2 Friday, April 23, 1982 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Purely Commentary The Bitter Pill Grown in Sinai Keeps Calling for Recognition of the Value of Peace in an Area Where Two Nations Abandon Warfare By Philip Slomovitz The Bitterness of a Time When Settlers Must Abandon Their Homes in the Interest of Peace This is one of the bitterest periods in the history of the sovereign state of Israel. That which hurts Israel also agonizes the entire Jewish people. In a matter of days, the Sinai will fly the Egyptian flag. The Jewish settlers will be removed, for resettlement elsewhere. Viewing the vastness of the territory to be sliced off from what was the state of Israel for the last 15 years, it is not easy to adjust, it will be difficult to fit into the new conditions. Sinai itself appears immense map-wise. It is large also on the specially-designed cartography provided by the Jewish Na- tional Fund and indicated below. Adjust- ing to a new state of affairs, there is need for a more evaluative judgment. What is vast and blank in the map on the left is desert. All else is highly developed, proof of the creative spirit of Israel. Perhaps it is in this sense that the map should be judged — as a map. In the more serious, the human sense, a much deeper meaning must be assigned to the with- drawal from Sinai. It is the commitment to peace that must be rated as uppermost in the experience now awaiting Israel, the , Jewish people and the world. The entire process must be judged in the sense of an aspiration to make the Holy Land also the symbol for peace for all mankind. For those who view all of the area that had been Jewish some 2,000 years ago as ordained by the Highest Power, little if anything, even in the quest for peace, will obviate anger over the fulfillment of a bi- national agreement for Israel to give Sinai back to the Egyptians. Not to be forgotten, however, it is the reality of five years of accord during which war was erased from the minds of two nations, there were no casualties, there was and hopefully will continue to be a sincerity of purpose to make peace workable in an embattled area of the globe. It is true that Egypt is alone in the Arab world in the serious striving for peace. If the good example set by Egypt is to be pursued by other Arab nations, it must come as a result of an amity that will seek an end to the tragedies now being imposed by a rebelliousness that has placed Israel on trial in the judgment of many in man- kind. It is the best interests of good rela- tions which must end the Israel-Arab con- flict; the seeds for peace sown in a desert must not be uprooted. The cost is immense. For Israel it is a $25 billion expense to abandon the Sinai and to resettle those who are being moved out of the garden spots they created in a desert. It is all for peace. Hopefully, the lesson learned that war indeed ended with the Sadat-Begin friendship will be a lesson for all the peoples in the Middle East. Could there be any other approach to amity and to reducing the unpleasant bit- terness of what is transpiring at this time? * * * The large spot on the map could give the impression of a vast area of serious urgency to whatever nation may occupy it. The fact is that it is desert. The garden spots like Yamit on the borderline were created by the sweat of pioneers who re- moved tens of thousands of tons of sand to establish blossoming communities. Abandonment of the Sinai is symbolic for Egypt, which can now claim victory; and sad for Israel, whose sacrifices towards assuring the success of the Camp David agreements are immense. Israel's action, let it be emphasized again, was all for Menahem Begin's Independence Day Message from Israel JERUSALEM (JTA) — The following is the text of greetings from Premier Menahem Begin on the occasion of Israel's 34th Independence Day which will be celebrated next Wednesday: From Jerusalem, our eternal and indivisible capital, I send my heartfelt greetings to the Jewish communities throughout Peace Salient * &et •*,••"' olio 0 Sinai peace. Sadly — tragically!.— there is now talk of an erosion of the Camp David decisions. There is more talk about its defections than gaining assurance that peace cannot be destroyed insofar as Egypt and Israel are concerned. There is much at stake in the U.S. role, and the assurances given by Hosni Mubarak that nothing, even the extremist pressures from antagonistic Arab nations, can stand in the way of fulfillment of the aims for peace. It may mean much for the future of a Middle East devoid of warfa ,-, . April 25 is a sad date to contemplate. Israel rabbinate has already observeu fast day marking that event. The hopes for a better future nevertheless must not be abandoned.Out of sacrifice may come not- able human achievements. Once again, this is dependant on Jewry's major sustain- ing power: hope! MENAHEM BEGIN the Diaspora on the occasion of the 34th anniversary of Israel's independence in Eretz Israel. Yom Ha'Atzmaut — Independence Day — is a universal Jewish festival commemorating the victory of the few over the many, right over wrong, justice over might. After the most terri- ble catastrophe ever to have befallen our once homeless, and helpless people, and the heroic battle for national self-liberation in Eretz Israel, we have lived to see the day when the flag of Jewish liberty has been raised again in the land of our forefathers. This day shall forever be celebrated as one of the greatest in the annals of our ancient people, indeed of mankind. Israel