THE 4liETROlt JEWISA . NEWSc Friday; August 21, 1931 23' Bnai Brith Report Analyzes the Situation of Latin Jewry JERUSALEM (JTA) — Although disappearances of Jews and others have stop- ped, and terrorism of the right and left has been largely curtailed, Argen- tinq is haunted by both its past excesses and its pre- sent weaknesses, the Inter- national Council of Bnai Brith (ICBB) was told Tues- day. Warren Eisenberg, direc- tor of the council, said that the current military gov- ernment of Gen. Roberto _.la is seeking a "middle und" as it struggles for survival. Eisenberg visited Argen- tina and several other , South American countries last spring, meeting with Bnai Brith and other Jewish community leaders, members of the "grass roots," journalists, human rights activists and gov- ernment officials. Eisenberg reported that conditions have sub- stantially improved over the mid-1970s and that there was "a definite mood among many Jews that past excesses must be buried." They feared that continued rehashing "will undo any chance of strengthening the new government" of President Viola who, they believed, is their best hope of containing anti-Jewish behavior. lip The Jewish community's chief concern is for an im- proved economy, Eisenberg reported. "There is incipient fear . . . that a decline in the economy will result in scapegoating of the Jewish community," he declared. Eisenberg stated that un- like Americans, who seek compromise as a means of resolving issues, Argenti- nians cling to their exces- sive views, which fre- quently results in a collision of forces and a search for someone to blame. Viola is viewed "as a crea- ture of the three-man junta which is beholden to other military who are ultimately controlled by lower-ranking forces, including Nazi ex- tremists and other anti- Semites," Eisenberg re- ported. Nevertheless, most Argentinians want Viola to succeed, fearing "more re- pressive measures in the name of quelling opposition or criticism" of the govern- ment, he added. Eisenberg said that Argentine Jews protest anti-Semitic acts, "but their isolation makes it difficult for them to be ef. fective without help from the outside," he declared. "On the surface, the situ- ation is far quieter than the stormy debate inside the United States suggests. American must remember that the U.S. has limited leverage on Argentina, and what they have should be used ef- fectively." On the other hand, he noted, "ignoring the lever- age we have will send the wrong message to Argen- tina." In other nations he vis- ited — Brazil, Chile and Uruguay = Eisenberg said anti-Semitism, if not dead, is not flagrant. He reported that the basic dilemma for Brazil's 170,000 Jews "is the degree of discomfort they feel in a society which has, historically not evinced strong signs of anti- Semitism." Nevertheless, there is "a general atmos- phere or uneasiness and disquieting which has grown out of instability in the country's economy and political structure." The major problem facing the 35,000 Jews of Chile is complacency, Eisenberg said. The Jewish commu- nity lives comfortably and is "deeply immersed" in all aspects of Chilean life. The result is apathy, and accord- ing to the organized Jewish community there are less than 20,000 people who identify themselves as Jews and participate in Jewish communal affairs. In Uruguay, where the Jewish population is Archbishop Promotes PLO Cause By MORTON ROSENTHAL Director, Latin American Affairs Department Anti-Defamation League of Bnai Brith (Copyright 1981, JTA, Inc.) The black-robed priest was a featured speaker in Buenos Aires at ceremonies last November, marking the International Day of Solidarity with the Palesti- nian people. With his long full beard, he has become a ubiquitous and controver- sial personality. In Iran he visited American hostages and subsequently retrieved the bodies of American soldiers killed in the aborted rescue mission. He publicly embraced Yasir Arafat, chief of the Palestinian Liberation Organization, in Spain and subsequently went to Syria to accept honorary member- ship in the PLO's Palestine National Council. Some South American Arab communities have de- nounced him as "an active member of the Palestine guerrillas." his priest, Hilarion ucci, first came to inter- national prominence in 1974, when Israeli security forces detained him for smuggling arms for Arab terrorists. He was sen- tenced to 12 years in prison. Israel rejected re- peated demands from various quarters that Capucci be released. In January 1975, in reply to a Syrian complaint Israel sent a letter to United Na- tions Secretary General Kurt Waldheim stating that Capucci, "having been caught red-handed tflagrante delicto' admit- ted his misdeeds and was properly and lawfully convicted and sentenced after due process of law." However, in November, 1977, Israel relented and responded favorably to a Papal appeal for cle- mency on humanitarian grounds. During the past three years, the government of Israel has had ample reason to wonder whether it had erred in releasing him. On various occasions it regis- tered official protests that Capucci's activities violated terms of the agreement for his release. On Dec. 19, 1977, Cardi- nal Paul Phillippe an- nounced that Capucci had been appointed, by the Sac- red Congregation for Churches of the Eastern Rite, as Visitor of the Faith- ful of the Melkite Byzantine Rite in Venezuela, Colom- bia, Mexico and Argentina, where some 50,000 adhe- rents of the Melkite Church live. Capucci declared that he would visit those coun- tries as a representative of Pope Paul VI, with Ven- ezuela the first country on his Latin American tour. In January 1979, the Caracas daily, "El Univer- sal," reported that his pur- poses would be "strictly religious and spiritual," but at a press conference in Caracas two days later, Capucci announced that part of his mission was to persuade the president of Venezuela to permit the opening of a PLO office. In April, Capucci went to Argentina where the press reported that his visit "has divided the wealthy and numerous Arab community in Argentina, bringing to light differences between Christians and Mos- lems." The Moslem Arabs hailed Capucci as a de- fender of Palestinian interests, but Christian Arabs, through the East- ern Catholic Association, publicly criticized his visit as "fomenting sub- version and disturbing the peace . . . a slap in the face to the spiritual values and morals of the Argentine people." The association caustically observed that "the Papal Nuncio keeps a prudent silence." Many adherents of the Melkite Church in Latin America agree that there is a need to curb the activities of Archbishop Capucci who is sometimes referred to as "The Archbishop of Ter- rorism." They also agree . with Archbishop Joseph Raya, the spiritual head of the Melkite Church in Is- rael at the time of Capucci's conviction, who said, "It is the duty of every clergyman to bring peace to his own community and to the world as a whole. If there are those that hide behind their cloth to aid murderers, their place is not in the Christian Church.", 50,000 out of a total popu- lation of three million, the suspension of many tra- ditional liberties by a military dictatorship has brought unease, Eisen- berg said. 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