Charlotte Jacobson Elected National JNF President NEW YORK (JTA) — Charlotte Jacobson, a leading American Zionist, has been elected president of the Jewish National Fund, succeed- ing Rabbi William Berkowitz. She is the first woman to head the 80-year- old Zionist afforestation and land development agency. Prior to her elec- tion by the JNF Board of Directors at its biennial meeting here, Mrs. Jacobson was chairman of the World Zionist Organization - American Section. Her two-year term as JNF president begins immediately. A native of New York City, Mrs. Jacobson has been active in Zionist activities for more than 30 years. In Hadassah, she was its national vice president and national treasurer before serving as president from 1964 to 1968. She served as chairman of the Medical Building and Development Campaign until 1976 and was responsible for the rebuilding of the Hadas- F Sha-Sha Attitude Always Denied by Vigilance sah Hospital on Mt. Scopus after the Six-Day War. She was elected to the Jewish Agency Executive in 1968 and is a member of the Board of Governors of the reconstituted Jewish Agency for Israel. As chairman of its Commission on Higher Education, Mrs. Jacobson supervises its allocations for the seven institutions of higher learning in Israel that it supports. In 1970 she was co-chairman of a committee that resulted in the founding of the American Zionist Federation. She also served on the committee for the reorganization of the Jewish Agency. She has visited many countries in her capacity as a Zionist leader and as an expert in international health and social development programs. THE JEWISH NEWS Anti-Semitism Less Virulent In This Decade A Weekly Review Commentary, Page 2 of Jewish Events Holocaust Center as an Affirmation of 'Never Again' to Bestialities Patience as a Cure for Many Agonies Editorials, Page 4 Copyright © The Jewish News Publishing Co. — VOL. LXXX, No. 15 17515 W. Nine Mile, Suite 865, Southfield, Mich. 48075 424-8833 $15 Per Year: This Issue 35c December 11, 1981 Violent Gaza Demonstrations End in Death, More Protests Memory of Six Million Pervades HMC Event By ALAN HITSKY "Today, 36 yearsafter the Holocaus t, the unbelievable is prove that the happening. We to have Holocaust really hap- pened." The words of speaker Ernest Miche l echoed through the Jewish Community Hall on Sunday as a Center's Shiffmans hushed, standing-room-only audience of 6 00 listened to Michel at ceremonies and the r Detroit's Holocaust groundbreaking fo Memorial Center. The first exclusive ly-designed facility of its type in the U.S., to the main entr- the HMC will be a sep arate building adja (Continued on Page 25) Atik. Rabbi Charles Rosenzveig, left, guest speaker Ernest Michel and Henry Dorfman are shown at the press confer- ence which preceded Sunday's ceremonies and groundbreaking for the Holocaust Memorial Center. JERUSALEM (JTA) — Unrest in the administered territories spread Wednesday over both the Gaza region and Judea and Samaria. The entire Gaza region was closed off by the military authorities to all outsiders, including newsmen. The general strike in the Strip continued. Shortly after noon Wednesday the merchants in the city of Gaza gathered to decide on further steps. The Gaza Municipality as well as other public institutions in town decided to extend the strike for another two days after the authorities on Tuesday welded the doors of 170 stores as a punitive measure against the strike. The strike, originally called to protest the introduction of the civil administration to the Strip and the implementation of a value added tax on Gaza merchants, was originally scheduled to end on Tuesday. Leaflets and notices of support were distributed throughout the West Bank. Funeral services were held early Wednesday morning for Mohammad Suleiman Nahle, 16, who was shot when Israeli security forces were surrounded during a violent demonstra- tion which took place in the town of Rafah on Monday. The funeral was held under heavy guard. Only family members were allowed to attend, to prevent agitation of the local population. Three other teens and an Israeli soldier were injured in the clash. A curfew was imposed on the town of Rafah, in the southern section of the Gaza strip. The demonstrations spread Wednesday to various places in the West Bank. Youth burned tires, threw rocks at security forces and raised Palestinian flags. In one case JERUSALEM (JTA) — French Foreign Minister the security forces entered a Ramallah Claude Cheysson's 24-hour visit to Israel ended Tuesday school and tore down a Palestinian flag. with his Israeli hosts immensely satisfied that the long era Meanwhile, the Israeli Supreme Court of "misunderstandings" and cold relations between the two on Wednesday issued an interim order countries has ended although France and Israel still re- banning the military government from main worlds apart on Middle East political issues, mainly linking the town of Salfit, in the Hebron resolution of the Palestinian problem. _ region, to the national electricity network. The Israelis were especially gratified by Cheysson's The court also issued an order against unqualified pledge that there would be no more "European the military government, compelling it to initiatives" in the region, indicating that as far as France was concerned, the European Economic Community's Ven- explain within 30 days why it would not ice declaration of June 1980 is dead. reverse its decision to link the town to the national network. (Continued on Page 6) Cheysson Pledges End to Initiatives Reagan, Anti-Semitism and Unresolved 'Dual Loyalty' Issue By RABBI MARC H. TANENBAUM — A Seven Arts Feature PRESIDENT REAGAN Despite the assurances that President Reagan gave to Jewish leaders recently in which he repudiated the resort to anti-Semitism during the AWACS struggle, there is something deeply disconcerting over the unresolved issue of "dual loyalty." After 1974, when Turkey invaded Cyprus and displaced some 250,000 Greek Orthodox refugees from their homes, Archbishop Iakovos, primate of the Greek Orthodox Church.of North and South America, organized a massive political campaign against American economic and military aid to Turkey. The Archbishop, joined by Greek lay leaders who have substantial political and financial clout, met with Presidents Nixon and Ford, and members of the U.S. Congress, demanding that America terminate its extensive aid to Turkey. Although Turkey is a critically important anchor of the NATO alliance, the Greek community in the U.S. succeeded in influencing the American government to curtail its aid to Turkey. Significantly, throughout the entire American Greek political and public opinion campaign, not a whisper of the charge of "dual loyalty" was lodged against them. Similarly, no such charge has been lodged against the American Irishmen who press for an economic boycott of Great Britain for her policies toward Ireland. No one charges American blacks who have been vociferous in demanding American reprisals against South Africa for that country's despicable apartheid policy with "dual loyalty." The singling out of American Jewry by Reagan Administration aides and several Senators who floated the "Begin versus Reagan" scenario is nothing less than an act of singular scapegoating of American Jewry and it must be opposed with undiminished fervor. If this Administration succeeds in intimidating American Jewry into silence over the Saudi plan, what is to stop them from silencing Greeks, Irishmen, and blacks from exercising their democratic rights? RABBI TANENBAUM