has remained faithful to its Declaration of Indepen- dence. We have brought home millions of our scattered sisters and brothers, we have built up the land and - made it green, we have gained national vigor with each passing year, we have renewed our heritage. Not since the days of the Maccabees has Israel enjoyed such strength. Five times our enemies launched war against us in their bloody attempt to destroy our independence. Five times we repel- led the aggressors and won the day. The best of our sons sacrificed their lives so that we might celebrate this day. Their memory shall live on forever. Israel's unflinching resolve to pursue the cause of peace with security was consummated in the signing of the Treaty of Peace with Egypt. This milestone constitutes, no doubt, a turning point in the history of our two countries and of the Middle East. We made great and painful sacrifices for the sake of that peace, as demonstrated during these very days. Let the world note what the Jewish state did to break the cycle of warfare, sorrow and bereavement which had prevailed for more than three decades. And now we look to the future, hopeful and confident that the peace with Egypt will deepen and prosper and that the problems still outstanding will be overcome. For, better the difficulties of peace than the sufferings of war. Elsewhere in our region and its periphery the convulsions and turmoil persist. Iraq and Iran remain locked in attritional bloodletting; the Iraqi aggressor, implacable enemy of Israel, is bogged down. Jordan has sided with Iraq and Syria with Iran. Syria itself is seized by internal bloody eruption, aotompanied by fearful massacres. Lebanon remains in a state of strife, occupied by Syria and plagued. by the so-called PLO which continues to amass weapons financed by Saudi Arabia and supplied by the Soviet Union and its satellites. It is in this turbulent context that Israel; stable, strong and faithful ally of the free and democratic family of nations, strives to pursue its goals of peace while remaining ever vigilant in protecting its national rights and its vital security in Eretz Israel. Indeed, the challenges ahead are many but we have started a great new chapter of peace. We live by the faith that it shall yet grow and that here, in Eretz Israel, future generations will live together with our neighbors in equality, in human dignity, in freedom, in independence and in real security. On this day of independence,- we share the prayer that our fellow Jews in countries of distress will jpe rescued from their torment. We, Israel, shall continue to leave no stone unturned in the holy endeavor to bring them home. We shall. We look towards a future of aliya from throughout the free world — thousands and tens of thousands of our Jewish brethren to share in the momentous task of rebuilding the land of our forefathers — for the glory of the Jewish people and of all free people. Israeli Cancer Research Is- Making Great Strides Forward By PHILIP GILLON Israel Government Press Service Israel's burdens are immense. They have multiplied as a result of the Camp David decisions. While the commitment to with- draw from Sinai is being fulfilled, the obli- gations accompanying the move are over- whelming. Settlements in the Sinai are being evacuated and the settlers are find- ing new homes in areas provided by the Jewish National Fund — Keren Kayemet 1'Israel: This JNF-formulated map indi- cates the vastness of the problem, pointing to the areas where, in the blackened por- tion and in the north of Israel, new settle- ments will replace those being abandoned. It is a tragic picture — all in the interest of peace. REHOVOT = There are two explana- tions for Israel's intense interest in cancer. One is that in the course of 30 years Israel has vanquished the communicable dis- eases that plague most poor countries; the killers it combats today are the same as those faced in other Western countries: cancer, heart disease, stroke and road acci- dents. The second reason is somewhat a by- product of hiptory. When Dr. Chaim Weiz- mann, the first president of Israel, was building up the Weizmann Institute of Sci- ence, he made up his mind to search the world for first-class Jewish scientists. One of the experts he attracted was Prof. Isaac I. Berenblum, who first propounded the theory of two stages of cancer induction. In 1981, Prof. Berenblum was awarded the Sloan Prize for his life's work. Thus generations of scientists interested in cancer began to work -in Israel: On a practical level, several scientists are working on new technologies to iden- tify cancers very early. One of the problems of treating cancer is that patients come to the doctor too late. - One computerized electronic device -for the early detection of breast cancer, de- veloped at Weizmann and known as a Mammoscan, is now undergoing clinical trials in Israel and Switzerland. As for finding new methods of cancer treatment, very promising work is in pro- gress at the Hadassah-Hebrew University Medical Center in Jerusalem. Doctors there are attempting to overcome the prob- lems involved in the transfer of healthy bone marrow, perferably from a first- degree relative, for the treatment of acute leukemia. - The Hadassah researchers, led by Dr. Shimon Slavin, have developed an entirely new approach, called fractionated to ' lymphoid irradiation. They irradiate lymphatic organs, while other radio- sensitive organs, like the lungs or bones containing bone marrow, are protected. Israel's new Mamoscan