THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 6 Friday, May 25, 1919 IBM Typewriteri SeleCtriC, etc. $400 Add 'n Type 862-1300 ,342-7800 Diamond Setting to the Trade - Specialist in brightcut work Daily messenger service David WINSEN Co. 322 Michigan Bldg. 962-5220 -‹ \ At Least One Jew Is in No Rush to Tour Egypt By VICTOR BIENSTOCK To paraphrase the poet, American Jews rush in where angels fear to tread. How else explain what seems to be the unquencha- ble desire of American Jews to rush off to Egypt and the venality of those American Jewish organizations which set up tours for profit in encouraging our Jews to rush to the banks of the Nile to savor "intriguing local dishes graciously served by waiters dressed in colorful turbans and `galibiyas'?" XXXXXX X X XXXXXX X XXX)XXXXXXXXX)(X X X Now at X X Zero Neckband Shirts 100% Cotton Solid & Stripes from $27.50 Long Sleeves 31455 Southfield Road (between 13 & 14 Mile) Phone: 645-5560 X Open 9-6 daily, Thurs. til 9 and Sat. til 5:30 p.m. x ample parking/credit cards accepted xxxXxxXxXxX)(xxxxxxxxx)(xxxxXxxx It is true, President Sadat's Egypt has shattered the pattern of decades and has formally recognized the right of Jews to live in Palestine and the right of the state of Israel to exist. He is — as he has properly . been — applauded for fi- nally coming to recognize those rights and for acting on that recognition. So we have today a legal state of peace between Egypt and Israel for the first time since the State of Israel was proclaimed. But make no mistake about it: that legal declaration of a state of peace does not auto- matically mean that gener- ations of Arab anti-Jewish feeling, if not hatred, has been removed with the stroke of a pen or that we can bask in the reflected atmosphere of warm Egyptian-Israeli friend- ship. With care, and delicate regard for the sen- sitivities of people, that friendship may bloom in time — but that time is not yet. It may be . that I am too long remembering and too slow in forgiving. Just as I Seniors, Are You Living Alone and NOT liking It? Or, Living With Your Children and Feel Like You're In The Way? Perhaps You Should Consider.. . CWB An Adult Community Located of 28301 Franklin Road, Southfield, Michigan Among the Many Services We Offer... • Breakfast and Dinner • Apartment Cleaning • Linen Service • Attendants on Duty 24 hrs. Daily • All Utilities • Chauffeur Service... • Ongoing Activities and, of course Companionship! Come to Our OPEN HOUSE EVERY SUNDAY from 1:00 to 4:00 PM. ... And See For Yourself Call 353-2810 for details have never been able to forget the Germany of de- cades ago and the Holocaust and to forgive the Germans of my generation who were responsible for Hitler and all his evils, so I cannot forget the savage ef- forts of the Egyptian Army to destroy the Jews of Pales- tine in 1948. Nor can I forget the treacherous Yom Kippur attack of 1973 — an action that, morally, differed in no way from the Japanese at- tack on Pearl Harbor which President Roosevelt de- nounced as "a day of in- famy." I have no animosity toward the Egyptian people; I lived among them for two years and obtained some in- sight into their difficult lives. I remember, too, the hundreds of Jewish families I encountered there whose forebears had dwelled in the land for generations in peace and harmony with their neighbors. But, sadly, too, I remember meeting many of them years later, homeless, rootless, de- spoiled exiles unable to ad- just to another world. I hope for the Egyptian people that peace with Israel will mean the be- ginning of the end df the state of grinding, degrad- ing poverty which is the reality for so many of them. I. hope that, in time, a genuine friendship will de- velop between the people of Israel and their Arab neighbors, a peace in which we as Jews in America will share. But that time is not yet, and certainly not in Egypt. There is an Egyptian- Israeli peace treaty, a legalistic document over which the legal experts toiled, which carefully' and Yiddish Culture Support Group Is Established NEW YORK — A new organization to promote Yiddish culture and support various Yiddish programs and clubs in Israel has been established. It will be called "The League of Friends of Labor Israel." The new