THE JEWISH NEWS Incorporating The Detroit Jewish Chronicle commencing with the issnc QIInly 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 \V. Nine Mile, Suite 865, Southfield, Mich. -18075. Second-Class Postage Paid at Southfield, Michigan and Additional Mailing Offices. Suhscription :11(1 a year. CARMI M. SLOMOVITZ PHILIP SLOMOVITZ Business Manager Editor and Publisher II DREW LIEBERWITZ Advertising Manager :News Editor . . IIEII)I PRESS. Assistant News Editor Sabbath Scriptural Selections This Sabbath, the second day of Tammuz, 5737, the following scriptural selections will be read in our synagogues: Pentateuchal portion, Numbers 16:1-18:32. Prophetical portion, I Samuel 11:14-12:22. Candle lighting. Friday. June 17.8:52 p.m. VOL. LXXI, No. 15 Page Four Friday, June 17, 1977 Fantasies Rejected: Truth About Israel So much fiction, tantamount to desert fan- tasies, have been circulated about Menahem Begin and the party chosen to head the Israel government that the search for truth demands excoriation of rumor-mongering and the presen- tation of the facts relating to a grave situation affecting the Middle East. Since it is agreed that continued spread of animosities in that part of the world endangers the peace of the en- tire world and threatens the existing friendship between Israel and the United States, it is espe- cially vital that fiction should be exposed, that fantasies should be demolished and that the basic facts should be emphasized. Knowledgeable and authoritative supporters of Israel are responsible for the following analy- sis of the existing problems as they arose with the triumph of Menahem Begin and his Likud party in the recent Israel election. MYTH: "MENAHEM BEGIN IS A TERROR- IST" FACT: Begin's Irgun fought against British rule of the Jewish homeland. Unlike the PLO, the Irgun struck exclusively at military targets. Unlike the PLO, the Irgun sought to minimize ci- vilian casualties by giving advance warning — often at the risk of its own soldiers. The Irgun fought to terminate British rule, not to terrorize populations. The Irgun retaliated against Brit- ish floggings, imprisonment and hangings of its members. In contrast, the PLO has attacked only civil- ian targets, never military targets. It has mur- dered innocent women and children deliberately. The PLO has no political/military purpose in its acts, save to sow fear and seek revenge. MYTH: "BEGIN'S IRGUN COMMITTED A MASSACRE AT THE ARAB VILLAGE OF DEIR YASSIN" FACT: An authoritative study of what oc- curred at Deir Yassin was published on March 16; 1969 by the Israeli Ministry for Foreign Af- fairs. It offered 'these major details and con- clusions: Deir Yassin was one of two villages (the other was Castel) which was blocking the road to Je- rusalem and keeping food and water from reach- ing nearly 100,000 beleaguered inhabitants of Je- rusalem. It w inhabited by several hundred vil- lagers and sheltered elt ered one company of Iraqi troops and another company Palestinian Arab soldiers. On April 10, 1948, about 100 members of the Jewish Irgun and Stern groups drove up to the village with a sound truck and ordered it to sur- render. Over 200 Arabs evacuated the village im- mediately and were escorted by the Irgun, un- harmed, back to - Jerusalem. White flags were extended from the windows of the buildings nearest the Jewish forces. An advance party entered the village and was hit by a hail of bullets. Fierce house-to-house fighting followed. The combatants were able to take the stone houses on- ly with grenades. When the attack ended, it was found that 254 civilians had been killed. They had either been held as hostages by the Iraqi and Palestinian army regulars who ambushed the Irgun or they had sought protection with the Arab soldiers. Yunes Ahmad Assad, a prominent Arab survivor of Deir Yassin, said: "The Jews never intended to hurt the popu- lation of the village, but were forced to do so after they met enemy fire which killed the Irgun commander." (Al Urdan, April 9, 1955) MYTH: "BEGIN'S IRGUN BOMBED THE KING DAVID HOTEL AND KILLED IN- NOCENT PEOPLE". FACT: The British military command and Criminal Investigation Division for the Mandate were located in the King David Hotel. The Irgun planted bombs in the basement of the hotel on July 22, 1946. At great risk, the Irgun twice called the British command and warned them to evacuate the hotel, as bombs had been planted. In a display of poor judgment, the British refused to evacuate. As a result, 91 British, Arabs and Jews were killed in the blast. MYTH: "THE PALESTINIANS HAVE A RIGHT TO THE WEST BANK" FACT: No Palestinian state was formed in the West Bank and Gaza during the 19 years of Arab rule. In fact, there already is a Palestinian state. It is Jordan, which occupies four-fifths of the historic Palestine Mandate. Israel occupied only one-fifth of Palestine. The majority of the people of Jordan are Palestinian, as is the ma- jority of the bureaucracy and army. It should not be forgotten that nearly three-quarters of all Palestinians still live in the mandate area, and never left. The PLO has little direct