- 64 Friday, October 12, 1979 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 4 Palestinians' Status Defined: PLO Claims Exposed The Conference of Presidents of Major American is unknown anywhere in the Middle East outside Jewish Organizations has issued a "Middle East Memo" in freedom of Israel. response to recent criticsm of Israel's position of not dealing In the 12 years of Israeli administration of these ter- with the Palestine Liberation Organization. The memo, ritories, the Arab residents have prospered economically as entitled "On Talking With the PLO," stated: never before; health has improved and longevity has in- Why shouldn't the United States deal with the creased dramatically; education has become universal; PLO? What's wrong with talking? . local elections with universal suffrage have been insti- Nothing is wrong with talking. But we should be talk- tuted, and freedom of travel, of speech and press exists to a ing to the Palestinian Arabs residing in the West Bank and degree never before enjoyed by those resident or by Arabs Gaza, not to the PLO. in any other nation in the Middle East. Is there really a difference between the Palesti- Understandably, the Palestinian Arabs do not want to nian Arabs and the PLO? continue to live under Israel's, or anyone's occupation. And All the difference in the world. The Arabs of the West Bank and Gaza are peaceful residents who have demon- so it was agreed at Camp David that through negotiations, strated that they are prepared to live in peace with Israel. they should be granted autonomy. But they have not entered the negotiations because the PLO threatens to The PLO's singular aim is the destruction of Israel. No assassinate any West Bank Arab leader who dares to sit at state should be asked to deal with any country or organiza- the peace table with Israel. tion whose public purpose is to liquidate that state. Why would the PLO assassinate Palestinians who How did the Palestinian Arabs of the West Bank want to live in peace with Israel? and Gaza come under Israel's jurisdiction in the first The PLO is an umbrella of 16 mostly Marxist or Maoist place? terrorist bands who have committed atrocities not only On the day when the world's only Jewish state was against Israeli civilians but against thousands of Arabs created in 1948, it was invaded by seven Arab states. While who work in Israel or are willing to live in peace with a they did not succeed in destroying Israel, Jordan did suceed Jewish state in the Middle East. Their goal is and always in occupying the West Bank; Egypt occupied Gaza. In 1967, was the destruction of Israel. Indeed, they were created in when the same Arab states again attempted to liquidate 1964, when Jordan — not Israel — occupied the West Bank. Israel, Jordan was forced to retreat from the West Bank and In 1970, the PLO attempted to take over Jordan; the Egypt from Gaza. Since then, both territories have been move was repulsed by King Hussein, who killed as many administered by Israel. PLO members as his army could find and deported the rest. It is noteworthy that in all the years Jordan occupied Since that time the PLO has made its headquarters in the West Bank and Egypt controlled Gaza, no attempt was Lebanon, where a similar attempt to take over its host ever made to establish a Palestinian state. country led to the more than 60,000 deaths in the Lebanese What about the human rights of the Palestinians? civil war. It is cynicism of a very high order for Arab states to Any successful negotiation on the issue of autonomy complain about the human rights of the West Bank-Gaza would undermine whatever claim the PLO may have to the residents while slavery still exists in Saudi Arabia and loyalty and support of the Palestinian Arabs; that support, to the extent that it exists at all, is the direct result of PLO terror and threats of terror against the West Bank-Gaza Arabs and their leaders. But from the point of view of American interests — especially our need for an assured supply of oil — isn't it necessary for us to deal with the PLO? The exact opposite is true. The PLO is supported militarily, financially and politically by the Soviet Union. A PLO state or even a PLO presence on the West Bank would be a priceless gift to the USSR. How about from Israel's point of view? Israel has agreed to negotiate autonomy for the resi- dents of the West Bank and Gaza. It has not agreed to allow the PLO to become ensconced on the West Bank, and it never will. The PLO almost destroyed Jordan in 1970 and Lebanon in 1976. If this is what the terrorists did to Arabs, can you imagine what they have in mind for the Isr. ? On this issue of dealing with the PLO, do can and Israeli interests diverge? . They are identical. Both nations seek the emergence of moderation and the defeat of radical terrorism in the Mid- dle East. The United States would suffer a crushing and economically devastating defeat if the PLO were to be allowed to shoot its way into the peace negotiations to establish its presence in the West Bank and to bring along its Soviet suppliers — and masters. And a defeat for America would be a crushing defeat for Israel too. - Israel's very survival would be threatened by a PLO presence on the West Bank., Israel is the only democracy and has the only stable government in the Middle East. Just as important, Israel is by far the strongest ally of the United States in the region. Israel's democratic society and military strength are the major obstacles to Soviet encroachment into the oil-rich Middle East. A diplomatic defeat for Israel would be a serious blow to American prestige and to the American goal of blocking the USSR from intruding itself into the area. The Coveted Nobel Prize Has Se veral Disadvantages and Perils By DAVID SCHWARTZ later? Yes, I repeat, what hap- Maybe you have som e- pened later? times said to yourself, The first thing that hap- wouldn't mind winning t I he pened was about a dozen Nobel Prize. There is th money angle, but that is th e people called him on the lesser part. It's the hon e telephone to congratulate that is the great thing. Yo or him. Well, that pleased him can take the prize and sho u — but alas, that was only it to your friends. "See wh w the beginning. The tele- I just got" — and your the at phone never stopped ring- would heave — it probabl st ing for days. It rang during would heave a