THE JEWISH NEWS LISPS 275 520) Incorporating The Detroit Jewish Chronicle commencing with the issue of July 20, 1951 Member of American Association of English-Jewish Newspapers and National Editorial Association and Affiliate Member of National Newspaper Association and Capital Club,. Published every Friday by The Jewish News Publishing Co., 17515 W. Nine Mile, Suite 865, Southfield, Mich. 48075 Postmaster: Send address changes to The Jewish News,'17515 W. Nine Mile, Suite 865, Southfield, Mich. 48075 Second-Class Postage Paid at Southfield, Michigan and Additional Mailing Offices. Subscription $15 a year. CARMI M. SLOMOVITZ Business Manager PHILIP SLOMOVITZ Editor and Publisher ALAN HITSKY News Editor. HEIDI PRESS Associate News Editor DREW LIEBERWITZ Advertising Manager Sabbath Scriptural SelectiOns This Sabbath, the fifth day of Tevet, 5741, the following scriptural selections will be read in our synagogues: Pentateachal portion, Genesis 44:1847:27. Prophetical portion, Ezekiel 37:15-28. Wednesday, Fast of' the Tenth Day of Tevet Candle lighting, Friday;, Dec. 12, 4:43 p.m. VOL. LXXVIII, No. 15 Page Four Friday, Dec. 12, 1980 COVENANTS OF HATE Gathering poisonous moss, like a rolling, stone, the hate-mongering of the PLO is gaining momentum. Even in the traditionally most- liberal ranks, there is a yielding to the advo- cates of Israel's destruction. They have gone to Madrid, to the conference analyzing the Helsinki accords, with pressure for giving a voice to the terrorists in matters relating to human rights, and only the voice of the U.S. has barred that attempt. Whether it is the petro-dollar or the mere aim to crush Israel, the PLO has gained ground. King Hussein of Jordan, himself in a vise, al- ways seeks self-rescue by constantly reverting to the attack on Israel, his continuing declara- tion being that the PLO is the voice of the Arabs. This is how the Middle East struggles always revolve. Out of chaos there is the developing unity that is always achieved by means of sol- idifying Arab forces in the war on Israel. That's why the cry of "Jihad" reverberates whenever there is mention of Israel or Jews to the Arabs. Because of this growing menace, the decline in political and social morality and in the human rights obligations among the nations of the world, the menacing conditions keep threatening Israel. There is always the scapegoat, and in the current situation he is the prime minister of Israel. It has becomes° easy to single out a man for attack as means of justify- ing barbarities and threats to the very existence of a nation. To the menace spelled PLO is appended not only the support from hitherto democratically- judged nations but the especially-shocking role of the United Nations. The issuance of official PLO postage stamps by the UN, the domination there of anti-Israel blocs, combine to undermine Israel's position and the hopes of world Jewry and Israel's Christian friends for an assured Israeli security. _ _• It is the weakening of pro-Israel forces and the danger of a divisiveness in Jewish and gen- erally pro-Israel ranks that must be a cause of concern. The old and repeated cry for solidarity in pro- Israel ranks must be emphasized anew. The danger to Israel's existence is too menacing. Whatever the language of those speaking in terms of justice for Palestinians, the truth must be revealed regarding the fallacies of such con- tentions. There is an honorable element in Israel's ranks that approves of Palestianian rule, per- haps also of a new Palestinian government to be added to the 21 Arab states now menacing Is- rael, Egypt being the only exception. Chief among them is Arie Eliav, who had held impor- tant Israel government positions, who was in the Israel embassy in Russia when there were good relations between the two countries. He had great popularity, and gained the nickname "Liova." Eliav is an extreme advocate of grant- ing Arabs rights that are considered dangerous to Israel's existence. His case is analyzed in an article in Midstream magazine by Benno Weiser Baron, entitled "Fight the Brainwash," in which he exposes false claims in support of a Palestinian myth: "I listened last spring to a speech by Arie (Liova) Eliav, a man of so many Zionist and Israeli a.edentials that he commands my re- spect, even if I can't share some of his views. He is one of the first and foremost Israeli doves. I could even applaud his speech, because his analysis of why we should strive for peace with the Palestinians made sense. Yet more than the speech, I liked the man. We had lunch together. I said: Peace now is certainly better than peace later, or no peace at all. But do you know any Palestinian who is ready for peace now?' Eliav gave me one name of a 'PLO moderate,' one Issa Alfatawi. I learned later that Alfatawi had re- ceived together with Eliav a Peace Medal' from that great friend and benefactor of Israel, Au- stria's Chancellor Bruno Kreisky. "A few days later