contact with the vast Majority of Palestinians. The PLO has asserted that it desires a state in the West Bank only to facilitate the conquest of Israel and that the ex- istence of Israel is fundamentally null and void, and that the Jews have no right for a homeland. In his insistence that a Palestinian state not be established within only a few miles of Is- rael's population centers, Menahem Begin enjoys the support of the vast majority of Is- rael's citizens. MYTH: "THE WEST BANK BELONGS TO JORDAN" FACT: Jordan never had legal title to the West Bank. When the Mandate of Palestine was parti- tioned in 1948, a Jewish state and an Arab state, based in the West Bank, were formed. But the Arab legion of King Hussein's grandfather, King Abdullah, occupied the West Bank forcibly in 1948 and the Arab Palestinian state died aborn- ing. Abdullah took this action specifically to pre- vent a state under the control of the Nazi-sup- porter, Haj Amin el-Husseini, the leader of the Palestinians, from coming into existence and threatening his own kingdom. In 1950, following stage-managed political meetings in the West Bank, Transjordan official- ly annexed the West Bank and was renamed Jor- dan. Only Britain and Pakistan recognized this an- nexation; many Arab states shunned Jordan as a result. From 1948 until 1967, Jordan remained in con- trol of the West Bank. During that time of total Arab control, there was no move to establish a Palestinian state there, or in Gaza, which Egypt had seized. The claim for a Palestinian state only arose after Israel repelled Arab aggression in 1967 and took control of the historic Jewish territories of Judea and Samaria in the West Bank. Partisanship must be ruled out of consid- eration in viewing the issues and answers as presented here. Israel is a sovereign state and its citizens have a right to choose their leaders without being hampered by pressures from abroad. But the issues as they have emerged are those of all Israelis and are of concern to all of Israel's friends and certainly of the en- tire Jewish people. The facts as delineated above demand serious consideration. Misrepresentations must not be permitted to invade the diplomatic scene and to poison the minds of statesmen. Let the truth be known. It is the only way of guiding peace lovers to the peace table. Wiesel's `God's Messengers,' Slaughter's 'Ruth' Paperbacked Elie Wiesel has become one of the most effective interpreters of Hasidic lore and of Bible literature. Among his latest works is a vol- ume in which he draws upon parables and describes the giants in the Torah. In "Messengers of God: Biblical Portraits and Legends" (Simon and Schuster Pocket Books) he tells Bible stories, depicts the heroes of the Old Testament, quotes the wisdom of the Torah as they apply to modem times. It is a work that invites appreciation of the Bible tales and makes the old folktales live as realities. The manner in which the Wiesel approach is linked with the contemporary interests is in:- dicated in the chapter entitled "Job: Our Con- temporary." Ancient lore lives again in the modern approach provided by Wiesel. Also issued as a paperback by Pocket Books, the Simon and Schuster division, is "The Song WIESEL of Ruth" by Frank G. Slaughter. The eminent author has drawn upon the Bible love story and has produced a most impressive narrative. Slaughter bases his work on the Bible theme and the text relates admirably to Ruth of the Bible. `Mirages,' Israel Travel Notes Stanley Burnshaw has written "a public poem," as he has subtitled his "Mirages: Travel Notes in the Promised Land" (Doubleday). He pours forth inspiration based on realism, and as a traveler he shares with his reader impressions that leave the reader with a desire to emulate and to experience the tour in a personal way. It is a splendid poem that is rooted in tradition as well as on contemporary trekking of the Holy Land. There is a philosophic note to the entire poem, as emphasized espe- cially in the concluding chapter, "Choices." Furthermore, as the notes appended to this work show, the leaning upon Scripture is exten- sive. The poet was inspired by scholars and farmers, children and house - wives. Here is a portion from the section titled "The Talmudist": Gloat, glittering talmudist, With your eastern eye, your nothern eye, your western eye; The Days are a fog of clashing words: cleave If you can—warp with your buzz-saw brain a light filled Path shallow enough for a heart to follow! Why do you fist your words With your merchant's hand, your scholar's hand, your toiler's hand? Is a god you smother the dyname of your fury Or a wraith you reasoned into existence in hope It would pierce your eye with joys? Or a heartsick need For a heaven-on-earth perfection That drives you, though you have found there can be no right Unmixed with wrong. Where will you go when the moment Strikes and your arms, defying brain, reach out To your brothers' will, your homeland's will, your body's will? That's how Israel and her people inspire and how the poet inter- prets the glories, anxieties and daily experiences of Eretz Israel.