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May 09, 1980 - Image 10

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1980-05-09

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

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

10 Friday, May 9, 1980

Israel Resisting Hebron Massacre Diplomatic Crisis

Advice is seldom wel-
come. Those who need it
most, like it least.

(Continued from Page 1)
was planned and carried
out by local Arabs be-
cause local cigarettes
and other paraphernalia
were found at the scene.
The victims were among a
group of 24 worshippers
who had attended Friday
evening services at the
Machpela Cave in Hebron,
site of the Patriarch's Tomb,
a shrine sacred to Jews and
Moslems.
Many were residents of
Kiryat Arba or of Bnei

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Brak, a religious township
north of Tel Aviv. Among
them were students at the
Hesder Yeshiva in Kiryat
Arba where religious
studies are combined with
military training.
It had long been their
habit, after Friday evening
services, to celebrate the
kidush in what was at one
time the Hadassah clinic in
Hebron where Orthodox
women and children from
Kiryat Arba took possession
about a year ago in order to
assert a Jewish "presence"
in the town where no Jewish
community has existed
since the Arab uprising in
1929.
Although they acted in
defiance of Military Gov-
ernment orders, the
squatters were protected
by Israeli soldiers and
supplied with food, water
and other necessities.
The weekly visits by the
young worshippers after
prayers were apparently
noted by the terrorists who
planned the ambush. They
concealed themselves with
their weapons on the roofs of
a line of one-story shops op-
posite the clinic and waited
for the victims.
When the group passed
beneath them, they opened
fire with submachineguns
and Kalachnikoy rifles.
They threw at least six hand
grenades and home-made
bOmbs. The latter failed to
explode and were picked up
later by Israeli sappers for
investigation.
Although all Knesset
political factions con-
demned the attack during

an acrimonious debate in
the Knesset, former Labor
minister and Chief-of-Staff
Haim Bar-Lev called the
weekly procession through
Hebron a provocation.
Tehiya members Moshe
Tamir and Geula Cohen
said by this logic the entire
Zionist movement was a
provocation.
Three of the six yeshiva
students who were killed
originally came from the
United States and
Canada. They were Zvi
Menahem Glatt, 21, of
New York; Eli Hazeev
(Wolf), 32, believed to be
from Chicago; and
Shmuel Marmelstein, 19,
of Montreal.
The other three who were
killed were Yaacov Zim-
merman, 19, Gershon
Klein, 21, and Hanan
Kroitheimer, 20, all of the
Hesder Yeshiva.
The Hebron outrage over- --
shadowed the weekly
Cabinet meeting on Sun-
day. As a body, the Cabinet
rejected criticism of Defense
Minister Ezer Weizman and
the defense establishment
as a whole for not prevent-
ing the terrorist attack but
some ministers individually
expressed strong dissatis-
faction with the security
policies adopted in the occu-
pied territories until now.
Premier Begin insisted
that the entire Cabinet
must bear responsibility for
the incident. He also
warned against hasty
measures in response to the
killings. A considered and
balanced policy "must be
adopted to enable coexis-

Reagan's Views on Israel
Commended by Max Fisher

Max M. Fisher pointed to
the positive attitude on Is-
rael by Ronald Reagan on
the occasion of his joining
the ranks of the leading con-
tender for the Republican
nomination for the
Presidency.
Fisher joins a number of
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Reagan's ranks, including
Senator Jacob Javits, Max-
well Rabb, Detroit Jewish
women's leader Jane Sher-
man and others.

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The Reagan ranks appar-
ently are growing in a
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munities.
Local leaders who have
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rael include Edward Levy
Jr. who is utilizing a March

tance with the Arabs and
the successful conclusion of
the autonomy talks, Begin
said.
Weizman took a similar
position. He told the
Cabinet that he accepted
responsibility for secu-
rity policy in the ter-
ritories.
But he warned that Israel
must not deviate from its
course toward an agree-
ment with Egypt on au-
tonomy. This, he said, was
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Weizman urged that the
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ing security interests. The
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24,1980, article by William
Safire, in the NYTimes,
under the title "Reagan on
Israel." This article, which
Levy is circulating, states:
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Israel as an obligation and a
burden for the U.S., and
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but for U.S. security in the
future.
"That consistent, hard-
line approach to alliances, it
seems to me, offers Israel's
supporters the main assur-
ance that Reagan would not
emulate Carter's post-
election performance."

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