somebody read me over the telephone a statement by Issa Alfatawi. In it, Alfatawi indeed said that he would settle for a Palestinian state on the West Bank and in Gala, which makes him a PLO moderate.' But, he added, `of course, all the Palestinians who left what today is Israel will have to be allowed to return to their original homes.' All the Pales- tinians who left means every IWestinian with exception of those who remained in Israel pro- per, on the West Bank, and the original inhabi , tants of the Gaza Strip, and it means, of course, also their children and children's children. "To how many of the estimated four million Palestinians in existence can this apply? Two million? Two and one-half million? The most impressive argument Eliav had made in his speech againSt holding onto the West Bank and Gaza was that this would add 1,300,000 Arabs to the 600,000 who are Israeli citizens and that, combined, they would outbreed within a short time Israel's Jews and by the non-violent proc- ess of democratic elections change the Jewish character of the Jewish state. If the injection of some two million or more Arabs into what would remain of Israel after the surrender of the territories' is the idea of a 'PLO moderate' — what should we have to fear from the PLO fanatics? At that lunch meeting I also mentioned to Eliav that he had participated in October, 1979, in a conference in Washington organized by the MAPAM publication New Outlook, which turned in to a meeting-ground for Israel haters of every ilk, including Alfred Liliental of the Council for Judaism fame and I. F. Stone. 1. F. Stone an enemy?' exclaimed Eliay. He wrote the most heart-rending articles about Aliya Bet and the end of the British Mandate.' This was in 1946, 1947, 1948. Eliav had either not kept up with the changes which three decades have pro- duced in Stone, or he deliberately ignored them." What else needs to be said as an admonition against splitting the Jewish ranks? Is more evi- dence needed? If the menace of the PLO is to be averted even in the slightest, if Israel's isolation is to be re- duced if not totally prevented, there must be unity in Jewish ranks. Solidarity is an obliga- tion. - • Published by Herzl Press `Zionism in Transition Defines Many Challenges ' "Zionism in Transition" (Herzl Press) is a most definitive work. It gives new strength to the historic and libertarian movement in the views of the leading ideologists of the movement and it-serves as a most valuable guide for Jewish communities everywhere in the cur- rent aim to solidify Jewish thinking and devotion to the movement that gave birth to the,state of Israel. Edited by Dr. Moshe Davis, the list of essayists in this volume is a verita- Atf m- ble Who's Who in modern Jewish thought and leadership. The foreword by former President Ephraim Katzir of Israel adds significantly to the de- finitive in the valuable volume. So impressive are the contents, of this important work that two.excerpts from the introductory comments by Dr. Davis an d Dr: Katzir are of special merit: "Zionism should be understood not only as the movement for the Return of the Jewish People in its Homeland in Eretz Israel, but also as that creative historical process which intensifies the content of Jewish life everywhere." MOSHE DAVIS —Moshe Davis In this 20th Century we have reached the point where scientific technology can make far-reaching changes in human life. It is allthe more important, then, that technology be directed by moral values. Here is the new challenge for Zionist planning .. . "It seems to me that the great intellectual potential of the Dias- pora in cooperation with Israel's own capacity can go far towards making Israel a pilot plant for the 21st Century, a pilot plant created by the combination of science and Jewish values." —Ephraim Katzir The thoroughness with which the Zionist ideal is treated in the light of current experiences and in evaluating the roots of the move- ment becomes evident in the totality of aspects covered in the imy tant essays. The authors deal with aliya and with the social probleL with the economics and the Arab-Jewish issues. The fact that "achievements and problems" are studied by such personalities in the movement as Charlotte Jacobson, Ben Halperin, Alfred Gottschalk, Dr. Emanuel Rackman, Mordecai Waxman and others is an indication of the authoritativeness of the approaches to the basic issues. Many of the challenges are touched upon. Noteworthy is the essay "Renewing the Zionist Vision" by the former Detroiter, Prof. Daniel Elazar. The list of authors attests to the importance of this noteworthy achievement treating Zionism in all its aspects. The authors of the essays include Yehuda Nini, Yehuda Bauer, Arye Leon Dulzin, David Polish, Nathan Rottenstreich, Avraham Shenker, Isadore Twersky and a score of others. They represent all the parties in Zionism and spokesman from many communities, giving the volume a global interest. ztah, ?: _