THE JEWISH NEWS secuRny QuARD hicmporating The Detroit Jewish Chronicle coin mencivil with the issiw July 20, 1951 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. -18075. Second-Class Postage Paid at Southfield, Michigan and Additional Mailing Offices. Subscription $10 a year. PHILIP SLOMOVITZ Editor and Publisher CARMI M. SLOMOVITZ 'rt§ DREW LIEBERWITZ Business Manager Advertising Manager Alan Hitsky, News Editor . . . Heidi Press, Assistant News Editor Sabbath Scriptural Selections This Sabbath, the 25th of Av, 5736, the following scriptural selections will be read in our synagogues: Pentateuchal portion, Deuteronomy 11:26-16:17. Prophetical portion, Isaiah. 54:11 55:1. - Thursday and Friday, Rosh Hodesh Elul, Numbers 28:1 J5. - Candle lighting, Friday, August 20, 8:07 p.m. VOL. LX I X, No. 24 Page Four Friday, August 20, 1976 Voter as Activist and Chief Judge The die is cast. The battle is on. The two major political parties — all the others do not count, not even as a balance of power collective- ly — will battle it out in the coming 10 weeks. Occupancy of the White House may or may not change in 1977. Meanwhile, the American elec- torate again assumes the role of Chief Judge on a Judgment Day to Come. The specially privileged, the Voter, is destined to learn that the American way of life is the predominant factor in the government destined either for perpetuation of its staffs or for change of guard. In either form, the legislative bodies and the courts, and primarily Public Opinion, will have greater power than a single individual. Would that in the process of choosing the Chief Executive the real ruler, the Voter, would determine to give as much attention to the nation's needs on a permanent basis as is given in the course of a battle for power by politicians! Then party lines will be narrowed and the pUblic needs affirmed as policy for job-seekers as well as job-givers, for voters as well as candidates. It is the thinking, the knowledgeable, the activist citizen whose concern creates an in- fluence and whose knowledge and understand- ing of national needs, involving the domestic obligations as well as foreign policies, evolve a response from the heads of the government, regardless of party. It is when the citizen is unconcerned that government becomes a sham and rulership may become either corrupt or domineering. Anxiety over foreign policies, the American view of Israel and the Middle East, the fate of refugees, wherever their origin, and the hopes of many in lands of oppression who look to this country, are part of the debatable policies affecting U.S. foreign policies. These are primarily humanitarian aspects in the relationships of peoples, and to have transformed them into political party differences was an error. To have made them causes for disputes between differing politicians is unreasonable and unrealistic. Insofar as Israel's position in the foreign policies of this country is concerned, the view- point of one important political leader is vital to the issue. He summarized the facts by stating that Israel's security is humane, and an inter- national obligation because Israel is a symbol of the world's quest for justice. Israel's security, her quest for justice, her needs to assure an eventual peace by making her strong enough to resist attacks for enemies on her borders who outnumber her 40 to 1, are imbedded policies of both political parties, and whichever remains or moves into the White House has a duty that is not to be tampered with. There are, nevertheless, tasks which can and are affected by differing views as well as sentiments involving the domestic needs and the relationships with the nations of the world. When the constituency of this great nation exercises an interest in post-election problems as much as it did while candidates were battling for power, then hope for a strong government motivated by reason, good judgment and justice will be unmatched. Whoever retains or attains power, this nation will not be sold down the river by irresponsible politicians. The result of the con- test now commencing will be resolved at the polls in November. The nation is safe as long as the Chief Judge on that Day of Judgment, the Voter, is a thinking American activist. All glory to the Voter. World Complacency Breeds Terrorism U.S. Senator Jacob Javits and Israel Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin joined in expressing their sense of horror over the unending wave of terrorism and attempted hijackings after the outrage at the Istanbul Airport last week. The murder of .Sehator Javits' chief aide, Harold Wallace Rosenthal, the attack on the airport and its attendant threat to the lives of many scores of innocent people, all were part of a continuing incitement to mass murders by men like George Habash and Yasir Arafat and their trained killers. Javits and Rabin were right in blaming the unending terrors upon an indifferent inter- national community. The impotence of the United Nations, the fright that has been in- spired by the Soviet and Arab blocs in the ranks of Third World nations