c 0 .lefelegYfitia(Ipkke4tritti• - i • . BO Friday, October 73, 1581 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Vienna Synagogue Bombing Unites Austrian Jewish Community By BEN FRANK NEW YORK (JTA) — "'That closed up feeling of the ghetto; the walls, the concentration camp, the shootings, the blood on the side walks — it was a feel- ing that we were back in the war. - This is how Leon Zelman, a leader of the Vienna Jewish community, de- scribed his feelings when two terrorists attacked the synagogue in Vienna Aug. 29 and left two people dead, 18 wounded and psychologi- cal scars that will take some time to heal. Zelman was in the synagogue on that Saturday along with some 250 other people celebrating a Bar Mitzva. I had visited the Jewish community in Vie- nna only a month before the tragic event. During my visit, he and the people I met were at ease. Now, as one would expect, anxiety was evi- dent in Zelman's voice. He stressed that the Jewish community did not panic when the ter- rorists staged their as- sault, but began to mobilize their resources. "We held a large de- monstration in the square around the corner from the synagogue in central Vienna," Zelman said. Many Jews and non-Jews attended the funeral service of the two persons who had been murdered in front of the synagogue, Ulrike Kohut, 25, and Lotan Fried, 68. Present at the service, Zelman recalled, were the Austrian Vice Chancellor, the Minister of Foreign Af- fairs, the Minister of In terior and members of the clergy. The synagogue bombing will have a lasting effect on this small Jewish commun- ity which numbers between 8,000-10,000, many of whom are elderly. Many of the buildings which house Israeli and Jewish institu- tions had been under sec- urity to avert terrorist as- saults. Now, security is being tightened even further — a daily reminder of vulnerability to attack by terrorists. In its own way, the ter- rorist attack on the synagogue will probably help unite the community in its resolve to go on, de- spite its small population— and its memories. The community has, survived because it maintained its Jewish identity and cohe- sion through all the tragic times, because of the rela- tive freedom which Jews have had in Austrian soci- ety and because they have been able to become integ- rated economically and pro- fessionally and contributed to Austria's economy, poli- tics, the arts and sciences. Everyone lives with the memories in Vienna. It is, after all, a city in which one inhales culture and nostalgia. To be in Vie- nna and to visit the Jewish community of about 8,000 to 10.000 is to Bar-Ilan Archeologists Find Storehouses, Jugs at Shilo RAMAT GAN — An ar- cheological team of 60 per- sons from Bar-Ban Univer- sity, digging at Shilo, have confirmed that the site was destroyed in a fierce fire, probably by the Philistines. According to Israel Finkels- tein, who headed the exca- vation, many artifacts re- mained in the ruins as the population fled. The dig turned up important data relating to the early Israel- ite architecture and process of settlement in the Holy Land. Among the finds were 20 huge storage jugs, each over thre •-feet high, and a large ant. rare seal showing two hr.: ned animals. The seal wa, discovered in the ,tratum relating to the early Israelite period. Shilo was the religious and political center of the tribes of Israel during the time of Joshua and the Judges. The Tabernacle and the Arc of the Covenant were at first based there until transferred to Jerusalem. Shilo was cap- tured by the Philistines as a consequence of the defeat of Israel at the Battle of Eben-ezer (Samuel 1:4) and abandoned for a short time. It was at Shilo that the Land of Israel was di- vided among the tribes and the Levites assigned their cities. It reached the peak of its development at the time of the Priest Eli and the Prophet Samuel who was there as a boy. During the Israel- ite monarchy it was still occupied. It was men- tioned in Roman- Byzantine sources, as well as in Jewish writ- ings. The archeologists from Bar-Ilan found a whole sec- tion of buildings with rows of pillars of uniform layout. The large storage jugs indi- cate that they were public buildings, perhaps storehouses, and may have been part of the religious, political and administrative center of Shilo. Austrian Jewish youths participate in a religious ceremony in Vienna's main synagogue. The building, which was bombed by terrorists in August, was dedi- cated in 1826. confront the past, enjoy the present and plot the future. Zelman has done all three. He survived the Holocaust, he helped the Jewish community stay alive, and he is convinced that it will continue as a vital and viable entity. Zelman has a theory about the Jews of Vienna which may be extended to other Jewish communities in Europe. He believes that there are Jews who say that after World War II Jews should have abandoned Europe completely — sim- ply left for good. Jews arrived in this European metropolis at the beginning of the 10th Cen- tury and, except for a brief period, have resided in this city of symphonies, operas, romantic Baroque buildings and sweeping green parks. Jews overcame social obstacles and were very much a part of Austria which until 1918 ruled much of Europe. Many Jews who became world famous much of Europe. Many Jews who became world famous were born in Austria: Sigmund Freud, Theodor Herzl, Alfred Adler and Gustav Mahler are examples. Vienna is a geo-political city. It was and still is at the crossroads of Europe. Here, East meets West. One feels it in the monuments, one sees it in the faces of the tourists from many lands; one realizes immediately that three Communist countries (Czechoslovakia, Hungary and Yugoslavia) border on Austria. Vienna, moreover, hosts the world. That is why tourists flock here. There are no airs and pretenses. And Austria is even becom- ing more of a popular desti- nation for Israelis on vaca- tion. There are about a dozen houses of worship (batei midrash) in Vienna; a Jewish elementary school, and a very active Lubavitch group. There were some 180,000 Jews in the city be- fore World War II, but very few survived the Holocaust. The history of Austrian Jewry is spotlighted by three popular sights; the