i n c skTiTiV11-7ZW171TWEVINi Temple Mount Excavations End Anti-Semitism in Literature By Ben Gallob (Copyright 1977, JTA, Inc.) Only a handful of work- inspections of the dig con- A Jewish teacher of ers are still turning earth ducted on two separate oc- English at Houston Uni- at the site, and they are casions. versity has asserted that expected to end. their Raymond Lemaire, while it may not be prac- labors soon. Eventually who conducted the inves- tical or ethical to censor the site will be opened to tigations for UNESCO, or ban such anti-Semitic tourists who will be able, wrote: "Criticisms classics as Shakespeare's because of the careful "Merchant of Venice," stratification the ar- leveled at the methods teachers in public schools cheologists sought in used in the excavations are groundless. The ex- and colleges should be re- their excavation, to look cavations are being car- quired to recognize the at the different historical ried out by a perfectly anti-Semitism in such eras. No date for opening the area to the public has well-qualified team of ex, classics and use them to perts who are extremely teach their students been set. "what anti-Semitism is The excavation, which attentive." all about." cost about $2.3 million, Menahem Magen, an E. L. Dachslager, in of- much of it from founda- archeologist, pointed on a fering his criticism, de- tion and private dona- recent tour to the exca- clared that "the image of tions, caused a furor vated Herodian stones the Jew as cunning, within the United Na- that undergird the Old crafty, constrined by tions Educational, Scien- City's famous wall. cupiditas and hatred for tific and Cultural Organi- zation a few years ago The huge blocks of Christians," is, "for the and resulted in its being stone — one of them _ most part; the Jew found in the pages of some of the banned from a number of weighing 100 tons — are world's great — and occa- UNESCO activities. • engineering marvels. sionally not so great The dispute stemmed Heaps of them still lie on art and literature." from Arab objections that an ancient unearthed Discussing the issue in the Israeli dig would un- street, blunt reminders, a recent issue of "Sh'ma," dermine the foundations Magen said, of the razing Dachslager asserted that of Moslem shrines on the of the Second Temple by "such images have Temple Mount, particu- the Romans in 70 A.D. greatly contributed to the larly the Al Aksa Mosque after the Jewish revolt. long-standing idea of the and the Dome of the Rock Jew as an undesirable — two of the most sacred The dig has also pro- element in our society." Moslem structures. No duced evidence of the He added that "in view of damage to the buildings protracted occupation by the risk inherent for has been evidenced. the Roman 10th Legion, world Jewry" in teaching It was also charged that which was garrisoned in archeologists under Is Jerusalem for about 200 such plays as The Mer- chant of Venice to raeli supervision were in years. "thousands of public such haste to get to the Rethains of eighth- schools and college stu- remains from the Second Temple period that they century Arabic palaces dents" year after year, had given short shrift to have been excavated and there was "at least an ar- unearthing materials from show that they used gument" for barring such obvious examples later Arab and Christian many of the stones that eras in Jerusalem's long were part of the original of anti-Semitism" from history. But these charges Temple Mount wall de- the curricula of the schools and colleges. - were refuted by UNESCO stroyed by the Romans. He said that if the Jewish community does JDC Launches not wish to, or is not able to, prohibit such works, Medical Program the issue becomes how NEW YORK — The they should be taught. RAMAT G N — A applied by society in vari- major grant of $775,000, ous stages of its evolution. American Jewish Joint "The most obvious re- the largest awarded by The late Chief Justice Earl Distribution Committee quirement," he asserted, the National Endowment Warren is known to have (JDC) has inaugurated a "is that the teacher should for the Humanities considered the Responsa a long-range program to be able to recognize' that (NEH) during the past fertile source of legal wis- help Israel overcome a an .anti-Semitic text is shortage of medical social year, will help an Israeli dom and -precedent. workers in northern Is- anti-Semitic." university to expand con- The second responsibil- The grant, which siderably its project for amounts to IL 7 million is rael, it was reported by ity of the teacher, computerizing Jewish one of the largest ever ob- Ralph I. Goldman, execu- Dachslager declared, "is tivevice President of