W!,....11UOPPM*4 12 Friday, May 1, 1981 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Platoon's Kfar Etzion Struggle Part of Independence Day Lore By DVORA WAYSMAN World Zionist Press Service JERUSALEM — History is made up of incidents . . . some become immortalized and others — even acts of great valor — often become lost in the greater drama against which they were enacted. The broad sweep of history is better remem- bered than its apparently minor events. The story of The 35" is a story of great heroism, and it is well-known in Israel. However, to the rest of the world, it is a minor part of the overall struggle for the birth of the state of Israel, with details having become blurred with the years. • The story is linked to the struggle for the Etzion Bloc. Today it is a peaceful rural community 14 miles south of Jerusalem, situated be- tween Bethlehem and Heb- ron. At Kfar Etzion, families live and work, their daily lives tranquil and ful- filling. In 1948 the whole Etzion Bloc was under siege, subjected to Arab at- tacks, riots and massacres repeatedly, dating right back to 1929. In 1948, life in that area was a gruelling experi- ence. In winter, Kfar Etz- ion's slopes were covered with dank mist and the wind screeched. In sum- mer, a harsh sun parched the earth. There was no water. The land was cleared by hand, aided by four mules, and the top- soil terraced with stones to prevent the rain wash- ing it away. Nevertheless, four villages had been settled in the Etzion Bloc, with most members lute as it circled over their grave, set among bushes and cypress saplings. Most of the defenders of Kfar Etz- ion, men and women, were massacred by an Arab mob four months later, after having capitulated to the Arab Legion, which wiped out all traces of their Jewish villages. But in the Six-Day War, in June 1967, the Israel army recaptured the whole Bloc area. Kibutz NO' 'a Lamed Heh (The Pat. .ie 35) was founded in .1949 in memory of the valiant pla- toon. Kibutz Kfar Etzion was rebuilt by the religious kibutz movement and, in- cluded in the group now liv- ing and working there are children of the original settlers who gave their lives for the new state of Israel in 1948. able to get through the Arab lines unseen. The monument of remembrance in Jerusalem commemorating those who fell during Israel's War for Independence. working in afforestation when they were not de- fending their villages from Arab attack. Early in January, 1948, the whole Etzion Bloc was under siege, and the Hagana decided that the only way to assist them was to send a battalion of men by foot from Hartuv. Only 35 men could be spared, and it was believed that a small platoon might possibly be However, while crossing the Hebron hills they encountered large Arab gangs on whom they in- flicted heavy casualties be- fore being themselves wiped out in the face of over- whelming odds. After kil- ling the Jewish soldiers, the Arabs mutilated their bodies. A relief convoy to Kfar Etzion also suffered heavy losses. The bodies of the 35 mar- tyrs were buried in a com- mon grave at Kfar Etzion, the settlement they had been on their way to relieve. A shooting party paid trib- ute by firing three volleys over their grave and a small Aviron plane, which had dropped medical supplies to the settlement, dipped in sa- An Arab Golda Meir Stresses Political Causes and Women's Lib By CARL ALPERT HAIFA — Social worker, age 52, born in the Arab vil- lage of Kfar Yassif, mother of three grown sons; her grandfather was a Greek Orthodox priest, and her father a police officer under the British Mandate. These are the elementary facts in the life of Violet Khoury, but there is much more to the story of this remarkable woman. Ten years ago, Violet Khoury bucked the tradi- tional Arab political con- servatism, ran for Town Council in Kfar Yassif, and has been a member ever since. For two of those years she was mayor of the town, perhaps the only woman to serve as mayor of an Arab town in Israel or for that -matter anywhere in the Middle East. She has higher political ambitions. During a long personal interview in the Kfar Yassif council cham-_ hers, she told me she would like to become the first Arab woman member of the Knesset. The chances are slight, because in Israel's political system one has to work within the framework of an established political party, and Mrs. Khoury pre- fers to be politically inde- pender Shi .s a broad back- grou . As a graduate of the English Mission School in Haifa, she speaks near-perfect English. As a social worker who has for some years covered more than 40 Arab villages in the Galilee, on foot, by jeep or on horseback, she knows at first hand the prob- lems of Israel's Atabs. And as a woman, leading the fight for equal rights, she knows what it is to constant struggle for personal survival, each individual looks out for his own skin. But when personal survival is as- sured, and economic conditions are good;then there is time to be con- cerned with group survi- val. The inference was that the more Israel does for its Arab citizens, .the more it provides the at- mosphere in, which separatist nationalism and extremism flourish. Her view on the Jorda- nian option: Don't push it. CARL ALPERT - Even if a Palestinian state. struggle against prej- is established next door, it udices. will sooner or later be ab- Laughingly she told me sorbed into Jordan. that she feels herself to be a "If I were a Jew," she went minority within a minority on, "I would ask the next within a minority within a minority — an Israeli, Christian, Arab, woman! Of course Mrs. Khoury By DULCY LEIBLER has- views on Arab-Jewish World Zionist - political problems but she Press Service considers herself a moder- JERUSALEM — A young