THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 30 Years By ARIE HASKEL ; JERUSALEM — Thirty years. Less than half an av- erage lifespan and in the lives of many nations, no more than a fleeting episode. But for Israel it is all there is and enough to have produced a generation that was born in war, has had to fight for survival time and again, but has been sustained by the hope of a brighter tomorrow. Now finally that hope is begin- ning to near realization. Thirty years. Time enough for a remarkable exercise in nation building. May 14, 1948, the Tel Aviv Museum: a small man inbued with a large vision stands before his peers and reads from the scroll they have endorsed. David Ben-Gurion proclaims the birth of the independent state of Israel.. Five months earlier, on Nov. 29, 1947 the UN Gen- eral Assembly, by 33 to 13 with 10 abstentions, had paved the way for this mo- ment by voting for the parti- tion of the area known as Palestine into two small states — one Jewish and the other Arab. For the Jews it had been a bittersweet deci- sion, because the land area allocated them was so small and in particular because it did not include the focal point of Jewish prayer and longing over 2,000 years — Jerusalem. Nevertheless, the Jews had danced in the streets and wept tears of joy. But the Arabs neither danced nor wept. They declared war and in pressing for this his- toric moment, Ben-Gurion and the Jewish leadership were under no illusions. Be- tween Nov. 29, 1947 and May 14, 1948, 318 Jews had been murdered in Arab at- tacks and ambushes — and that at a time when the British Mandatory authorities were still nomi- nally responsible for the maintenance of law and or- der. Now the armies of Egypt, Trans-jordan, Syria and Lebanon, strengthened by expeditionary forces from Iraq and Saudi Arabia, were poised for all-out war, the aim of which was spelled out by Azzam Pasha, Secretary-General of the Arab League: "This will be a war of extermination and a momentous massacre which will be spoken of like the Mongolian massacres and the Crusades." The war was indeed bloody and by the time it ended early in 1949, 6,000 Israelis were dead — one third of them civilians — out of a total population of only 650,000. However, the new armistice lines did give Israel a sovereign foothold in Jerusalem and the possi- bility of rolling up its sleeves to build a state and a homeland for those Jews wishing to come. And come they did. In three years of the statehood, Israel more first a Hard Struggle than doubled its popula- tion by taking in almost 700,000 refugees. About half of them were fleeing from persecution in Arab lands and the other half were Holocaust sur- vivors from Europe. Al- together, since 1948, Is- rael has succeeded in ab- sorbing 1.5 million new- comers — the majority of them refugees, who ar- rived with little but the clothes on their backs. one of the best standards of living of Arabs anywhere in the Middle East. These achievements were brought about under the shadow of constant war threats, punctuated by the need to fight four additional wars for survival. The trouble with at- tempting to pick out some of the highlights of what has been achieved in these three decades is that it all sounds too Welding this legion of much like propaganda immigrants, with their dis- slogans: the swamps that parate cultural back- have been drained, the grounds, into one nation has deserts that now bloom, not been easy, particularly the primitive immigrant as there was little infras- whose son builds super- tructure to build on. At first sonic jets, the little coun- many were accomodated in try caught up in the cen- primitive tent camps, then ter of the bitter Middle in equally primitive shack- East conflict, which still towns. They had to be succeeds in becoming an taught Hebrew and many international center of scientific research. had no skills to start with. The effect on the economy Nevertheless, all of this is of those early years was the unembellished truth. chaotic. But by the mid- 1950's Israel had begun to turn the corner, although immigration was still pour- ing in, protected by the Law of Return, which gives every Jew the right to live in Israel as a full and equal citizen. Throughout the 30 years, economic growth has been slowed by the fact that close to one-third of gov- ernment expenditure has gone to meet defense costs. Nevertheless, progress has been remarkable. In the 20 years between 1952 and 1972 the Gross Na- tional Product grew at an annual rate of nine per- cent. This was compar- able to the growth rate for Japan (9.6) and con- siderablf higher than that for West Germany (5.3) and the United States (3.3). The country's exports have grown 40-fold since 1948, the number of univer- sity students has risen 25- fold and the