THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, November 4, 1977 21 Jewish Communities of the Riviera BY BEN G. FRANK (Copyright 1977. JTA. Inc.) MONTE CARLO—Jewish life in the south of France and Monaco has changed markedly in the last decade. No longer are there the dif- ficulties merely of settling in Jewish immigrants from North Africa. Today. the problems being discussed among Jew- ish leaders in Monte Carlo and Nice are: inter-' marriage. whether it's 33 or 48 percent; assimilation in a country which assimilates Jews faster than any other in the world; educating youth; and how to best organize this community of more than 35,000 Jews who live along the Riveria's warm shores of the Mediter- ranean from Menton to St. Tropez. For any visitor to the Cote d'Azur must come away with the feeling that there is a Jewish presence in France which has a total Jewish population of about 700,000 Jews and is the fourth largest Jewish com- munity in the world after the U.S., the USSR and Israel. Jews began coming to the south of France en masse back in the 1950s and 1960s in one of the most exciting movements of immigration in contemporary European history. Wave after wave they came, Jews from Algeria, Morocco, Tunisia. These Sephardic Jews so revitalized and revolution- ized French Jewry that some have called the pre- sent community, "The Sec- ond French Jewry." Many Algerian Jews chose the Riviera because of the sun-drenched climate. the red-tiled roofs and the brilliant gardens—all nos- talgically reminding them of their former home which they left in the early 1960s when the French departed. When Algeria became independent in 1962, it was natural for these Algerian Jews who were French citi- zens, French-educated and French-speaking, to resettle on the mainland. As citi- zens, Jews from Algeria could immediately rejoin the civil service as postal employes, customs officials and civil servants. Many found employment in the travel and tourism industry in this delightful climate. Take Monte Carlo, for instance, where there are exciting new developments taking place. A group of Americans, Canadians, Englishmen, many retired, have added vitality to the Sephardic synagogue located at 15 Avenue de la Costa, Monte Carlo. Half of the congregation is English-speaking and Ash- kenazic. The Ashkenazim have joined with their Seph- ardic brothers in attempting to better organize the con- mundane in gregation organizational methods, such as a bulletin, notices, pledge cards, and a commu- nity center and activities for youth. The latter is one of the serious problems facing the Monte Carlo Jewish community: how to get proper group leaders for young Jewish teenagers and how to organize large Jew- ish youth activities. called meeting, mass "Twelve Hours for Israel." More than 100,000 persons attended the event in Paris. Nearby Nice, of course, is the hub of Jewish life in the Riviera. More than 20,000 Jews reside in this city of more than 400,000, with more than a half dozen synagogues, a community center, Talmud Torahs, and even a Hebrew bookstore, the Libraire Hebraique Tanya. Also exciting is the discovery that on the Ave- nue Jean Medecin in Nice one can browse in a com- mercial bookstore and find a number of Jewish books on Jewish history and Israel. Jews are involved in French politics here; sev- eral are on the City Council of Nice. The Jews in the south of France are staunch suppor- ters of Israel and often join their brothers and sisters in the north in representations, to the government. I,nst year, for example, Jews from Nice and Marseilles and other cities joined in a President Valery Giscard d'Estaing and Premier Ray- mond Barre have invited delegations of French Jews to their official residences which caused observers to eye the meetings as attempts by government leaders to woo the Jewish electorate. North African Jews have been quite successful in the south of France. There are many Jewish doctors and lawyers in Nice and many of the finest boutiques and shops are owned and man- aged by French Jews from Algeria. Politicization Called Cause for U.S. Withdrawal fromWorld Labor Unit UNITED NATIONS (JTA)—President Carter's announcement Tuesday that the United States was with- drawing from the Inter- national Labor Organization because of its continued pol- iticization of issues was greeted with regret by top United Nations officials. Francis Blanchard, the ILO's director general, told a press conference Wednes- day he was surprised and sorry and hoped the U.S. will not remove itself per- manently from this great endeavor. - He said that like' many others. I had expected that an objective and dispassionate exam- ination would, without any possible doubt, have led the U.S. to recognize that the ILO had remained faithful to its traditions." President Carter, in a statement read Tuesday by Secretary of Labor Ray Marshall, said, -The United States remains ready to return whenever the ILO is again true to its proper prin- ciples and procedures." - - The President imple- mented a threat made by then Secretary of State Henry Kissinger two years ago because of belief that the ILO was becoming a political forum for , anti- Israel and pro-Communist moves at the expense of its task to improve the condi- tions for workers around the world. According to sources in Washington. the move was opposed by Secretary of State Cyrus Vance and Car- ter's National Security Adviser Zbigniew Brze- zinski, who along with West European countries had urged the U.S. to give the ILO another year to' make reforms. However, both the AFL-CIO and the United States Chamber of Com- merce which form the American delegation to the ILO along with the govern- ment supported the withdrawal. Sen. Jacob Javits (R- N.Y.) said he was one of a group of Senators who had opposed the move. think we have given...those who are the enemies of freedom a much greater opportu- nity." he said. Blanchard told a press conference Wednesday that "I think it is very proper that the ILO deal with politi- cal problems only to the extent that those problems have to do with the specific task of the ILO, which is the improvement of the condi- tions of workers." Mean- while, he said, he was work- ing on a contingency plan to take in account the U.S. pullout, effective Saturday, which will mean an end to the $20 million contribution to ILO, one-fourth of the organization's budget. UN Secretary General Kurt Waldheim expressed "deep regret and concern" over the American move. He criticized it as a "retro- gressive step for the prin- ciple of collective responsi- bility and from the goal of universality in UN bodies." U.S. difficulties, which had been increasing with the ILO over the years. reached a peak on June 15, 1975 when the ILO admitted a representtive of the Pales- tine Liberation Organization as an official observer. This caused a storm of protest throughout the U.S. and on Nov. 6 of that year Kissi- nger wrote to Blanchard that the U.S. will withdraw in two years unless the organization returns to its normal activities and halts the process of politicization. Meanwhile, the Israeli government was confused by the U.S. decision. An offi- cial announcement by the Foreign Ministry indicated Israel has not yet made up her mind whether she would follow the Americans. The statement described the American pullout as "significant." It meant the withdrawal of the largest employer "and the largest workers unions" from the ILO. However, Israel's policy for years has been not to desert international organi- zations. Israel needs every opportunity to explain her positions abroad, a Jerusa- lem source said. The second consideration is, while the U.S. can pull out of an organization and get back in with ease, Israel may very well find she may want to return, but will not be able to do so under exist- ing circumstances in the international arena. Like their co-religionists in Paris, Jews in the south of France will play an important role in the French national elections next spring, for already, as reported by the Jewish Telegraphic Agency, the French government has renewed its dialogue with French Jewry. -14 FULL TIME PROTECTION FROM • • • • Burglary Vandalism Fire Personal Attack 'MARV ROSEN At A Price You Can Afford Automatically Notifies within seconds Police Dept. & Fire Dept. 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