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November 09, 1979 - Image 20

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1979-11-09

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

20 r Friday, November 9, 1979

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

OPEN
Mon

DryTh

IA BIBLIO1HaU

Arafat Makes Gains for PLO During Recent Portugal Visit

LISBON (JTA) — Pales-
tine Liberation Organiza-
tion leader Yasir Arafat
met last Friday with Por-
tuguese President Antonio
Ramalho Eanes, practically
winning recognition for his
organization.

Fri. & Sat.
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Arafat arrived in Lisbon
early Friday morning to
open the five-day interna-
tional "Solidarity Confer-
ence with the Arab Na-
tions" that night.
The PLO leader was met
at the airport by Foreign
Minister Carlos Freitas
Cruz, who later gave an offi-
cial banquet in his honor.
Freitas Cruz, in his toast,
called for the recognition of
the martyred Palestinian
people to a homeland."
Arafat was also re-
ceived by Protuguese
Prime Minister Maria de
Lourdes Pintasilgo for a
one-hour-long audience
at her official residence.
The official welcome
amounted to a de facto Por-
tuguese recognition of the

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PLO and diplomatic sources
here believe that Arafat's
visit will conclude with _the
creation of a PLO diploma-
tic representation in Lis-
bon.
It would be the second
such mission in a NATO
country — the first was set
up last month in Turkey.
Portugal's Jewish commu-
nity has protested to the
prime minister and the
president against holding
the conference in Lisbon
and Arafat's visit.
Arafat also met Friday
morning at his hotel with
the leaders of the Por-
tuguese Socialist and
Communist parties.
Socialist leader Mario
Soares was the first caller.
He said he had come to "pay
his respects" and "to recall
the Portuguese Socialist
Party's traditional friend-
ship for the Palestinian
people and its cause."
Two days earlier,
Soares warmly embraced
Israel's Labor Party
leader Shimon Peres,
who attended the
Socialist International
meeting in Estoril, stres-

sing his "devotion" to Is-
rael and its existence.
The Palestinian solidar-
ity conference opened in the
presence of more than 600
official delegates from 100
countries and some three
dozen organizations. The
conference is expressing sol-
idarity with both the Arab
nations and their poeple
and "Palestine."
Libya, which is repor-
tedly funding the huge par
ley, also set down the law:
barred an invitation to Is--
rael's Community Party
(Rakah) and also refused to
grant accreditation to the
Jewish Telegraphic Agency
correspondent in Lisbon.
Palestinian circles
were openly unhappy
with these decisions but
said "the matter is not in
our hands." The PLO
traditionally claims it is
not anti-Jewish, only
anti-Israel.
Though most West Euro-
pean Socialist parties are
not attending the Lisbon
conference, prominent
Socialists from most of these
countries are participating
in "individual capacities."

Canada-Israel Relations
Topic of Jewish Press Body

B.

C

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Seven Office Locations to serve you

• WARREN: 4104 East Ten Mile

• REDFORD: 22041 Grand River

• DOWNTOWN DETROIT: 1250 Griswold

• EAST DETROIT: 20700 Kelly Road

• PLYMOUTH: 1200 S. Sheldon Road

• ROCHESTER: 70 West Tienken

• SOUTHFIELD: Home Office 27255 , Lahser Rd.

MONTREAL (JTA) —
Yeshayahu Anug, Israel's
Ambassador to Canada, will
discuss the current state of
Canadian-Israeli relations
in his keynote address at
the two-day meeting in
Montreal next week of the
American Jewish Press
Association (AJPA), it was
announced by Frank Wun-
dohl, AJPA president, who
is editor of the Jewish Ex-
ponent of Philadelphia.
Editors and publishers of
the AJPA who, according to
Wundohl represent some 70
Jewish community
English-language news-
papers and monthly maga-
zines in the United States
and Canada with a com-
bined circulation of more
than two million, will hold
their sessions Nov. 15 and
16 in the private meeting
facilities of Restaurant
Cinque Portes.
The AJPA mid-year
meeting is scheduled an-
nually in the same city and
during the Council of
Jewish Federations Gen-
eral Assembly. The 48th
Assembly will be meeting
here Wednesday through
Nov. 18.
In his address, Anug is
expected to focus on Is-
raeli and world Jewish
reaction to Canadian
Prime Minister Joe
Clark's announcement
that he is bowing to the
recommendation of
Ambassador-at-large
Robert Stanfield, submit-
ted to the House of Com-
mons, that Canada will
not at this time move its
Embassy from Tel Aviv to
Jerusalem. The move
was one of Clark's cam-
paign promises.
Dr. Murray Friedman,
Middle Atlantic States di-
rector of the American
Jewish Committee and a
member of the faculty at
LaSalle College in

Philadelphia, will discuss
The Future of Black-
Jewish Relations" at
Thursday's morning ses-
sion.
Dr. Irving Greenberg,
executive director of the
National Jewish Resource
Center (formerly the Na-
tional Jewish Conference
Center), will discuss "The
President and Future Prob-
lems of the American
Jewish Community — How
the Media Fits In" at the
Nov. 16 morning session.
The wind-up address at
the Nov. 16 luncheon will be
delivered by Yitzhak Bar-
On, vice president of the
Jewish Agency-American
Section, who will be report-
ing for the AJPA on details
of a planned AJPA study
mission to Israel early in
1980 in cooperation with
the World Federation of
Jewish Journalists.

Skokie Culturfest

CHICAGO (JTA) — A
month-long Israel Cultur-
fest, the first ever to be held
in the metropolitan Chicago
area, is being held at the
Skokie Public Library
through Nov. 30. It is spor
sored by the Israel Cons
late General for the Mid-
west and the township of
Skokie, Ill., a suburb of
Chicago.
Consul General Moshe
Gilboa and Mayor Albert J.
Smith, of Skokie, served as
hosts at the opening cele-
bration. A multi-screen
audio-visual presentation
on Jerusalem highlighted
the occasoin.
The Culturfest includes
special exhibitions, shows,
films, lectures, workshops
and discussions on
Jerusalem, archaeology,
art, literature and other
facets of Israeli culture.

It is much easier to be
critical than correct.

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