couple y the day and the ringing of of the phone awakened him at times. night. People that he had Even if you are the mod est type and try to avoi d never seen or heard of, called. The jingle of the boasting, there is nothing t stop you from casually ask ° phones was so incessant, ing, "Did you read that littl - that finally fearing he would become a nervous item in the big headlines o wreck, he packed up some of the paper about my winnin g his belongings and moved to the Nobel Prize?" Yes, admittedly, ther e a hotel. After a month, he felt it are advantages to winnin the Nobel Prize, but mayb g e might be safe to return, but you are better off not win he moved to a new apart- ment and now has an un- ning it. In some ways, be lieve me, it has its hand - listed phone. icaps and if any of you r All of this happenedto a friends are working to. ge t man who is not only one of you the prize, it might be the great writers but a man well for you to ask them to noted for his friendliness lay off. You know the old and consideration — a man classical line: "Beware o f who sympathizes with all the Greeks bearing pre- • people, but there is just so sents." Anyway, beware o f much telephone any person the Nobel Prize! can take. To leave your Take the case of Isaac apartment these days when Bashevis Singer. He has it is so hard to find another been long known as one is not easy but there was no of the bigger talents of other way. the Yiddish press, but no People are strange. doubt he was happy There are many who when he first heard that would appreciate a tele- he was to be awarded the phone call but they sel- prize; but what happened dom get one. Take Joe (Copyright 1979, JTA, Inc.) Gaiowitz. He has had a hard life. He has never won a prize in his life. If you rang him up and said, "Joe, I see by the papers that you did not win the Nobel Prize, I wish you had," he would ap- preciate it. But hOw many call Joe to tell him that? But that is beside the point. The point here is that the winners of the prize have to go through quite an ordeal and Jews face this problem more than others. Recently, we read in a leading New York daily a review of a book in which the writer quotes a great liberal of some 50 years back as saying that 65 per- cent of the Russian Jewish immigrants to this country are feeble-minded. Yet strangely enough these feeble-minded people seem to win a greater percentage of the Nobel Prizes than others. The Jewish percentage of Nobel Prize winners is ex- ceptional. So if you are a Jew, you are faced more than others with the possi- The great danger lies in bility that you will have to the fields of medicine, sci- move from your apartment ence, literature, economics. to a hotel, and maybe to find So avoid those subjects. Cul- a new apartment. tivate a bit of ignorance. Some will no doubt Take up tennis, horse rac- take a fatalistic position. ing and such things instead. If it is "beshert," they will And above all be firm. say, that they shall win a The the attitude like taht Nobel Prize, they will of General Sherman when take it. There is no use in he was mentioned for the fighting fate. However, Presidency, "If nominated, I that is the wrong attitude. will not accept; if elected, I If you approach the prob- will not serve." lem thoughtfully and With that kind of firm- firmly, you can avoid the ness, you are bound to suc- peril. ceed. ' New Volume Shows the Bias of Philip Roth By DR. MILTON STEINHARDT In his attempted defense in The Ghost Writer," he "The Ghost Writer" by gets himself further Philip Roth (Farrar, Straus enmeshed and subtly bet- and Giroux) is clearly a re- rays his true ambivalence. sponse to the criticism level- Roth devised a fictional led at Roth for his anti- plot of a young, talented Jewish bias and "self- writer, Nathan Zucker- hatred." man, who writes a story Some of the feelings about a family quarrel against Roth stem from his concerning an inheri- characterization of most of tance intended for the his unsavory characters as medical education of Jews — in a seemingly twin boys. The will is casual relationship — and challenged in open court not that the unprincipled, by an unscrupulous manipulative person hap- member of the family pens to be Jewish. PHILIP ROTH who claims that "higher There is a world of dif- education" d6es not in- and the young Zuckerman ference in the above ap- elude becoming doctors. took the problem to the proaches. It is not isolated Zuckerman's father tries adored 56-year-old Jewish instances, but the total pat- reasonable mediation in writer E.I. Lonoff who lives tern of his writings that the quarrel, to no avail. on a farm in Massachusetts seem to imply "being When the father read the with his Yankee wife. Jewish is being banal and draft of the story he found it It appears that Roth built coarse." embarrassing, and con- a straw man and then pro- sulted a prominent Jewish ceeded to demolish him. judge who once helped Zuc- There was no convincing kerman get into college. evidence to withhold publi- The secretary of the judge cation — since obviously sent a polite reply, and ap- Jews, like other people, may pended 10 queries for be good, bad; or indifferent. Nathan Zuckerman to an- The author exploits this saver before the story is irrelevant episode to show submitted to a popular the inviolability and uni- magazine. versality of his literary art. Some of the questions In reality, literature were crude and irrelevant, that is authentic and truly reflects life need not fear criticism. The con- flict arises when the author transmits his am- bivalence about Jewish- ness to the reader. A brief example follows: The New York Jews re- sented the author for living in the country in the Goyish wilderness of birds and trees where America began and long ended." The impli- cation is pure rubbish! Zuckerman, addressing Lonoff again, says: "I think of you as the Jew thit . away from some of thy; down in New York." -To Roth all New York Jews are so obnoxious that one "must get away". He seems to attribute all vulgarities to Jewishness, perhaps judg- ing them by his own frail- ties. There is no doubt Roth left the psychiatrist's couch much too soon. One may critically main- tain that Roth obtained his recognition in non-Jewish circles by explicit sex, por- nography, and by walking on the corpses of the Jewish people whom he shoots down with malice, satire and ridicule.