100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

The University of Michigan Library provides access to these materials for educational and research purposes. These materials may be under copyright. If you decide to use any of these materials, you are responsible for making your own legal assessment and securing any necessary permission. If you have questions about the collection, please contact the Bentley Historical Library at bentley.ref@umich.edu

April 02, 1976 - Image 41

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1976-04-02

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

Apt& 2, .1976 41

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS'

Women Conduct
\,-, Zionist Institute

1 NEW YORK — One
> hundred women of the
American Jewish Congress
recently concluded a two-
day "Institute on Zionism"
with a series of visits to
leaders of national civic and
religious groups.
They found considerable
good will toward the ideal of
a Jewish state among many
1 of the organization officials
— primarily women — with
whom they met. They came
away convinced that more
dialogues were necessary
Ivercome the misinfor-
\_/ i
_ don and ignorance that
>-\
'hues exist about the purpose
and meaning of Zionism to-
day."
The institute began with
an all-day discussion of the
ideology, history and con-
_temporary meaning of Zion-
ism by Rabbi Arthur Hertz-
berg, president of the
AJCongress and author of
>r, "The Zionist Idea;" Dr.
Marie Syrkin, author and
\ /,. editor of the Herzl Press;
Dr. Joseph Neyer of Ameri-
can Professors for Peace in
the Middle East; and Rita
Hauser; former U.S. Repre-
sentative to the UN Com-
mission on Human Rights.
The following day the
women broke up into small
groups for visits to 10 na-
organizations — the
I tional
American association of the
UN, American Friends
Service Committee, Church
Women United, Council on
Religious and International
Affairs, Lutheran Council
in the U.S.A., National Con-
ference of Christians and
Jews, National Council of
Negro Women, Women's
International League for
Peace and Freedom, World
Federalists, and Young
Women's Christian Associa-
tion.

Passover Veal,
J, egetable Dish

By NORMA BARACH

(Copyright 1976, JTA, Inc.)

I thought you might like
an idea for something dif-
ferent for Passover — some-
thing good to serve on the
last days of the holiday
when the Passover fare
seems to be losing its zip.

21/2 to 3 lbs. veal breast

2 tbsps. oil
5 large potatoes, cut in half
5 carrots, cut in thirds

2 medium onions, cut in rings
1 clove garlic, minced
11/4 cups tomato-mushroom
sauce (kosher for Passover)
1 /4 cup cider vinegar
(kosher for Passover)
1 tbsp. sugar
Vs tsp. pepper
1/4 cup tomato-mushroom sauce
(optional)
Cut meat into serving pieces.
In a dutch oven, brown meat and
onions in oil. Remove meat and
brown potatoes and carrots. Put
meat back in. Mix remaining in-
gredients together and pour over
meat and vegetables. Cover and
bake in 350-degree oven for two
hours or until tender. Makes 5

servings. Add another 1/4 cup
sauce if necessary.

OU Women Plan
Scholarship Event

Oakland University Wom-
en's Club will hold its sixth
international scholarship
coffee 9:30 a.m. Thursday in
Meadow Brook Hall.
Members will greet
guests in foreign costumes,
and refreshments will be
served. The mansion will be
open for visitors to tour.
Proceeds will aid a deserv-
ing student.
Tickets may be purchased
in advance at Meadow Brook
Hall and at the door.