the to come to terms with the law. tained for research by an JDC. • The grant from the U.S. Israeli university. anti-Semitism, rather The JDC will provide IL than government-supported evade it. To say, for 4 million ($450,000) over a example, that Chaucer, NEH in Washington was period of five years to the Marlowe, Shakespeare, awarded recently to HUC Starts Grad Haifa University School the - anonymous authors Bar-Ilan, Israel's only Judaica Program of Social Work for de- of medieval religious religious-oriented uni- veloping the program and drama, Charles Dickens, NEW YORK (JTA) — A versity, which several years ago began the pro- rapid increase in the for the establishment of Frank Norris, T. S. - Eliot, ject of computerizing the number of Jewish and social service depart- Ezra Pound, et al, were major part of the Re- Christian candidates for ments in two Haifa hospi- not really antagonistic to sponsa literature. This a doctorate in Jewish tals, Rambam and Jews but were simply fol- comprises more than studies has led to estab- Rothschild. lowing the beliefs of their 250,000 questions and lishment of a graduate times, merely expressing school at the Cincinnati Egyptian Attorney answers on subjects of the conventional views of J ewish law (Halakha) ex- campus of the Hebrew Asks Equal Rights `their day,' is not only to changed between 5,000 Union College-Jewish In- evade the question of stitute of Religion, the TUNIS (ZINS) — teaching what anti- rabbinical authbrities Reform institution, ac- Left-wing Egytpian at- over a period of 1,500 Semitism is all about but, cording to Dr. Alfred torney Shehata Haroun years. even more, to evade his- Shehata, who is Jewish, To date; the Bar-Ilan Gottschalk, president. tory itself." Enrollment rose from a was reported by an Egyp- Responsa project has He also criticized the half dozen students an- tian newspaper as calling fact 'led close to 18,000. c that anti-Semitism in q ions and answers, nually in the 1950s and 20 on the Sadat government literature "is often by- to 25 in the early 1970s to appoint a Jew to con ained in 74 volumes pasSed as irrelevant, a of the Responsa. The and has more than dou- Egypt's People's Assem- side issue, 'not a pressing bled to the present en- bly and requesting equal grant will now enable the matte•,' as one critic has university to reach a total rollment of nearly 60 can- rights for Jews. written about an anti- didates, he reported. Shehata demanded of 200 to 300 volumes or Semitic poem by T. S. that names of Jews be some 50,000 questions French Trade removed from lists of Eliot." and answers within the Dachslager declared next three years. JERUSALEM (ZINS) people prevented from Among the aims of the — Israel achieved trade leaving the country ex- that "an even less profes- NEH in assisting the Bar- parity with France last cept by special permit. He sional, if not less ethical, Ilan project is to help the year by exporting $125 called on the government approach to teaching American legal profession million in goods and ser- to restore Egyptian na- anti-Semitism in litera- ture is to justify it as sim- by providing new legal in- vices to the French. Is- tionality to Jews deprived ply a literary device, a sights and precedents and rael doubled its exports to of it and to grant citizen- to learn how a system and France in the last three ship to stateless Jews "if wayward but uninten- they are worthy of it." tional transgression philosophy of law has been years. JERUSALEM — A major nine-year-old ar- cheological excavation on the periphery of the an- cient wall of Jerusalem's Old City near the historic Temple Mount is coming to a close after yielding tightly compacted layers of civilization touching on ancient Jews, Romans, Byzantine Christians, Moslem Arabs, Crusaders and Turks, the New York Times reports. Over the years Jewish and Arab laborers, aided by hundreds of volun- teers from all over the world, have excavated near the southern and wefern portions of the ty's wall. iLey have unearthed ancient streets and houses, huge Herodian blocks of stone going back 2,000 years that look as new as if a 20th Century stonecutter had just, put his finishing touches on them, and enormous quantities of pottery, stoneware, coins, frag- ments of glass and bits of bone. The excavation; under the supervision of Prof. Benjamin Mazar, former president of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, is ending not so much be- cause it can no longer yield up the past but because there iS__such a wealth of objects and material al- ready tucked away in warehouses that await study, analysis and scho- larly publications on their meaning and importance. Bar-Ilan Receives