are the causes of failures to stem the terrors. The shocking proof of worldwide com- placency to the growing terrorist movement is shown in an analysis of experiences that reveal that 201 terrorists are at large at this time. The facts were analyzed by Jewish Observer and Middle East Review of London as follows: From July 1968 to July 1976, at least 72 acts of terrorism have been perpetrated throughout the world by Arab terrorists and their allies. At least 204 Arabs and others working with with them were apprehended in connection with these acts of terrorism. Their crimes have involved mainly hi- jacking but also indiscriminate attacks on civilian targets. These include the massacre of 27 passengers at Lod Airport in May 1972; the murder of 11 Israeli athletes at the Munich Olympic Games in September 1972; and the slaughter of 32 bystanders and passengers at Rome Airport in December 1973. Of the 204 terrorists apprehended, only three are still in prison — and they are all in Israel. The rest are free, having been released in their respective countries of their deten- tion, either after a short while and often without a trial, or as a result of Arab terrorist blackmail. A worldwide, internationally activated task of punishing the guilty, denying them access to airports and public avenues of transportation and letting it be known that these crimes will not be tolerated is mandatory. If the entire Western world were to cooperate with the U.S. in assuring legislation to outlaw the hijackings, murders, blackmail and related crimes there might be a solution to the horror. The lack of such assistance in the UN is a contributing factor to the continuity of savagery. 41 "-UTIA Hechal Shlomo Museum Provides Illustrative Data Hechal Shlomo, headquarters of the Orthodox Rabbinate in Jerusalem, is a major center of interest for tourists to Israel as well as the country's residents. The rabbinic leadership is there, the im- pressive Sabbath services are enhanced by the well-trained youth choir and seminars held there draw great interest. Of unusual importance is the Hechal Shlomo Museum, whose values, contents and emphases on all aspects of Jewish life receive emphasis in a splendidly illustrated volume, "Jewish Life in Art and Tradition," (G. P. Putnam's Sons), edited by the museum's curator, Yehuda L. Bialer. Based upon the collected art and ceremonial objects of Sir Isaac and Lady Edith Wolfson in the Hechal Shlomo Museum, this noteworthy book contains 48 full-color plates and some 200 monochromes. The accompanying explanatory essays attest to the scholarly editorship of the museum's curator: Yehuda L. Bialer was born in Warsaw in 1896 and specialized in both Jewish studies and art history there. In 1936, fleeing from the Nazis he took refuge in the Soviet Union, returning to Poland after World War II and emigrating to Israel in 1949. From then until 1965 he served as a departmental director in Israel's Ministry of Religious Affairs, starting to organize the Sir Isaac and Lady Edith Wolfson Museum in 1958, and was its director right up to the present. In this magnificently illustrated volume Bialer has focused upon the collection of Jewish ceremonial art in the Sir Isaac and Lady Edith Wolfson Museum at Hechal Shlomo, Jerusalem, to convey a comprehensive portrait of the Jewish cultural heritage. Using the various ritual objects preserved in the museum, Bialer explains the customs and ceremonies that have helped keep the Jewish people intact over the centuries — from the marriage ceremoney and establishment of a new household to the rites and customs surrounding the funeral and mourning, as well as the cycle of the Jewish year. As curator of the museum, Bialer draws upon his extensive knowledge of Jewish custom and lore and his specialized study of Judaica to highlight the unequalled variety embodied in Jewish tradition, with objects from Poland to Yemen, northern Europe to North Africa. Most important of all, the volume as a whole is an impressive testimony to how deeply Jewish art is grounded in the daily rounds of Jewish life, showing that the creative impulse has always been firmly tied to the home and family, the synagogue and th- community, and that the patrons of Jewish art were the people the patrons of Jewish life. In the preparation of this work Bialer had the cooperation of the musuem's assistant curator, Estelle Fink. The photography is by David Harris. The daily life experience of the Jew, in home and synagogue, the holiday observances and the festivities that mark Jewish family life emerge in great detail and in all their glories in the descriptive tasks attained in "Jewish Life in Art and Tradition." In an appended note to this volume Maurice Jaffe, Hechal Shlomo president, asserts: Publication of this album will fill a long-felt need for the synagogue, the community and the individual. Essentially, the album constitutes the life-cycle of the Jewish man and woman from birth to death. Even as every age of Jewish history is depicted in art and sculpture, so the influence of every age and every society is portrayed here.