Jewish Leader's
Widow Starts Fund

MEXICO CITY (JTA) —
Mrs. Rose Jeno, widow of
the late Fernando Jeno,
president of the Central
Jewish
Committee, estab-
Music Study Club of Met-
ropolitan Detroit will have a lished a new literature
pre-concert musical tea and award in the name of her
\-., rally honoring its patrons husband which will bestow
12:30 p.m. Tuesday in the three yearly $1,000 prizes
) home of Mrs. Jerome Kauf- for books in Yiddish, He-
man, 611 Pine Valley Way, brew and Spanish.
It also was announced
Bloomfield Hills.
Alyze Dreiling, 16-year- that about 10 olim of three
old violinist and pupil of families left for Israel last
Mischa Mischakoff, will per- week, among them Moshe
> form. Miss Dreiling is con- Dulzin, 88, father of Leon
certmaster of the Scandina- Dulzin, Jewish Agency trea-
vian Symphony Orchestra, surer.
assistant concertmaster of Meal Program
the Oakway Symphony and
received several scholar- Expanded in L.A.
ships, including an award
LOS ANGELES (JTA) —
from Music Study Club.
A kosher meals for the eld-
Admission to the tea is erly project, operated five
1 \\ open to patrons and pros- days a week by the Jewish
'-tive patrons only for the Family Service, is being ex-
.o's - annual Artists Con- panded to three more loca-
1 cert, which will take place tions with a total capacity to
7:30 p.m. April 25 at Temple provide some 500 lunches,
) Beth El. The artists will he the JFS, a federation-coun-
\- Joel Lipton and Alma Jean cil agency, announced.
/' Smith.
Martha Newmark, coordi-
For patron ticket infor- nator of the project, said
> illation, contact Mrs. Felix home-delivered kosher
Rosenwach, 353-3541, or meals are available also for
Mrs. Joseph M. Markel, shut-in elderly Jews unable
557-5531.
to leave their residences.
She said that, in addition to
Thou shalt not go up and providing meals, the lunch
down as a talebearer among program brings isolated and
> thy people; neither shalt lonely Jewish aged persons
thou stand idly by the blood "into a warm, congenial at-
of thy neighbor, I am the mosphere where thay can
Lord.
socialize and enjoy cultural
—Leviticus and educational programs."

Music Club Tea
Precedes Concert

U.S. Jews Urged
to Help Falashas

Captive of Idi Amin

British Writer's Book Describes
Fearful 'Village Tyrant' of Uganda

When Dennis Hills called
Idi Amin "a village tyrant
ruling by fear," and was
sentenced to death by the
Uganda dictator, the entire
world was in tension over
the impending and threat-
ened tragedy. But diplo-
matic pressures succeeded
in obtaining Hills' release.
Now the story of Amin
and his oppressive proce-
dures are available in the
then projected story related
by Hills in his descriptive
work, "The White Pump-
kin" (Grove Press).
The very dramatic inci-
dent involving Hills, draw-
ing attention to the dictator
of Uganda, makes the de-
scriptive Hills book an un-
usual document supple-
menting the scores of other
experiences involving Amin.
It is assumed that had the
noted British author still
been in Uganda when this
book finally appeared he
could not have escaped the
horrors of a tyrant's threat.
Now the book is a document
for the world to read as a
guideline of what is occur-
ring in the land ruled so sav-
agely by Amin.

Amin's rise to power, the
purges he engineered, the
victims of his terrorism
listed in this book provide
data on the backgrdund and
present policies of land and
people suffering from the
tyranny imposed by Amin.
Essays by the author's
Ugandian students supple-
ment informative data
about Amin and Uganda.
The 40 photographs taken
by the author while in
Uganda add to an apprecia-
tion of the experiences rec-
orded in the book.
A chapter entitled "The
Brown Jews" has an inter-
esting reference to the anti--
Jewish attitudes of the vil-
lage tyrant and his inspired
hatreds:

History of Zionism
Pamphlet Available

NEW YORK — "A Por-
trait of a National Libera-
tion Movement," a brief his-
tory of Zionism, has been
issued in booklet form by
the Zionist Organization of
America.
Copies can be obtained by
writing ZOA Publications,
Zionist Organization of
America, 4 East 34th Street,
New York 10016.

