64 Friday, June 15, 1919 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Boris Smolar's `Between You .. and Me' Editor-in-Chief Emeritus, JTA (Copyright 1979, JTA, Inc.) WEILER AT 75: Don't look for the age of Jack D. Weiler —the noted Jewish communal leader and philanthropist— in the Jewish "Who's Who." You will not find it there. Unlike others, his biographical data is modestly limited to six lines. It is very far from giving a full picture of the wide range of his impressive philanthropic activities and his deep interest in Jewish causes. His age has now been "discovered" by the Joint Distri- bution Committee, of which he is chairman of the board, after completing his term as president. He reached 75 on May 30. With his birthday no longer a secret, the JDC leader- ship decided to surprise him with a birthday gift, an elegant collection box of brass, embossed with the word "Tzedaka" in modern Hebrew letters. "Tzedaka" is the best char- acterization of Weiler. A TALE OF NOSTALGIA: In one of his relaxed moods, Weiler confided to me years ago the "secret" of what inspired him to dedicate himself to philanthropic activities. spoke of his childhood and his mother. "I inherited the tradition of giving from my, mother," he said emotionally. He then told me of the atmosphere of poverty in which he was raised as a child. "There were many times when we had no money for the gaslight," he related," "but the house was nevertheless full of 'push- kes.' There was the Jewish National Fund, the tradi- tional Reb and Meir-Ball- Haness pushke, those of various yeshivot and in- stitutions for the aged, the WEILER blind and the sick. "Every Friday, before blessing the Sab- bath candles, my mother used to move from (pushke' and deposit a coin or two in each of them. We were short in money on other necessities but my mother always managed to find coins for her Friday deposits in the charity pushkes." Today it is not a question with him of putting small change in charity pushkes but of donating hundreds of thousands of dollars year after year, reaching into millions. He enjoys a worldwide reputation among Jews as one of the greatest philanthropists of our times. He is also active in stimulating others to give generously. AN ENVIABLE RECORD: For more than a quarter of a century Weiler has been one of the top leaders of the JDC and a national chairman of the UJA. He is a top leader of the Israel Bond Organization and treasurer of the United Israel Appeal. Long active in the New York Federation of Jewish Philanthropies, he served as its vice chairman He is one of the founders of the Albert Einstein College of Medicine and served as chairman of its board of over- seers. He takes an active interest in Yeshiva University which bestowed an honorary doctorate upon him. He is a member of the boards of trustees and directors of the Jewish Theological Seminary. He serves on the boards of the American Committee of the Weizmann Institute, of the American Friends of the Hebrew University, of the Israel Education Fund, Montefiore Hospital and Medical Center, and honorary president of the Bronx-Lebanon Hospital. He is chairman of the New York Board of Rabbis' Lay Advisory Council, and a leading member of five Conservative synagogues in New York, New Rochelle and White Plains. His interest in Israel expresses itself not only in being active in various groups in this country for Israel, but also in being a board member of the Jewish Agency in Israel. He is chairman of the Jewish Agency's Housing Committee which built more than 12,000 housing units for over 50,000 new immigrants at a cost of $60 million. He is also chair- man of the Jewish Agency's committee in New York which is in control of campaigns for the state of Israel. He is honorary chairman of the Jewish National Fund. JTA News Agency Elects New Officers NEW YORK (JTA) — Robert H. Arnow, chairman of the executive committee of the Jewish Telegraphic Agency, announced that Martin S. Fox of Newark, N.J., has been elected president of the JTA and will take office today. Fox succeeds William M. Landau who has been president since 1973. The announcement by Arnow came last week at - the annual meeting of the board of directors of the worldwide agency that gathers and distributes news and information con- cerning the Jewish people world over. Fox, a graduate of Amherst College and Har- vard Law School, has prac- ticed law in Newark as a partner in Fox and Fox since his graduation from Harvard in 1949. A native of Newark, Fox was president of the Jewish Community Federation of Metropolitan New Jersey and a United Jewish Appeal campaign chairman. He was also on the board of the Council of Jewish Federa- tions. Presently, Fox is on the board of HIAS and the Jewish News of Metropoli- tan New Jersey. He served for 10 years as a member of the New Jersey State Board of Education and is a member of the board of di- rectors of the Northern Energy Corp. by appoint- ment of the governor of New Jersey. Other officers elected were: William M. Landau of New York, JTA board chairman; Robert H. Arnow of New York, chairman of the execu- tive committee; Raymond Epstein of Chicago, Philip Slomovitz of De- MARTIN FOX ROBERT ARNOW troit, Melvin M. Swig of San Francisco and Mar- shall Weinberg of New York, vice presidents; Julius Berman of New York, secretary; and Ab- raham Goodman of Kearny, N.J., treasurer. Foundation for Jewish Cul- ture and a member of the Large City Budgeting Con- ference of the Council of Jewish Federations. Levinson, a senior partner of the law firm of Levinson & Lieberman Inc., is the national chairman of the Commu- nity Service Division of the Anti-Defamation League and previously served- as the national chairman of the ADL's Latin American Affairs Division. He is now na- tional