- Friday, August 15, 1980 25 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Zionism Listed as World Evil in Plan of UN Decade for Women's Conference COPENHAGEN (JTA) — The world conference of the United Nations Decade for Women ended here with an overwhelming 94-4 vote for a 186-point "plan of action" which included a paragraph that listed Zionism as one of the world's main evils, long with colonialism and partheid. There were 22 absten- tions, mostly by Western European countries. . The United States, Canada, Israel and Au- stralia voted against the document because of the anti-Zionist statement. Sarah Weddington (Mrs. Philip Power of Ann Arbor), head of the U.S. delegation, declared after the vote that "the conference was sub- verted from focussing on women's real issues by the political polemics of the Middle East crisis." The final document also contained a proviso that all UN funds for Palestinian women refu- gees be channeled through the Palestine Liberation Organization, a singular victory for the PLO. The paragraph, which in effect declared Zionism to be racist and colonialist, was submitted by Cuba when the conference opened as an amendment to the "plan of action." The anti-Israel mood of the gathering was further manifested by its extension of official recognition to the PLO delegation, headed by airline hijacker Leila Khaled. The PLO prev- iously had only observer status. The conference, attended by 1,200 delegates repre- senting 136 of the 152 member states of the UN, was heavily weighted in favor of the Arabs because of the preponderance of Moslem, Third World, non- aligned and Soviet-bloc na- tions. Each country had a single vote. Nevertheless, the U.S. appealed to the confer- ence to show a spirit of moderation and com- promise when discussing resolutions, amendments d political proposals. (In Washington, Bnai Brith International called n Congress to block U.S. to any UN agencies that fund opera- tions of the PLO.) But that was not the case. The anti-Israel, pro-Third World tenor of the confer- ence continued, as described in the following reports. The day after Arab ter- rorist grenades killed one Jewish 15-year-old boy and injured 20 other persons in Antwerp, Belgium, Ovadiah Safer, a member of the Israeli delegation to the UN Decade for Women Conference, requested the floor at one of the plenary sessions. Complying with a rule that such requests be sec- onded by another nation, the United States eagerly volunteered its support. In- stead of giving the floor to the Israeli delegate, the ses- sion chairman promptly ad- journed the meeting. Esther Landa, a member of the official U.S. delegation to the conference and a past president of the National Council of Jewish Women, said that "the really evil thing is that this is the second time a women's conference has been used for (anti- Zionist) purposes" and has been followed by an anti-Zionist vote from the UN General Assembly. The first time a UN women's conference suf- fered such politicization was at the beginning of the UN Decade for Women in 1975, in Mexico City. That conference was followed by a UN General Assembly vote equating Zionism with racism. The second such vote was this past July 29 when a resolution was passed cal- ling for Israel to withdraw from all the occupied ter- ritories, including Jerusalem. Not only Israel, but all democratic countries were subjected to bias in Copenhagen, Landa said. Within the parameters of U.S. foreign policy, the official delegation mem- bers tried to thwart the virulent anti-Israel at- tacks. She added that de- spite U.S. efforts on be- half of a "strong defense of Israel" it was "rather difficult to get the floor because chairs of the ses- sions were not too recep- tive to interruptions from the U.S. or other demo- cratic countries." "Once the conference was politicized it was unrealistic to expect any results differ- ing from those in New York (at the UN). The American Jewish community was naive because • we thought that by exerting pressure on the U.S. government to de- politicize the conference that we could accomplish that," Landa said. But the cold facts are "we do not have the votes. The other side in the UN accom- plished their goals because they have the votes and Is- rael is the object of all their animosity and hatred," she observed. Bernice Tannenbaum, president of Hadassah, who represented the World Jewish Congress as a non- governmental organization with consultative status at the conference, echoes the sentiments of Mrs. Landa. "I was appalled by the bias of those in the chair, the secretariat, the United Nations special agencies, and by the lack of ordinary proper