"Early in 1968 the Kenya
government's decision to
expel certain categories of
non-citizen Indians set off a
temporary panic among the
Indian community in
Kenya. Non-citizen Indians
in Uganda felt too that their
future was threatened.
"The British Labor Gov-
ernment reacted by passing
defense legislation against
the threatened rush of In-
dian immigrants.
"Under the influence of
these events, which led to a
protracted exchange of ill-
tempered letters between
local Indian and British res-
idents in the East African
press, a young Kampala
Sikh Jagjit Singh wrote a
poem in which he lamented
the lot of the 'brown Jew' in
East Africa.
"There was the ingrati-
tude:
For the sweat is dry
That built the railways,
And black blood must
forget
Swamp sleeping sava-
gery of greenness
That burst into an In-
dian bazaar.
"And there was humi-
liation:
And you will see it al-
ways
In back alleys and gov-
ernment offices
My subordinate Asian
smile of friendship
That proclaims the Jew
also is a citizen
And the stare past hos-
tility replying:
Citizen? .•. . Perhaps
so,
But of Asian extrac-

Zim Lines Start
Far East Service

-TEL AVIV — The Zim
Israel Navigation Co. re-
cently inaugurated its con-
tainerized shipping service
from Eilat to the Far East,
marking the 20th year of
the firm's operations in Is-
rael's Red Sea port.
Now, two new 8,000-ton
freighters, each with a ca-
pacity of 100 containers, are
to sail every three weeks
from Eilat to Djibouti, Sin-
gapore and Hong Kong,
with feeder ports in East
Africa, Korea, Taiwan, the
Philippines, Thailand and
Australia.

ALBU

IDI AMIN

tion!"
The enslavement of Indi-
ans, the oppressive attitudes
affecting the victims of a
terrorized government, are
part of the portrayal which
leads the reader to believe
that Hills' judgement of the
"village tyrant" was justi-
fied.
—P.S.

WILL BE

FINER
R

WHEN PHOTOGRAPHED BY

W

AND ASSOCIATES .

357-1010

SALE!

S

PAINTED
NEEDLEPOINT

up to 50%

YARN SHOP

15075 Lincoln

Lincon Tower Apt.

OFF

968-1015

Oak Park

New Needlepoint Classes
Beg. Class starts April 26, 10-12:30
Advance Classes April 26, 1-3:30
Tues., May 4, 7-9:30-20 hrs. per class

Price Sells Cars

Stop In
And See Why

Let Us Build A Car For You

Measure Quality With Gage

Gage
Oldsmobile inc.

ed•

21710 Woodward, 6 Blks N. of 8 Mile
Ferndale, Mich. 399-3200

SEE US LAST!!!

Large selection _of Rings,
Watches and other fine
Jewelry gift items.

Israeli Art Show
Set in South Africa

TEL AVIV — Batsheva
Crafts Corp., an artistic/
commercial venture of
Mme. Batsheva de Roths-
child, will present the tal-
ents of Israeli craftsmen in
a major showing of original
decorations and giftware for
the first time to the South
African business commu-
nity and public at the Rand
Show, beginning April,26 in
Johannesburg.

NEW YORK — A leading
expert on the Falasha Jews
of Ethipia urged Americans
to come to their rescue from
"abject economic . condi-
tions."
At a luncheon seminar of
the Labor Zionist Alliance's
National Jewish Communal
Workers Division on March
9 at the National Jewish
Welfare Board in New York
City. Dr. Graenum Berger,
a top American Jewish
communal worker declared
that "more will be done for
Ethiopian Jewry in 1976
than at any time in the his-
tory of their relationship
with the rest of the world."
YOUR WEDDING —
BAR MITZVA

14 K & 18 K GOLD

DIAMONDS & FINE JEWELRY

Danny

wBarrYEINTRAUB,

Jewelers

"WHERE THE CUSTOMER COMES FIRST"

All

Bank Cards
Honored

Mon. thru Fri. 9 to 5
Sat. 9 to 3

Quality Jewelers for 3 Generations

23077 Greenfield, Advance Bldg., Suite 354, Southfield, Michigan

557-5544

O

Back to Top

© 2025 Regents of the University of Michigan