chairman of the National Conference on Soviet Jewry and a member of the board of directors of the Jewish Federation Council of Greater Los Angeles. Pollack is a member of the World Zionist Organization Executive, the Jewish Agency board of governors, and a director of the United Israel Appeal. He has taught at Brooklyn College, the University of Pittsburgh and Yeshiva University. Long active in Jewish communal affairs, he is a member of the execu- tive committee of the United Jewish Appeal and was recently elected president of the Labor Arnow also announced the election of six new board members. They are: Jack Geldbart of Atlanta, Ga.; Joseph D. Hurwitz of Hartford, Conn.; Burton S. Levinson of Los Angeles, Calif.; Prof. Allen Pollack of New York; Fred K. Shochet of Miami, Fla.; and Dr. Gene Sosin of New York. Geldbart is former editor and publisher of the South- ern Jsraelite and a board member of the Jewish Wel- fare Federation of Atlanta, the Jewish Community Center of Atlanta and the Anti-Defamation League of Bnai Brith. Hurwitz is president of the Hartford Jewish Com- munity Center and a direc- tor of the Greater Hartford Jewish Federation. Born in Hartford, he graduated Trinity College and Har- vard Law School and is a partner in a Hartford law firm. He is also a director of the National Jewish Wel- fare Board, the National . WILLIAM LANDAU Zionists. Shochet is editor and publisher of the Jewish Floridian Newspapers. He is a member of Bnai Brith, ADL, World Federation of Jewish Journalists, a past president of the American Association of English- Jewish Newspapers, and a founder of Mt. Sinai Hospi- tal in Miami. He is also a director of the Greater Miami Jewish Federation, Jewish Community Centers and the Zionist Organiza- tion of America. Sosin is director of pro- gram planning of Radio Free Europe. A graduate of Columbia College, he has devoted the last 25 years to work in the field ofinterna- tional radio communica- tions and is also a vice president of the New York Association for New Ameri- cans (NYANA). As president of the JTA, Martin Fox will be the top lay officer of a news service operating in more than 30 countries and transmitting more than 10,000 words of news each day. The JTA serves 85 newspapers in the U.S. and Canada and scores more around the world with a total readership of more than one million. Arabs and Jews Do Business in Jerusalem By JOEL WEINER watermelon vendors JERUSALEM — It is from East and West summertime. Opposite the Jerusalem started to set Damascus Gate leading into up kiosks on the empty the walled Old City, a patch land," recalls Aaron of former no-man's land is Sang, Mayor Teddy Kol- alive with the sounds of lek's special adviser on Arab affairs. healthy commerce. "Pretty soon, there were Business is lively in what some city residents call fistfights and, on one occa- "Watermelon Square" — sion, a fire as both sides vied the location of several de- for control of the strategic pots which sell the popular site. But they managed to Middle Eastern fruit. sort things out themselves Today, several years after and now some of the stalls becoming a Jerusalem are even operated on a landmark, this somewhat partnership basis. Coopera- unimpressive plot stands as tion, they found, was in a symbol of Jewish-Arab their mutual interest." Actually, joint ventures understanding. For it is here that, left to their own between Jerusalem's Arabs devices, both people reached and Jews are more common accommodation and do than one would imagine. Several of Israel's capital's business together. "After the reunifica- finest restaurants — includ- tion of the city in 1967, ing the two leading fish houses — are owned by partners from both sides of the city. Many auto repair shops are also shared enterprises of this sort, and other business fields feature partnerships, too. In fact, ever since the barbed wire and barricades that divided Jerusalem were pulled down in the Six-Day War 12 years ago, Arab and Jewish residents of the united city have ac- commodated themselves to each other quite well. It would be an exaggera- tion, of course, to suggest that close, personal friend- ships between families of both cultures is a way of life in Israel's capital. Never- theless, the number of indi- vidual cases has been in- creasing to such an extent_ that a definite trend is evi- dent. More clearcut at this stage is the widespread in- teraction that exists in the field of commerce and in- dustry. More than 6,000 Arab workers from East Jerusalem are now em- ployed in a variety of sectors in Jewish West Jerusalem, and all of them are full members of the Histadrut Labor Federation, Israel's largest trade union. "That means they get the same wages, benefits and working conditions as their Jewish colleagues," ex- plains Shlomo Shoshani, di- rector of the Jerusalem Labor Council's Arab de- partment. "We've also managed to get one major collective agreement for 170 of our Arab members em- ployed at a leading East Jerusalem hotel, and we actively represent about 400 other individuals in different places of work in the Old City." Sub-contracting is an- other cooperative field. Any visitor to East Jerusalem is astounded, for example, the extent of the shoe dustry. Trade works in the other direction, too. A vast number of Arab merchants are agents for Jewish-made products including clothing, food, household items and even kibutz-grown flow- ers. Virtually all the milk and cheese sold in the Arab market, for exam- ple, comes from dairies in West Jerusalem. Thus, non-observant Jews who want to shop on Saturday, the Jewish Sab- bath, head for the city's eastern section where they find familiar merchandise. During the week, many Jewish grocers buy their fruit and vegetable supplies from Arab wholesalers. .