.40040#41.040.1.74.*******40 • !! 04......lwaiaThietio4/0..eftmara.o.iwiA0*.4.4.,.... ■ THE JEWISH NEWS (USPS 275 52 °) Incorporating The Detroit Jewish Chronicle commencing with the issue of July 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 W. Nine Mile, Suite 865, Southfield, Mich. 48075 ' Postmaster: Send address changes to The Jewish News, 17515 W. 9 Mile Rd., Suite 865, Southfield, Mich. 48075 Second-Class Postage Paid at Southfield, Michigan and Additional Mailing Offices. Subscription $12 a year. • CARMI M. SLOMOVITZ PHILIP SLOMOVITZ. Business Manager Editor and Publisher DREW LIEBERWITZ ALAN HITSKY HEIDI PRESS Advertising Manager News Editor Assistant News Editor • •••• 4704r9.91,-Aw - 1s Sabbath Scriptural Selections This Sabbath, the sixth day of Shevat, 5739, the following scriptural selections will be read in our synagogues: Pentateuchal portion, Exodus 10:1-13:6. Prophetical portion, Jeremiah 46:13-28. Candle lighting, Friday, Feb. 2, 5:30 p.m. VOL. LXXIV, No. 22 Page Four Friday, February 2, 1979 Terror for Mankind from Libya Americans with a spark of conscience for through the file. Without looking up, he said, human rights and all who are concerned that "Why don't you give this to the Egyptians?' " terror should not reign on earth were justified in That's how the inspiration for . Egyptian- their concern lest a democratic communitythke Israel negotiations for peace - had begun. But it Miehigan's be polluted by visitors from terror- was one of a myriad of plots by the Libyans to ridden Libya ruled by Muammar Qaddafi. murder people. They engineered the Munich ' Surprisingly, politically-minded officials in Olympics murder of 11 Israeli athletes. They some communities were • ready to welcome a finance terrorism everywhere. Yet, there were delegation representing a country whence has \ some who condoned the antics of the President's come so much misery for many. brother in engineering a tour of this country, in - That the President's brother; Billy, should be search of an American partnership, by the the spokesman for a delegation personifying the representatives of a murder-inciting govern- worst in human, relations gave justification to ment. It is to be hoped that such actions will not the demands that the White House speak out prove to be the most disgraceful on the record of against recognition of a foreign element which too many Americans approving the very has failed to acquire diplomatic relations with . presence in this country of the vilest sponsors of the United States. That fact alone should have the world's terrorists. been proper cause to reject Billy Carter's lead- Detroit's officialdom nar r owly averted falling ership in a movement that lent status to an into the trap of giving credence to the worst in element threatening the basic principles of anti-Semitism had the visit of Libyan delega- human relationships. tion in Detroit been given formal status. The Announcing publication of a series of two ar- visiting Libyans proved to be the legitimate ticles, "Untold Story of the Middle East" by Sid- representatives of the brutal dictator Qaddafi ney Zion and Uri Dan, the front cover of the Jan. when their spokesmen resorted to one of the 21 New York Times Magazine Section asserted: most repulsive documents, the fabrications "The story begins in July 1977, when Prime known as the Protocols of the Elders of Zion, as Minister Menahem Begin received a visit in his their guide in an anti-Zionist crusade. The op- office from the men who run Israeli intelligence. position to Zionism in every instance is a resort They came with a thick file on a startling plot: to the vilest forms of anti-Semitism. To welcome the Libyan dictator, Col. Qaddafi, had or- a group with such tendencies could only mean ganized an operation to assassinate the Egyp- _ compromising with conscience. tian president, Anwar el-Sadat. Begin thumbed Dilemmas as Plagues for Israel Israel is not getting a good press. For a brief asked to pay. period, after Anwar Sadat had again postponed • "What Price Does the Treaty Require Egypt negotiations for a peace - pact with Israel, the to Pay? — Egypt is being asked to give only the Egyptian obstacles were recognized. Now intangible: normal 'relations between good neighbors. Under the treaty, Egypt would join Menahem Begin again is charged with being with Israel in normal relations including full intransigent and the establishment of three new settlements on the border with Jordan is recognition, diplomatic, economic and cultural relations, termination of economic boycotts and utilized for another attack on Begin as uncom- discriminatory barriers to the free movement of promising. • If the settlements were the issue they prob- people and goods. "What Can Be Done to Rescue the Treaty? — ably could have been resolved. But they are As long as the United States