28 Friday, November 5, 1982
PLO Rejects Reagan Plan
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THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
A member of the Pales-
tine National Council told
reporters in Dearborn last
Friday that the Palestine
Liberation Organization
will not accept President
Ronald Reagan's proposals
for peace in the Middle East
and claimed that "Syria and
Jordan will bethe next vic-
tims of Israeli aggression."
Ibrahim Abu-Lughod
spoke at a memorial meet-
ing for the victims of the Be-
irut massacre in September,
in which Palestinian civi-
lians were killed by Chris-
tian Phalangist soldiers.
Abu-Lughod is a politi-
cal science professor at
Northwestern University
and one of the five
American Palestinians
on the Palestine National
Council.
Abu-Lughod urged the
Arab states to exert pres-
sure on the U.S. to thwart
"Israel's threat" to Jordan
and Syria, and called for an
independent Palestinian
state.
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Another View of Pope and Arafat
By RABBI MARC H.
TANENBAUM
A Seven Arts Feature
The time is past due for
talking some calm, rational
sense about the recent
meeting of Pope John Paul
II and the PLO's Yasir
Arafat. That controversial
meeting has resulted in
considerable stress in
Catholic-Jewish relations.
Much of the anger in the
Jewish community was
appropriately in response to
the inexplicable fact that
the Pope would even agree
to meet with the PLO's
Arafat, the chief architect of
international terrorism.
Arafat, after all, was re-
sponsible for the massacre
of tens of thousands of
Christians, Muslims, as
well as Jews.
The photograph of the
Pope and Arafat became the
chief provocation for it
suggested to the world that
the Holy See somehow
sanctioned the murderous
actions of this arch ter-
rorist. But the embittered
reactions to the provocative
picture must not be allowed
to obscure what actually
went on during that meet-
ing.
We know from reliable
sources that the Pope
forcefully demanded that
Arafat's PLO give up
their violence and ter-
rorism, that the PLO stop
its killing of innocent
civilians in Lebanon and
Israel, that they recog-
nize Israel's right to secu-
rity and that Jerusalem
remain unified with
appropriate interna-
tional guarantees.
These positions are far
closer to those of Israel and
the Jewish people than they
are to the PLO and the Arab
extremists. To ignore those
important statements by
the Pope is to hand the PLO
another political victory.
During the past 20 years,
Catholics and Jews have
made great progress in
mutual understanding.
Sweeping emotional
charges and counter-
charges on all sides must be
contained in order not to
impede future progress in
what has rightly been called
the "revolution of mutual
esteem" between Catholics
and Jews.
Newest Nobel Prize Winner
Receives Acclaim in Britain
LONDON - Dr. Aaron
Klug, the 1982 Nobel
Laureate in chemistry for
his work in the development
of electron microscopy, was
settled as a child in South
Africa. His family had emi-
grated there from
Lithuania.
Dr. Klug studied at Wit-
watersrand and Cape Town
universities. He moved to
Britain in 1949 and is affil-
iated with Cambridge Uni-
versity.
Dr. Klug is a member of
the Cambridge Jewish
Residents' Association,
but says, "I am not very
active, though I preserve
Camp Victims
Memorialized
LONDON -
The
Czechoslovak Chamber Or-
chestra of Prague recently
performed Edoardo Brizio's
symphony inspired by the
children of the Terezin con-
centration camp.
According to the Interna-
tional Council of Jews from
Czechoslovakia, the pro-
gram notes explained that
140,000 Jews passed
through the ghetto. Some
35,000 died, including
15,000 children.
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DR. AARON KLUG
the links, and I have al-
ways had an interest in
Jewish history."
He has visited Israel on a
number of occasions, most
recently in August for the
wedding of his oldest son.
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