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March 28, 1980 - Image 7

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1980-03-28

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

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

$14,700,102 Gifts Spark AJCampaign Opener

Tapper's does
APPRAISALS

Traditional Generosity Assures Current
Drive Goal Will Exceed Last Year's Mark

Inspired by an address in
which former Israel Foreign
Minister Moshe Dayan em-
phasized the urgency of a
continuing American
Jewish interest in Israel's
needs, with local leaders
appealing for increased
labors in the drive, the 1980
Allied Jewish Campaign
opened Wednesday evening
at a dinner meeting at Adat
Shalom Synagogue, at -
which the initial sum of
$14,700,102 was announced
as an encouraging begin-
ning in an all-out effort to
continue for six weeks.
Sol Drachler, execu-
tive vice president of the
Jewish Welfare Federation,
who summed up the results
of the drive as of the opening
night, said he was confident
that when the drive con-
cludes, last year's $16.9 mil-
lion will be exceeded.
The $14.7 million total
to date is $1.2 million
above the 1979 opening
figure. Drachler said that
Detroit, with the 12th
largest U.S. Jewish popu-
lation, will again be ex-
ceeded only by New
York, Chicago and Los
Angeles in its Campaign
total.
David Handleman and
Irving Seligman, Campaign
co-chairmen, who presided,
analyzed the results of
pre-Campaign solicitations
and spoke about the urgent
needs for the overseas
causes and Israel as well as
the local and national agen-
cies included in the drive.
Supplementing their ap-
peals, George Zeltzer,
president of the Jewish Wel-
fare Federation, added an
appeal for consideration of _
the local programs, for aid
to the Russian emigres set-
tling in this area and the to-
tality of the local program,
with emphasis on the aged.
Announcing their di-
vision totals were Cam-
paign division chairmen
Emery Klein, Harry Sil-
verman, Earl Grant, Lester
Burton, Sol Colton, Dr.
Harris Mainster, Kenneth
Safran, David Levine and
Shelby Tauber.
All
records
for
attendance were broken
at the dinner meeting,
with more than 900 in
attendance and some 200
unable to secure reserva-
tions because the
capacity of the social hall
of Adat Shalom had been
exceeded far in advance
of the meeting date.
Dayan was introduced by
Paul Zuckerman, who with
his wife hosted Mrs. Dayan
who arrived in Detroit be-
fore her husband.
Dayan told the audience
that he had met earlier
Wednesday with Secretary
of State Cyrus Vance, and
then with President Carter,
Vice President Walter
Mondale and national secu-
rity adviser Zbigniew
Brzezinski.
He told the audience and
television reporters that the



March 1 UN Security Coun-
cil resolution condemning
Israel's settlements in
"occupied Arab territory —
and Jerusalem — was a
scandal, a shame. This
means that we must dis-
mantle the Jewish Quarter
in Old Jerusalem which was
destroyed by the Arab
Legion in 1948, and by the
Roman Legion 3,000 years
before.
"The Arabs controlled
Old Jerusalem, the West
Bank and Gaza from 1948
until 1967," Dayan re-
minded the audience.
"They did not form a
Palestinian state then.
They did not resettle the
Palestinian refugees.
They did not declare
Jerusalem as their capi-
tal. In 3,000 years, only
the Jews have consid-
ered Jerusalem as their
capital."
He said the United Na-
tions Security Council can-
not re-write the Bible, nor
change Jewish prayers or
history. "I ask your people
(the U.S.), what city do you
want us to have as our capi-
tal? Can there,_be any one
other than Jerusalem?"
Dayan said Anwar Sadat
prepared Egypt for seven
years to destroy Israel, and
only became an advocate of
peace when he found Is-
rael's forces within 100
kilometers of Cairo on the
west side of the Suez Canal.
"Sadat had to learn this les-
son, and we had to pay de-
arly for this lesson," Dayan
said.
He added that the Middle
East is not a political issue
for Israel. "This is our life,"
he said. "Not one European
country would allow the
U.S. to refuel its airlift (at
their airports) during the
Yom Kippur War. We have
to remember these things
when we talk about our fu-
ture."
Dayan repeated re-
marks that he has made
in New York and other
cities during his current
U.S. visit: he favors Is-
raeli settlements on the
West Bank, despite the
fact that he voted against
specific settlements near
Nablus and a Jewish
presence in Hebron. The
Conference of Jewish Ac-
tivists passed out flyers
before the dinner critical
of Dayan's view and ad-
vocating Israeli annexa-
tion of Judea, Samaria,
the Gaza Strip, the Golan
Heights and East
Jerusalem as an historic
right.
Dayan said that Israel
must have settlements on
the West Bank because
without them Israel could
not have a military
presence there. He said Is-
rael must always have mili-
tary forces and an early
warning network along the
Jordan River. "Without set-
tlements and a military
presence," he said, "the
West Bank will become a

Palestinian state to be used
as a springboard to destroy
Israel." But he said Israel
must be selective in placing
these settlements.
He said the historic im-
portance of the Camp David
accords was emphasis on
negotiations with Jordan as
Israel's eastern neighbor.
"It does not call for a Pales-
tinian state as our neighbor.
It does away with the Ro-
gers Plan of returning ter-
ritories. It says Israel's
neighbor is Jordan, and we
will negotiate with Jordan
while we are on the Jordan

River."
Dayan also approved of
the Camp David impetus for
shifting Egypt's military
dependance from the Soviet
Union to the U.S.

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