THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, September 24, 1982 19 Rome Jews Stage Strike to Protest Pope-Arafat Meeting ROME (JTA) — The Jews of Rome went on strike last Friday. They shut down their many shops in the heart of the city to protest the red carpet treatment 'given to PLO chief Yasir Arafat who had a private audience with Pope John Paul II on Wednesday, was cordially received by President Sandro Pertini at lunch and met at some length with Foreign Minis- ter Emilio Colombo. The Jewish community demonstrated outside the main synagogue. Italy's Chief Rabbi, Elio Toaff, sent a telegram to the Pope say- ing he was "profoundly dis- turbed by the audience con- ceded Arafat, a non- repentant persecutor of Christians in Lebanon, chief of an organization sul- lied with the horrible crimes of killing women and children; who aims at the destruction of the state of Israel. I fervidly protest against this grave act which hurts and disorients the religious sentiments of the faithful." Italian Foreign Minister Colombo presented a sum- mary of his talk with Arafat to the 69th Interparliamen- tary Union meeting. He spoke of Italy's position in the Middle East conflict, approving both President Reagan's new peace initia- tive and the results of the Arab League summit con- ference in Fez, Morocco. He maintained that both could lead to reciprocal recognition between Israel and the Arab states. Colombo said, "The Ita- lian government will undertake, in harmony with all the other coun- tries of the European Community, every op- portune initiative to make a negotiated and peaceful solution to the Middle East possible; negotiations which will lead to the regognition of Israel's right to exist within secure and guaranteed boundaries, respecting United Na- tions resolutions, and which is in line with the document recently for- mulated in the seat of the European Community and with prospects for of- ficial Italian recognition of the PLO as representa- tives of the Palestinian people." Colombo was referring to the 1980 Venice declaration on the Middle East, recetnly reaffirmed by the European Economic Community (EEC). It calls for, among other things, the "associa- tion" of the PLO in the Mid- dle East peace process. The Italian Foreign Minister stressed that Italy "will favor the reciprocal, unequivocal and simul- taneous recognition be- tween the PLO and the state of Israel." Reagan Demanded Israel's Withdrawal From Lebanon WASHINGTON (JTA) — The State Department stressed that President Re- agan in his nationally tele- vised speech Monday, had "demanded" that Israel leave all of Beirut, not just west Beirut, so that a mul- tinational force can help the Lebanese government "re- store control over its own capital." It was the second time in less than a week that Re- agan demanded an Israeli pullout. "The sooner Israeli forces are out of Beirut, the sooner the Lebanese government can restore order," depart- ment spokesman John Hughes said. But he main- tained that the departure of Israeli forces are not a "pre-condition" for the mul- tinational force made up of U.S. marines and Italian and French troops to enter the Lebanese capital. Hughes said there had been a "thinning out" of Is- raeli troops in Beirut but "entire units have not left the city. Secretary of State George Shultz, appearing on NBC-TV's "Today" show Tuesday morning, said that, while the U.S. marines would be in Be- irut for a "limited dura- tion," he could not give an exact time of 10, 20, 30, or 40 days. He said the reason was he did not know how long it would take the Lebanese gov- ernment to "create stabil- ity and govern" in Beirut. Shultz rejected the charges by some that the marines were pulled out too early when they left Sept. 10. He said that at that time Lebanese President-elect Bashir Gemayel, who was later assassinated, "was in the process of bringing about a reconciliation" in Lebanon. "So the conditions that were presumed at the time we came in had been met, and so we left, and I think . properly so," Shultz said. Meanwhile, Hughes said the United States "wel- comed the election of Amin Gemayel as President. He added that Reagan "is determined to assist Leba- non in the arduous process of rebuilding and reconcili- ation." He observed that the multinational force "is an essential element in this important effort aimed at enabling the Lebanese gov- ernment to restore security to its capital and eventually throughout its territory." Reagan did not announce the composition or the size of the American contribu- tion to the multinational force. Apparently, it will consist of the same marines from the U.S. Sixth Fleet who participated in the ear- lier force. They were with- drawn from Beirut on Sept. 10 and are reportedly stationed at Naples, about 72 hours by sea from the Lebanese capital. While Italy appears to be leaning toward official recognition of the PLO, it will not move in advance of the EEC. The members of parliaments attending the meeting are not all in agreement on this, even on the extent of de facto recog- nition Italy has already bes- towed on the PLO and on the extremely cordial recep- tion given Arafat in Rome. There are also sharp differences within the Italian government and Parliament. Signific- antly, Prime Minister Giovanni Spadolini, a major political personal- ity, flatly refused to see Arafat. President Pertini, on the other. hand, gave the PLO chief a warm welcome. He also deliv- ered a scathing attack on Israel's invasion of Lebanon in a speech be- fore the Interparliamen- tary Union. There was no immediate reply from the Israeli dele- gation. But its chairman, Labor MK Moshe Shahal, told the Jewish Telegraphic Agency that he considered it improper for the president of the host country to single out Israel for criticism when there are many more dangerous conflicts in the world. Shahal said he thought the president's remarks were very one-sided and took no account of the his- tory of PLO terrorism against Israel and its re- sponsibility for the deaths of 10,000 Christians in Leba- non. The Israeli delegation is- sued a press release detail- ing PLO crimes, among them the massacre of Is- rael's Olympic team in Munich in 1972, the hijack- ing of an El Al plane to Entebbe, Uganda in 1976, and the documented ties be- tween the PLO and other in- ternational terrorist groups, including Italy's Red Brigade. In Israel, the Foreign Ministry issued the follow- ing statement: "Israel expresses its shock over the fact that Pope John Paul II has granted an audience to the man who heads the organization of murder- ers which stands at the center of international terrorism. "Israel expresses pro- found disappointment at the fact that the audience took place in spite of appeals from numerous individuals and groups the world over urging the Pope to refrain from meeting the head of an organization that has per- petrated countless crimes against the Jewish people and against the citizens of many states. The decision of the Pope contradicts his OWn declaration, on Jan. 1, 1980, in favor of peace and against violence. "It shall now be recorded in the national memory of the state of Israel and of the Jewish people that the spiritual leader of millions of believers around the world did not recoil from meeting with the head of an organization that has writ- ten into its constitution as a central aim the annihila- tion of the Jewish state. "The raising of Arafat's status by the Pope meeting with him is a grave act also because it harms the peace process that constitutes the avowed personal wish of the Pope himself as well as the supreme aspiration of the state of Israel." The statement also ex- pressed "profound re- gret" at President Per- tini's meeting with Arafat. It noted that "this terrorist leader is re- sponsible for the disease of international ter- rorism that has spread to Italy too ... The president has bestowed a prize upon the perpet- rators of terror who threaten the very founda- tions of democracy and moral values. "This is a day when free- dom and justice everywhere have been dealt a severe blow." In Detroit, David Leben- born, president of the Jewish Community Coun- cil, wrote to the Vatican representative in Washing- ton to protest the Pope's audience with Arafat. In Baltimore, the Polish- Jewish Dialogue involving the Polish community and the Anti-Defamation League of Bnai Brith wrote directly to the Pope. The organization ap- pealed to the Pope to recog- nize Israel's struggle to sur- vive and called Arafat "a negative and destructive force in the struggle for world peace." 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