ate. She bemoans the trend man from Galicia was in- toward the extremism on spired by the founding of both sides, and would like to Petah Tikva, and wrote a work toward bridging the poem about his feelings. A gap between the two farmer from Rishon leZion peoples, who should live heard the poem in 1878. He side-by-side as friendly enjoyed it so much that he neighbors. promptly set it to music. She has words of high The song was originally praise for what Israel has called "Tikvatenu" (Our done for its Arab popula- Hope"), later to become tion, not least the elevation "HaTikva," the national an- of the status of the Arab them of the state of Israel, woman, and the general though never given official economic improvement in the lot of the Arab citizen. If status as such by the Knes- that is the case, we ask, why set. Naphtali Herz Imber was the recent upsurge of unrest and dissatisfaction among born in 1856 into a Hasidic Israel's Arabs? family. He received a tradi- She reminded me that tional education, and left for 50 years the Arabs home at an early age to here have lived under wander around the world. military rule — which While in Constantinople, he means oppression, no struck up a friendship with matter how benevolent. Laurence Oliphant, a So long as life means a Christian Zionist, and came prime minister of Israel to take an unconventional step. Just as Sadat was a great hero, braving the wrath of the entire Arab world by coming to Jerusalem and making peace with Israel, so Israel's leader should be a hero and sit down to talk with Yasir Arafat. Perhaps the two would find some common ground from which to make a start; if not, what has been lost? At least the effort has been made." I reminded her that- Arafat has sworn to destroy Israel; that his terrorists kill children in the Galilee, athletes in Munich, women in the market places; that the world is indebted to him for popularizing the hijack- ing ,of planes for political purposes. To this she replied that because of the Holocaust, Jews have a psychologi- cal fear of an enemy seek- ing to annihilate them. The Arabs, too, have a great fear of Israel's in- tentions, she said. She insists therd are many moderates among the Arabs; they are simply shouted down by the ex- tremists. When the Com- munist mayor of Nazareth recently addressed a meet- ing of Arab town mayors and launched an unbridled attack against Israel's policies he was heckled by Violet Khoury who accused him of "incitement" but she was in turn shouted down ' by others in the audience. She is not discouraged. They (Arab extremists) may even assassinate Arabs who do not agree with them, but she is not afraid, she told-, me. She wishes other Arab • women would join her in taking political initiatives' and is hopeful that as more and more of them receive an education, they may be pre- pared to assert themselves. .Behind her smiling brown-green eyes and her soft manner I sensed a strong woman, one who had successfully 'challenged the traditional hierarchy of her village, and was prepared to fight for greater causes as well. No wonder the Arabs call her the Golda of Kfar Yassif. : Petah Tikva Inspiration for Israeli Anthem with him to Palestine in 1882. - He served as Oliphant's secretary and adviser on Jewish affairs. Imber stayed in Palestine for some six years, during which time he wrote es- says and articles for He- brew periodicals, as well as several poems. "Tikvatenu," one of Im- ber's most popular poems, was first published in 1886, although it had initially been read in public as early as 1882 to a group of far- mers in Rishon le Zion who received it enthusiastically. Among them was Samuel Cohen, who originally hailed frpm Moldavia. He set the Poem to a melody based on a traditional Moldavian-Romanian folk song called Carul cu Boi (Cart and Oxen). Many changes were made in the original text of the poem over the years, and these have been traced through old song books, memoirs and the like. First of all, the title became "HaTikva," then some words were changed to suit contemporary opinion, and later' the old-fashioned Ashkenazi syllable stress was 'changed to the Sephardi stress, used in modern Hebrew today. NAPHTALI IMBER But whichever way it was sung, "HaTikva" was always inspiring. At the conclusion of the Sixth Zionist Congress in Basle in 1903 there was an enormously moving singing of "HaTikva" by all present. Since this was the last Congress presided over by Theodor Herzl, it is clear that Herzl did manage to hear "HaTikva" before his untimelyldeath in 1904. The anthem was sung at all subsequent Zionist Con- gresses but not until the 18th Congress, held in Prague in 1933, was it offi- cially confirmed as the Zionst anthem. By 'that time Imber had been dead for 24 years. He had left Palestine in 1888 to resume his world-wide wanderings. He was always poor and frequently in- volved with Christian mis- sionaries, so that even his close friends wondered if he had not converted to Chris- tianity in order to escape starvation. In 1892, the poet settled in America, where he was married for a brief time. He did some serious work in the U.S. His second volume of poetry appeared in 1900, he published a Hebrew trans- lation of the Rubbaiyait of Omar Khayyam and trans-' lated into English some his own poems and seve tracts on talmudic litera ture. • In spite of these intel- lectual achievements, he found it impossible to make a decent living, and in 1909, in New York City, he succumbed to a life of squalor, misery and alcoholism. His poem lived on, becom- ing the unofficial anthem of Jewish Palestine under the British Mandate. And, at the declaration of the state of Israel' on May 14, 1948, "HaTikva" was sung by the assembly at its opening ceremony.