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November 13, 1981 - Image 38

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1981-11-13

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

38 Friday, November 13, 1981

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Religious controversy
does only harm. It destroys
humble inquiry after truth,
and throws all the energies

into an attempt to prove
ourselves right— a spirit in
which no man gets at truth.
—F. W. Robertson

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Show 8 45pm
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Resnizky Rejects Timerman Charge He Was Forsaken

NEW YORK (JTA) —
Nehemia Resnizky, im-
mediate past president of
the DAIA, the central
agency for Argentine
Jewry, asserted here that
the DAIA, in cooperation
with the then Israeli am-
bassador, Ram Nirgad in-
tervened with the Argen-
tine government after the
arrest of publisher Jacobo
Timerman and that the in-
tervention "was the initial
impulse of the movement
that finally brought about
Timerman's release."
Resnizky made the
statement to a meeting of
the plenary council of the
World Jewish Congress -
American Section.
Timerman was arrested
in 1977 and kept in prison,
where he reported he was
regularly tortured, and was
kept under house arrest for
18 months, before being
stripped of his citizenship
and put on a plane to Israel,
where he now resides.
Resnizky asserted that
after his release, Timer-
man, "for reasons of his
own, launched a defama-
tion campaign against
the Jewish leadership in
Argentina," in articles
and in his book, "Pris-
oner Without A Name,
Cell Without a Number."
Timerman has since
made similar charges in
speeches.
Resnizky said Timer-
man's charge that the DAIA
failed to denounce anti-
Semitic activities reported
on in La Opinion, Timer-
man's newspaper, was sim-
ple untrue and that Timer-
man's charge that the 'daia
was "not ready to discuss
publicly the meaning of
Zionism" was also false.
Resnizky said, contrary to
Timerman's charges that
the DAIA had ignored the
publisher's arrest, "we
mobilized ourselves," in
cooperation with Nirgad,
"from the very moment of
Timerman's arrest," in a
"relentless effort to achieve
Timerman's release and to
preserve his personal secu-

AA Art Fair
Starts Today

The Ann Arbor Winter
Art Fair will be held 10
a.m.-9 p.m_ today and
Saturday and 10 a.m.-6 p.m.
Sunday at the Track and
Tennis Building at the Uni-
versity of Michigan.
More than 280 juried ar-
tists and craftsmen from 24
states will display works in
such media as: painting,
photography, pottery,
jewelry, glass, metal, wood,
scrimshaw, leather and
enamel.
There is an admission
charge.

Recital Due
at OP Library

Robert Oppelt, viola, and
Albert Fillmore, piano, will
perform at the Oak Park Li-
brary 7:30 p.m. Sunday.
The program is sponsored
by the Arts and Cultural
Commission and the
Friends of the Oak Park Li-
brary. Admission is free.

rity."
Critics of Timerman's
charges of widespread
anti-Semitism in the
Argentine government
have raised the matter of
Timerman's association
with David Graiver, a dubi-
ous Argentine Jewish
financier who had helped
finance La Opinion. Graiver
died in a mysterious plane
crash.

Resnizky asserted that
DAIA officials "were
aware of the fact that the
anti-Semitic groups that
tried, in 1977, to exploit
the Graiver case would
also try to make Timer-
man the target of their
anti-Jewish hatred. We
believed that, in addition,
Timerman was entitled to
our help and protection
for having defended
Jewish interests and op-
posed anti-Semitism" in
La Opinion.

In charging Timerman
with defaming the Argen-
tine Jewish community and
its leadership, Resnizky de-
clared that "the third _day
after Timerman's deten-
tion, I personally was re-
ceived by the then chief of
the army and today's -
President, Gen. Viola, to
whom I conveyed officially
the preoccupation of Argen-
tine Jewry regarding the
freedom and personal secu-
rity of Timerman."
In further rebuttal of
Timerman's charges, Re-
snizky declared that "we
have made public our iden-
tification with the state of
Israel and the Zionist
movement, stating clearly

Israeli Standard
of Living Rises
at Record Pace

JERUSALEM (JTA) —
Living standards in Israel
rose by a near record 12 per-
cent during the first six
months of this year, accord-
ing to figures released by
the Central Bureau of
Statistics last week.
The rise was attributed to
lower taxes on a variety of
consumer goods instituted
by Finance Minister Yoram
Aridor and larger indi-
vidual income resulting
from lowered income tax.
Those factors triggered
purchases of expensive
items such as color televi-
sion and private cars. Ex-
penditures on consumer
goods were 25 percent
higher than in the same
period last year.

The only similar rise in
living standards was re-
corded in 1967 when an
economic boom replaced
the slump that preceded
the Six-Day War.

Meanwhile, population
growth in 1981 was the
slowest for any year since
the state was founded in
1948. The increase in the
Jewish population was only
one percent compared to a
2.8 percent growth in the
non-Jewish population.
In past years the Jewish
population grew at an an-
nual rate of two percent

compared to a 3.5 percent

rate in the non-Jewish
,population.

that 'The government (of
Argentina) knows un-
equivocally that for Jews
there is no difference be-
tween anti-Zionism and
anti-Semitism'."
He said "we conveyed
to the authorities our
concern for Jews who
disappeared or were ar-,
rested, without opening
any judgement on exist-
ing or not existing re-
sponsibilities."
He added that the issue
was raised publicly at a

DAIA conference in Cor-
doba, in May 1979, "when
we stated" that "clarifica-
tion of the delicate problem
of the disappeared people
'would contribute to the
pacification' of the Repub-
lic" of Argentina.
He said the DAIA had
never remained silent about
anti-Jewish incidents,
"which we always de-
nounced publicly, within
the country and assuming
full responsibility and all
the risks -involved."

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