work on the over-all is- sues which have a bearing on current conditions. Edited by three noted scholars, Dr. Abraham I. Katsh, president of Dropsie University; Prof. Israel T. Naamani of the University of Louisville and Prof. David Rudaysky of New York University, this vol- ume covers the vast fields relevant to studies of the conditions which affect Israel's aspects of life, the educational and economic as well as philosophical and the protective that are marked by foreign policies and the defensive forces. The multiplicity of topics covered in this volume provides a total- ity of evaluative material for teachers and students and for the aver- age layman who seeks data on one of the most important areas in the world, with the emphasis on the Jewish role in state-building. The impressiveness of this volume is indicated by the list of au- thoritative participants in this anthology. They include: Zuriel Admonit, Benjamin Alain, Yigal Allon, Shulamit Aloni, Uri Avnery, Menahem Begin, Yitzhak Ben-Aharon, David Ben-Gur- ion, Samuel Hugo Bergman, Andre Chouraqui, Moshe Davis, Moshe Dayan, Abba Eban, Arie Eliav, Levi Eshkol, Israel Goldstein, Hayim Hazaz, David Horowitz, Eliezer Livneh, Golda Meir, Shmuel Mikunis, Yitzhak Nissim, Shirnon Peres, Aryeh L. Pincus, Yitzhak Rabin, Nis- sim Rejwan, Natan Rotenstreich, Moshe Shamir, Zalman Shazar, Moshe Silberg, Ernst A. Simon, Yitzhak Tabenkin, Jacob L. Talmon, Shmuel Tamir, Tawfiq Toubi and Yisrael Yesayahu. There is added value to this book in that each essay is preceded with a biographical sketch of the author. Thus, in addition to being an anthology that serves as an excellent annotated reader it is also a Who's Who of Jewish authors. Ethnic American Stories Americans of many ethnic backgrounds are represented in the collection of narratives edited by Katharine D. Newman and published as a Simon and Schuster Pocket Book under the title "Ethnic Ameri- can Short Stories." The compiler-editor, whose introductory essay adds consider, to an appreciation of the ethnic values that make for a collective American cultural and literary value, selected an essay by Hugh Nis- senson as representative of the Jewish-American image. Nissenson's essay was published by Commentary in 1960 under the title "The Law." It is a story about a lad who suffered from stam- mering, nevertheless risked preparing for his Bar Mitzva. In the process of relating the story, the father of the Bar Mitzva, himself raised under conditions in Germany when Jewish parents were so assimilated that they did not follow the precepts, is brought out. The escapee from Nazism had suffered in a concentration camp and he keeps relating his horrifying experiences. "The Law," therefore, is a tale of assimilation — the father had not been Bar Mitzva and the mother conceded to her son's wish under protest — while the stammering Bar Mitzva had the strength of will to ask and agree for study and fulfillment of religious attainment of Jew- ish communal membership under a trying test of scriptural reading from a synagogue podium. Miss Newman's collection includes tales about Americans of Jap- anese, Italian, German, Mexican, Black, Chinese, Polish, Irish, Greek, Cuban, Scandinavian, Native, Hawaiian and Puerto Rican origins. ow.... • az- 0 irae ,••• • mrpix,w.carl