Grant to Computerize Responsa " VMS jriW%-ei •■•■• JWB Education Plan Instituted committed in the service NEW YORK — To help of artistic : necessity." He insisted that "the the growing numbers of whole question of the Jewish children on U.S. morality, not to mention military installations re- artistry, of an author who ceive a proper Jewish creates racial or ethnic education without inter- stereotypes is largely ig- ruption, the Commission nored by teachers of lit- on Jewish Chaplaincy of erature" in public schools the National Jewish Wel- and colleges. - fare Board, in coopera- tion with the Armed Dachslager cited the Forces Chaplains Board, comment by the American has issued a Unified. poet, Charles Olson, about Jewish Religious Educa- Ezra Pound: "No man can tion Curriculum. attack a race ‘and remain The major advantage of useful to anyone as an ar- a unified religious educa- tist." Dachslager asked: tion curriculum for the "How many teachers of lit- Jewish school on a erature" are "able, or will- tary base is that it pro- ing, to consider seriously" motes the continuity of Olson's declaration? the children's Jewish education, as military He said that if Olson's personnel are .often judgment was correct, transferred from one declaring he believed it duty station to another in was, then teachers of lit- the U.S. or overseas. erature are "hypocrites, The 127-page unified propagandists for the curriculum is sutable for `humanizing' effect of instruction in all three literary study" when branches of Judaism — they know the effect of Orthodox, Conservative literary anti-Semitism and Reform. It provides "has proved to be de- core curricula for chil- humanizing. dren of various ages, lists basic Jewish books and He declared that anti- of discussion materials, Semitism is not culti- characteristics of Chil-. vated only "in the pulpit, dren in the elementary the country club, the grades and intermediate board room, the reactio- nary fears of left- or grades as well as adoles- right-wing political cents, curriculum con- groups." He said it is cul- tent, suggestions for or- tivated as much, "if not ganizifig classes, prepar- more," in the classroom ing lessons and handling problems, spe- and in some of the texts discipline cific aids and techniques. used to teach literature. A comprehensive bib- He warned that if what liography covering is said or taught in the Jewish Social Studies; the classroom, or in such Hebrew Language; Edu- textbooks "is not at the cational Resources; Liv- very least recognized, ing Jewishly; Liturgy- evaluated and judged for Prayer; Jewish Sources; what it is, then the Philosophy; Jewish Life chances are good that the Cycles,_. Jewish Art; and students will continue to Autio-Visual and Written receive an image of the References is a highlight Jew which should have of the Curriculum, which been long ago erased from is complete with a price their minds." list. Brandeis. U. Given Grant to Expand Judaic Studies WALTHAM, Mass. — Brandeis University's Near Eastern and Judaic Studies Departthent (NEJS) has been awarded a $250,000 grant by the National Endowment for the Humanities. will funds The strengthen specific areas of Judaic studies at Brandeis and develop a program of active rela- tionships with the gen- eral humanities. The grant covers a three-year period. "Brandeis' NEJS offers the largest and most comprehensive program of its kind in American higher education," said department Chairman Marvin Fox, thePhilip W. Lown Professor of Jewish Philosophy. "Now, with this grant, we will have resources for new faculty in the fields of talmudic literature and Hellenistic Judaism, add- ing important new dimen- sions to the existing strong offerings," he continued. The National Endow- ment for the Humanities grant will underwrite de- velopment of new courses to be taught jointly by Judaic studies faculty and their counteriarts in the departments of Classics, History and Phi- losophy and History of Ideas. Each course will be designed to bring to- gether scholars from the humanities and from parallel areas of Judaic studies. Israeli Average Monthly Income JERUSALEM — The "Families Expenditure Survey" conducted by the Central Bureau of Statis- tics and recently made public shows that the av- erage gross family in- come last year was IL4,088 ($454) per month. Of this, IL756 was paid in taxes and National In- surance fees, and IL75 to others, leaving an aver- age net income of IL3,250 ($361) per family. , In its analysis of con- sumption, the survey finds that. the share of food in the total expendi- ture is 30.5 per cent. The survey also notes a decline in the expendi- ture on education and culture from 13 to 10 per cent.