group will hold its national founding con- ference June 9 and 10 at the New York Sheraton Hotel. The League of Friends of Labor Israel will appeal to folk organizations, branches of fraternal or- ders, survivors' groups and cultural societies. The group is being or- ganized on the initiative of Labor Zionist leaders It- zhak Korn, chairman of the World Council for Yiddish and Yiddish Culture, and Dr. Berl Frymer, Israeli representative of the Labor Zionist movement. precisely spells out specific conditions to which the gov- ernments of Egypt and Is- rael must adhere. These are legal conditons, not the re- lationships of friends. It is a peace by the book and the Egyptians, so far, have in- sisted on adherence to the text. The agreement provides for the return of the entire Sinai Peninsula to Egypt. In a gesture, Israel is turning over the town of El Arish ahead of schedule. There are a few Israeli families there. The Egyptians insist they cannot remain, even temporarily, once Egypt takes over the town. There is even question whether the Arabs of El Arish who have jobs with the Israelis, will be per- mitted to cross over the new line to continue working at those jobs. The first Arab state to voice condemnation of Is- raeli measures against Yasir Arafat's terrorists is Egypt. The call for discus- sion of Jerusalem's future by the Arab summit confer- ence was issued by the Egyptian government — which will not be permitted to attend. I can understand why Egypt, despite the peace treaty, must take a public anti-Israeli stance and show the world that it is more patriotically Arab than other Arabs. Signing of the treaty has made Egypt a pariah among most of its neighbors and Egypt must prove itself. I can under- stand, but I cannot find in it an indication of a will for peace. On my desk is a circular from a national Jewish organization which screams out: "We waited 30 years. Now, don't wait another minute." It tells me that "the historic moment is now!" and that I must not delay a moment in making my reservations for an Israeli-Egyptian tour which is now "without a doubt the newest, hottest, the most exciting 'in' trip." It offers me sightseeing which includes "an an- cient miracle-a-minute (the inscrutable Sphinx, the majestic pyrami the towering temples Luxor and Karnak, th eternal Nile, the Moorish architecture of Cairo and the medieval markets and bazaars (BAR- GAINS!)." What makes them believe that bar- gains are the balm my Jewish soul needs or that my haggling for bargains in the Souk will advance the cause of Arab-Jewish amity? Peace will come some day between Arab and Jew. It will develop gradually and it will come about through face-to-face meetings of Is- raeli and Egyptian men and women who, despite all, have so much in common, particularly the suffering and hardships of the last three decades. It will not be advanced by camera- carrying American Jews descending in droves on the Souk, looking for bargains. American Jews have a role to perform: it is to be as supportive as possible of Is- rael and the Israelis at this special, crucial moment in history when they have put their security if not their very existence on the line. We do not help them by abandoning our dignity and our self-respect by dashing off to a country which, for 31 years, considered the term "Jew" anathema and would not let us in unless we de- nied ouriewish origin. Happy Birthday, Israel! By MERIAM MARGOLIS I sing a song of ecstasy, Your thirty-first I cheer And join with you to celebrate Your first, peace-crowned year! Two thousand years like shifting tide, Like rootless, drifting sand, Without the right to nationhood, Without their own land. Then, out of the Ghetto fold The People of The Book Their dream to make reality, With courage undertook. I sing of how these people came From far ends of the earth And how with their blood and sweat Gave dying land rebirth. Mountains bare they dressed with trees, The deserts they made bloom. Swamps they drained and cities built, And banished blighted gloom. The foe a hundred million strong, The world indifferent, cold — Alone, the Jews of Israel Maintained their firm hold! MgellOSI SEIRS . 4$A.' „ JEWISH NATIONAL Form 27308 Southfield Rd. 557-6644 r Southfield, Mich. 48076 f, lir a 1