Daughter's Biography of Zionist Pioneer Max Nordau to Appear in Jewish News -- '' • ...................................... The biography of the chief advocate pf the Zionist movement, Dr. Max Nordau, who was the chief supporter of Dr. Theodor Herzl in the founding of the World Zionist Organization and in the convening of the First World Zionist Congress in Basle in 1897, will commence in a series of articles that will be published beginning in next week's Detroit Jewish News. The articles are written by his daughter, Maxa Nordau of Paris, the eminent artist. Dr. Max Nordau gained fame in world literary ranks, and is considered with Herzl among the leading advocates of the Zionist ideal in the history of the movement. MAXA NORDAU OUR NEWSPAPER WORKS FOR YOU October 8-14 The Jewish News will publish this biographical essay by special arrangement with the Jewish National Fund of America. THE JEWISH NEWS A Weekly Review VOL. LXXIV, No. 5 MAX NORDAU Praetor of Zionism f Jewish Events 17515 W. Nine Mile, Suite 865, Southfield, Mich. 48075 424-8833 $12.00 Per Year: This Issue 30c om Kippur From the Prophecy of Isaiah, Chapter 58 3 "Why, when we fasted, did You not see; When we starved our bodies, did You pay no heed?" Because on your fast day You see to your business And oppress all your laborers! 4 Because you fast in strife and contention, And you strike with a wicked fist! Your fasting today is not such As to make your voice heard on high. 'Is such the fast I desire, A day for men to starve their bodies? Is it bowing the head like a bulrush And lying in sackcloth and ashes? Do you call that a fast, A day when the Lord is favorable? 'No, this is the fast I desire: To unlock fetters of wickedness, And untie the cords of the yoke To let the oppressed go free; To break off every yoke. It is to share your bread with the hungry, And to take the wretched poor into your home; When you see the naked, to clothe him, And not to ignore your own kin. 'Then shall your light burst through like the dawn And your healing spring up quickly; Your Vindicator shall march before you, The Presence of the Lord shall be your rear guard. 9 Then, when you call, The Lord will answer; When you cry, He will say: Here I am. If you banish the yoke from your midst, The menacing hand, and evil speech, "And you offer your compassion to the hungry And satisfy the famished creature — Then shall your light shine in darkness, And your gloom shall be like noonday. "The Lord will guide you always; He will slake your thirst in drought And give strength to your bones. You shall be like a watered garden, Like a spring whose waters do not fail." Oct. 6, 1978 Dayan Heads Israel Peace Missions 5 Will Address UN - JERUSALEM (JTA) — The Cabinet will decide Sunday on the composition of the Israeli negotiating team for the talks with Egypt, due to begin in Washington Thursday. , Foreign Minister Moshe Dayan is to head the team. He left for the U.S. this week and will addiess the UN General Assembly on Monday. From New York he will proceed to Washington to be joined there by the other negotiators. National Religious Party leader Dr. Yosef Burg and Deputy Premier and "Democratic Moirement" boss Yigael Yadin have indicated that they want to be included in the team, and observers expect that they will. Another possibility is Ariel Sharon. Meanwhile, an Egyptian defense ministry team of officers and technicians arrived in Israel Wednesday to set up direct communications between Cairo and Jerusalem. The two countries seem to be moving quickly towards a peace settlement by the end of the year. A dispute over the site of the peace talks that surfaced over the weekend apparently was resolved by President Carter's invitation to hold them in Washington. President Anwar Sadat, in a major address to the Egyptian parliament on the Camp David summit conference, announced that President Carter has accepted his invitation to come to Cairo for the signing of the Israeli-Egyptian peace treaty later this year. A White House spokesman said the President wanted to attend the signing but he did not know if it would be in Egypt. Sadat was lavisli . in his praise for Carter who, he said, had saved the Camp David talks from collapse. In his speech to the parliament he JERUSALEM (JTA) — A 70-year-old Jewish congregation in Cairo stressed America's full partnership was the recipient of Rosh Hashana greetings Trom President Anwar Sadat of Egypt on Monday. Sadat sent a special representative to role in the summit talks and in the convey his message to Chaar Hachami Synagogue celebrating the Egyptian-Israeli negotiations that Jewish New Year. The 90-member congregation responded with a lie ahead. He denounced Arab critics prayer for success of Egyptian-Israeli peace negotiations and begged of the Camp David frameworks, in- God "to end the conflict between the two countries and bless the area cluding the Palestine Liberation with peace." Organization and urged Syria and But on Wednesday it was reported that several Israeli newsmen in Jordan to join in the negotiations Cairo completed the minyan at the Cairo synagogue . with Israel based on the Camp David Three Israelis joined eight elderly men in the prayers, sup- .formulas. ported by one American girl who is studying at the American King Hussein of Jordan dis- University in Cairo. One Moslem guard and an American TV crew attended the prayer. "It was one of the saddest and closed Sunday, on the CBS televi- strangest prayers I have ever attended," wrote Zeev Shiff, sion "Face the Nation" program, Haaretz special correspondent in Cairo. that he has submitted a long The newsmen reported that the Jewish cemetery of Cairo was totally series of written questions to the neglected. Most of the tombstones were ruined, and only a few of the U.S. seeking clarification of the th ousands of tombstones could be recognized. (Continued on Page 5) • • Conflicting Cairo Reports on Rosh Hashana Services Sadness Colors Pioneer Sinai Settlements By YITZHAK SHARGIL YAMIT (JTA) — It is difficult to say what feelings fill the hearts of the 4,500 Israelis in this pleasant seaside township on the northern Sinai coast and in the string of agricultural settlements built further inland on the desert sands. For these settlers, some Israel-born, others immigrants from Europe, the Soviet Union, North America and South Africa who opted for the pioneer life, know today that they will have to leave. Not immediately, perhaps. But inevitably they will have to abandon their homes, shops, businesses, gardens and farms. They will be evacuated in accordance with a timetable -to be worked out when Israel and Egypt negotiate a peace treaty within the Camp David framework that provides for the restoration of Sinai to full Egyptian sovereignty. If there is anger and resentment in many hearts, that is understandable. What strikes a visitor, however, is a deep sadness and resignation mingled with an almost naive clinging to fragile hopes. The anger is directed mainly against the present Likud-led government of Premier Menahem Begin who signed the Camp David accords and now says the Sinai settlements must be liquidated in the interests of peace with Egypt. But there is also bitterness against the previous Labor-led regime that initiated the settlements 10 years ago and invited settlers to come to establish new homes and a new frontier. (Continued on Page 8)