supports Egypt's being exaggerated as an Ameripan issue, and stiff demands, Egypt will be unwilling to con- this is where the agony settles in the dilemma ciliate its position as evidenced by Sadat's posi- over delays in fulfilling the Camp David deci- tion that negotiations are now between the sions. There are many important developments that United States and Israel. Rather than being Egypt's public and private advocate, let the are plaguing the Israelis and are causing the Middle East stalemate. The National Jewish United States return to its Camp David role of mediating off camera. This will lead to the kind Community Relations Advisory Council com- of negotiations that is more likely to produce a piled a number of questions for which answers Treaty of Peace between Israel and Egypt." are demanded about the unfortunate and un- The developing irritations are especially dis- necessary delays for action, and the following tressing. Criticism of President Carter for al- may be considered as striking at the root of the leged inconsistencies are the result of anxieties unresolved issues: "What Price Is Israel Paying for This Peace over the delays in actions for a Middle East peace. Meanwhile, White House and State De- -Treaty? — Israel is paying tangibly in many partment are also evidencing irritations and substantial ways. Israel has agreed to withdraw instead of resolving the issues encouragement from all of the Sinai, giving up a vital buffer has been given to the PLO to resume terrorist zone. It is ceding highly sophisticated air fields and military bases. It is giving up towns and acts in Israel. These called for retaliations and villages strategically located on Egypt's tradi- enmities add to inconsistencies that become even more deeply rooted in war-threats. The tional invasion route to Israel. It is yielding parties to the Camp David accord must act with major oil fields at a time when Israel's major greater dedication to the assumed duties to source of oil — Iran — is threatened. Egypt's new demands have now raised the price Israel is avert further troubles in the Middle East. 4.104 At5ittgiig-- ■ `The Earth Is the Lord's' Now Issued as- Paperback When "The Earth Is the Lord's" by Abraham J. Heschel first was published by McGraw Hill, in 1949, it served as a pattern for Jewish inspiration. It introduced to American Jeskrry one_ of the great schol- ars, the interpreter and the guide to the highest rungs of Jewish piety and intellectual aspiration. The republishing of this book by Farrar, Straus and Giroux, in a paperback, renews an important link between scholarship and the Jewish student who is searching for the high spiritual legacies. "The Earth Is the Lord's" was written not for Jews alone but for the entire civilized world. Occasioned by tragedy of a magnitude never before experienced in the world, it re-creates one of the greatest periods in Jewish history and draws from the mind and character of a whole people spiritual enlightenment and historic meaning for all men. Abraham Joshua Heschel was born in Warsaw, Poland, in 1907, the scion of a distinguished Hasidic family. After obtaining his docto- rate ill philosophy from the Univer- sity of Berlin in 1933, Rabbi Hes- chel taught in Germany for several years, until he was forced_to flee from the Nazis. In 1940, he came to this country, where he taught first at the ilebreveUnion College and, until his death, at' the Jewish Theological Seminary. Rabbi Illeschel's great religious passion led him to be a major force in both the civil rights' movement and the anti-war movement. In 1965, he was inaugurated as Harry Emerson Fosdick Visiting Profes- sor at the Union Theological Semi- nary — the first Jew to be ap- pointed to that institution. Throughout his lifetime, Dr. Hes- chel was an important spokesman for Christians and Jews. He died in ABRAHAM HESCHEL New York City on Dec. 22, 1972. Reading the Prayerbook Made Easy With Songs A crash course for the study of Hebrew and the reading of prayers, introduced in 1963 by Rabbi. Noah Golinkin, then serving a 'congrega- tion in Arlington, Va., now is hailed as the commencement of a method that makes prayer-reading easy. It is being encouraged in the National Federation of Jewish Men's Clubs Hebrew Literacy Campaign. The unique method commences with the singing of the popular Hebrew hymn Shalom Aleichem. The reason for its inspirational influence is explained in an introductory-note to what may be consid- ered the textbook of the new task, "Shalom Aleichem: Learn to Read the Hebrew Prayerbook" (Hebrew Publishing Co.). The entire text of the 77-page "Shalom Aleichem" is in Hebrew. It includes the musical notes for the songs and is appropriately illus- trated. The uniqueness of the method introduced by Rabbi Golinkin elevates his book, printed as a paperback, into the status of a textbook.