Documentation Center directed by Simon Wie- senthal, the Max Berger Collection ofJudaica and the Sigmund Freud Museum. But there are many other sights and manifestations of Judaism in the city. The big debate in Vienna is whether the Jewish com- Austria or elsewhere, munity is viable or not. De- students do respond and spite disclosure by some .demonstrate support for that the community is not Israel, Soviet . Jews and one of the world's most Syrian Jews. Jewishly involved, hope is This is a close-knit com- expressed by many that munity. Everyone knows with encouragement, everyone else and the very Jewish life will continue to small nucleus is what keeps 'thrive. What is encouraging it alive. There is no doubt to a visitor is that a few of that the Jewish community the present Jewish com- is involved in the cultural munity leaders want to and economic life of the keep things humming. - country: They live a "nice life," is the best description For example, Michal Katz, president of the of Jews in Austria. Jewish Student Union, and And why not? Whether it Ben Segenrich, a student is the result of the relaxed leader, said that there are nature of the Viennese, 800 members in the union political direction, the for- between the ages of 18 and tunes of history or a combi- 35. nation of all three, Vienna emerges as a truly livable, One popular activity is urban cosmopolitan place. the weekly get together for Israeli folk dancing. The The best way to 'begin a students also often gather visit to Vienna is to stop at for parties. While fewer at- the Jewish Welcome Ser- tend lectures on Jewish and vice; it will begin an experi- Israeli-related topics, there ence with the past, present are some educational prog- and future in a country still rams which do draw a great deeply involved with the Many students. world and a Jewish com- And when there is a munity which intends to crisis . in Jewish life in stay alive. Recent Events Promote Feelings of Doubt Among European Jews By ARNO HERZBERG ZURICH (JTA) — A sense of uncertainty and doubt is pervasive in Europe. There is a feeling that events are slowly, but surely, slipping out of control and that Europe is in for hard times. If the numerous surveys are correct, the public, in al- most every country on the continent, is wary of the fu- ture which appears to be bleak and foreboding. Recent events which have shaken Europe have sent tremors through Zurich which is in the heart of Europe. Aside from local riots by restless youths, and even terrorist bombings here, Zurich and other cities and placid Alpine villages are keenly aware of the events elsewhere in Europe that border close to anar- chy: riots, terrorist bomb- ings, social unrest and polit- ical tensions and ethnic strife from Amsterdam to Liverpool, from West Berlin to Hamburg, from Rome to Bologna, from Paris to An- kara, from Vienna to Athens. Out of the welter of these developments is a growing concern over the safety and future of Jewish communities in many of these cities. In the past year Jewish and Israeli lives and proper- ties have been targeted by terrorists, as at the Copernic synagogue in Paris, the El Al office in Rome, the synagogue in Vienna, the Israel Consu- late in Athens and the Is- rael Embassy in Vienna. But terrorism has also struck the general public as well. If it were not so tragic, Jews could point to the fact that the general public in Europe is now reaping the harvest of terrorism against Israel. The fact is that it was Israel and the Jewish people that were the first to experi- ence acts of terrorism, bombings, kidnappings and murder by "freedom fight- ers" financed by Arab pet- rodollars. - Year after year the West- ern world kept quiet, paid ransom and opened prison doors through which ter- rorists escaped their just punishments and then re- grouped and rearmed them- selves to continue their wanton acts. 1930s. The consequences will be the same: surren- der is organized murder. Nobody could appease Hitler and nobody can appease the PLO. In the 1930s there were many who counselled that Hitler was not really that bad, just the people around him. Today, there are those who counsel that Yasir Arafat is not that bad, just the people around him. But this is wrong in theory and tragic in practice. There is no way of know- ing how much Arab money is hidden away in the bank vaults of Switzerland. But it is known, albeit in general and abstract terms, that while Europe is groping for an answer to Arab ter- rorism and trying to calcu- late the cost in terms of loss of lives and property, a transfer of riches is taking place that. can hardly be comprehended by anyone who is not a student of in- ternational economics. The peace-loving and un- concerned spectators of-the "game of death" that took so many Israeli and Jewish lives have now become vic- tims of the same criminals who envelop their bullets and bombs in politically de- ceptive phrases as "freedom fighters" even as the free- dom of innocent people is blown apart. The terrorists, regardless of the names Given this massive they give to their organiza- wealth, Arabs are in a posi- tions, were taught by the tion to finance well-oiled Palestine Liberation Or- propaganda campaigns ganization how to kill, how against '"Zionist im- to terrorize, how to cover murder with the mantle of perialism" and "Zionist ter- ror" and "Israel brutality patriotism and how to issue and bombings" of "innocent the cry for "justice" as a jus- people." tification for indiscriminate killing. But the genuinely inno- European politicians are cent people — Israeli men, at a loss as to how to cope `women and children in with these nefarious de- cities, on kibutzim and velopments. They do not moshavim, and Israelis, know how to meet the Jews and non-Jews in threat to the basic freedom Europe — are hitrd pressed of their citizenry. If a politi- to answer these 'slick prop- cian seeks to apply the full aganda campaigns. And so resources of the state — much of Europe views the against terrorism, he is at- victims as the aggressors tacked by the appeasers. •and the aggressors as the victims. This is truly a • Appeasement has be- modern-day version of Alice come fashionable once in Wonderland. again, as it was in the