procedures," she said. I came (to the confer- ence) hoping that it would not be politicized and we would talk about world issues," but "the PLO was there in full force, they busted up whatever meeting they were not happy with" and "ostentatiously walked out in droves" whenever a member of the Israeli delegation spoke, continued Tan- nenbaum. Jihan Sadat, wife of the Egyptian president, had several private meetings with Chava Hareli, Israel's ambassador to Norway, ac- cording to Tannenbaum. "The Egyptians were warm and proper until Mrs. Sadat left" at which time they kept "a low profile," she said. Despite Mrs. Sadat's words on behalf of Israel, the official Egyptian dele- gation was directed to vote for adoption of the final "Plan of Action" with its condemnation of Israel. Amid all the isolation, Tannenbaum reported, "the Danish community was stalwart, both Jews, and non-Jews." Danes equate anti- Israel sentiment with anti-Semitism, a phe- nomenon with which they are not familiar, Tannenbaum observed. To counter pro-PLO propaganda, about 100 Danes, Jews and non- Jews, demonstrated in front of the building housing the conference wearing yellow Stars of David on their arms, car- rying Danish and Israeli flags, and singing Hatikva, Israel's national anthem. Within minutes they were joined by other conference delegates singing Israeli songs. Frieda Leemon, national president of Pioneer Women, said she "felt threatened and isolated" as a Jewish participant at the world conference. Leemon, who attended the three-week open forum at Copenhagen University which paralleled the main conference, said she ex- pected anti-Israel prop- aganda to come out of the conference when she chose to go as Pioneer Women's representative. But what she never ex- pected, Leemon said with some anger during an interview with the Jewish Telegraphic Agency, was the widespread influence of the Palestine Liberation Organization borne out in the proceedings. "What I didn't know was the amount of strength that the PLO had gained in the world," Leemon said. She added that many Jews in the forum section wanted to talk with Arab women, only to be told by a PLO representative: "To you we will talk with weapons; to the rest of the world we'llk talk with words." Third World, Communist and PLO representatives at the forum, which 8,000 per- sons attended, expressed fierce anti-Jewish senti- ADL Intervenes in Worker's Case ment, Leemon noted. There was "a very well-organized coalition of anti-white, anti-American and anti- Israel" representatives, and she said the frequent walk- outs and anti-Jewish public statements may have been organized in advance. "No- body wanted to listen," she said of the pro-PLO dele- gates. "They came there with preconceived notions." Two JWV Conventions WASHINGTON — The Jewish War Veterans of the U.S.A. will hold their 85th national convention in New Orleans, Wednesday through Aug. 24. JWV's National Ladies Auxiliary will hold their 53rd annual meeting, also at the Fairmont Hotel in New Orleans, beginning Sunday. Speakers at the JWV ses- sions will include former Is- raeli Prime Minister Yit- zhak Rabin; Morris Amitay, executive director of the America Israel Public Af- fairs Committee; and Max Cleland, head of the Vete- rans Administration. Major speakers at the Auxiliary's convention will include Dr. Moshe Modi, deputy director of the Chaim Sheba Medical Cen- ter in Israel; and June Wakeford, deputy executive director of the President's Committee for Employment of the Handicapped. A major theme of the aux- iliary will be the Interna- tional Year for the Disabled Person. It is just as possible to convert Jews as it is to con- vert the devil. — Martin Luther NEW YORK — The Anti-Defamation League of Bnai Brith has asked a fed- eral appellate court to come to the aid of workers who are fired because of their religious pract'ces. ADL filed an "amici curiae" (friend-of-the-court) brief with the U.S. Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals urging it to uphold the con- stitutionality of an amend- ment of the 1964 Civil Rights Act. This requires employers to "reasonably accommodate" these prac- tices or observances if there is no "undue hardship" to the firm's business. The Ninth Circuit Court is considering an appeal from David Anderson, a member of the Seventh Day Adventist Church, who was fired by General Dynamics Corp. because he refused to join a union. A tenet of An- derson's church holds that its members should not be- long or contribute to unions. The brief was filed in con- junction with the National Jewish Commission on Law and Public Affairs. 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