annual com- gumption of electricity is more than 35 times what it was in 1948. The Arab population in Israel has also enjoyed the country's growth, and has May 14, 1948 was the launching of Israel's ship of state into a rough, un- charted ocean. Now, 30 years later we know that the ship is basically sound and there is hope that a safe haven may finally be com- ing into sight. Move Slowly By SHIN SHALOM Moue slowly, move slowly Oh moon, on your way By your light we are sowing The fields of Galilee We are sowing.at night. Friday, May 12, 1978 43 `Illegal' Ships With Human Cargo- By BETTY SIGLER World Zionist Organization JERUSALEM—A World War II tank carrier is now a museum of the "illegal" immigration that brought 107,000 people to Israel be- fore the land became a state, and of the Israel Navy that developed from those "il- legal" ships. Every week hundreds of tourists and school children are among the visitors to the Af-Al-Pi-Chen — "De- spite Everything" — now installed in a small park on the southern approaches to Haifa under the direction of Yosef Almog, himself a vet- eran of the immigration called "Aliya Bet." After the carrier had finished taking Canadian tanks and their crews to the French coast in the final phase of the war, she was bought by the Mosad ("The Institution"). The Mosad transported the "illegal" immigrants, some 75,000 of whom sailed from Mediter- ranean ports between May, 1945, when Nazi Germany collapsed, and May, 1948, when Israel was declared a state and immigration be- came legal. Under cover of darkness, she was rebuilt to look like a freighter. Inside, however, she was fitted with three tiers of bunks, floor to ceil- ing, that would enable her to carry 434 immigrants. They boarded one sum- mer night in 1947. Then "Despite Everything" set sail on her first and only voyage. In the eastern Mediterra- nean a British destroyer or- dered her to identify herself. She did so in Arabic. "Didn't understand a word," came the British wireless officer's reply. "Re- peat. Not a word." "Despite Everything" tried again, this time only half in Arabic and half in Arabic English, p's re- placed by b's and plenty of extra vowels. She de- clared herself an Egyp- tian freighter from Alexandria, bound for Jaffa. Off Port Said, however, after a fierce but futile struggle, the destroyers closed in. The ship had been betrayed, it turned out, by a woman who flashed signals at night when the passengers, in small groups, were allowed on deck for a breath of air. "Despite Ev- erything" was boarded and towed, listing heavily, to Haifa. There she lay rusting offshore after the refugees had been deported to Cyp- rus, and even after they fi- nally landed in Israel as citizens in the latter half of 1948. Nearly 20 years later "Despite Everything" was raised out of the water and, in 1969, she began her new life as a museum. Exhibits in the entrance hall built around the hull tell the story of the 140 il- legal ships making for the coast of Israel between 1934, when the first restric- tions on Jewish immigra- tion were enacted by the British, and 1948. t, Right after she was purchased in 1946, the tanker tied up at a remote pier in the port of Naples. The superstructure was dismantled and the word "SCRAP" was painted over the hull, to ward off unwelcome attention. BE THE Enemeies from all sides Rise against us Their striving desires Encompassed us But we went forth To sow at night. FIRST IN LINE TO BLOW OUT THE 30 CANDLES ^- sons shall eat And be satisfied They will remember us for good For their sakes we sowed at night. For them we trod with steps so wary For Hebrew men are we Who sowed their fields at night Move slowly, move slowly Oh moon, on your way. Can It Be (Editor's Note: Rachel Blumstein was born in Rus- sia and began writing Russian poetry when she was 15 years old. She settled in pre-state Israel at age 19 and learned Hebrew there. She lived in Rehovot and Kinneret and then in Kibutz Degania Aleph, the first kibutz, but tuberculosis forced her to leave the set- tlement. Her conversational and nostalgic style made her popular and this poem, like others, was set to music.) By RACHEL BLUMSTEIN Can it be but a dream that I dreamt after all? Can it be I never really went forth with the dawn To toil with the sweat of my brow? Can it be, on those flaming and endless days when we reaped, that I never gave voice to a song as I rode on a cartful of sheves high-heaped? That I never did bathe in the placid and perfect pure blue of Kinneret, my sea — ah, Kinneret, my own, were you only a waking dream too? 474 - LET EL AL, THE AIRLINE OF THE PEOPLE OF ISRAEL, FLY YOU THERE, TO CELEBRATE ISRAEL'S 30TH ANNIVERSARY EL AL ISRAEL AIRLINES PLEASE CONTACT YOUR LOCAL TRAVEL AGENT 24100 SOUTHFIELD RD., SOUTHFIELD, MICH. 48075, PHONE: 557-5737