u rnuay, uecEffirrigrr Int UtIHUI 1 JEWISH NEWS .A.!331 , E1: 1 tmermans ar s dike Daggers at the Heart of His People In his "Prisoner Without a Name, Cell Without a Number," Jacobo Timer- man emerged as a hero who was fulfilling his Zionist dream. He was welcomed with glory and dignity in his new home after he exposed the horrors he experienced in Argentina. He won a columnist's desk on the Hebrew daily. Haaretz, although he knew no Hebrew and his articles had to be translated from the Spanish. It was not very In 'The Longest War, Israel in Lebanon" (Knopf), he acts as if he were in Damascus, rather than in his homeland, welcoming the exiled. (313) 357-5222 AARON S. POSNER long before he began to call his hosts fascists. Now he does much more. He harms not only the Is- raeli hosts but the entire Jewish people with enigma- tic condemnations that stem from the unimagina- ble and mysterious. ADVANCE DISCOVERY SERVICE There is great pity in what Timerman had under- taken and now pursues. He has become a witness for the prosecution, and is espe- cially welcomed in the media. Grains of truth do not jus- P.O. BOX 37053 OAK PARK, MICHIGAN 48237 WE FIND EX-SPOUSES FOR BACK CHILD SUPPORT tap haers le ece4 GRAND OPENING Offering the finest in Jewelry and Watches at Discount Prices All Watches 25% OFF Select Earrings 40% OFF Special Offer On PARKER PENS Greenfield Plaza Bldg., Suite 361 21700 Greenfield Road between 8 & 9 Mile Rds. Oak Park AAVA eePlire rdtrifif .., 444 14,̀` We are an authorized PULSAR DEALER 968-2980 JACOBO TIMERMAN tify the attacks he spread, first in the publication of texts of his book in a na- tional magazine and then in his volume which will ap- pear this week, just before Hanuka, in an English translation from the Spanish by Miguel Acoca. The book is intended as an expose of Israel's Lebanese crime — pub- lished in advance of the in- vestigative findings by a commission delegated offi- cially by the Israel govern- ment. He is both judge and jury in all his contention. But he goes far afield. His target is Zionism and the Jewish people. He has entifled a concluding chapter to his book "The Massacre." In diary form, Timerman reports on Menahem Begin addressing a group of Americans, and he declares: "Last night our Prime Minister appeared on tele- vision addressing an audi- ence of Diaspora Jews in the Chagall Hall of the Knesset. If he already knew about the 19 fallen youths, he did not refer to them. Seldom is his vision of events based on immediate reality. This could be why he feels so comfortable with the Dias- pora Jews, whose only ob- jective is to raise money for Israel — they believe that this benefits Israel — and to shut their mouths. Not to ask questions, much less give opinions. "These Jews, like Begin, feel more comfortable with the remembrance of what happened than with what is happening now. "I studied the gestures, the looks, the tilting of the head, the vocal changes, the silences, and pauses of our Prime Minister as he addressed his Jews last night. It is my belief that he is unbalanced." There is more than one opinion on Begin, but Timerrnan's is based on a prejudice that will now be- come more difficult to erase, name-calling being the art of the biased. There is much in Timer- man's new essay that is true, that deals with moral- ity. What about the immor- ality of distortions that c.. HANUKAH on were so evident 'in the media? Reports from the commis- sion of inquiry already pro- vide torment for Jews and people seeking justice everywhere. Timerman de- scribes the public reactions which demanded a quiz, the results of which will be an anticipated judgment. Israeli newsmen were and are critical. Why, then, this means of judg- ing press and Jews: "Is- raeli discipline prevailed in the journalist. For 20 years this discipline has intoxicated the Israeli people and blackmailed Diaspora Jews." Because there is much that is vital to the consider- ation of a tragic war history, it is deplorable that a bril- liant journalist resorts to figures which were em- phasized in the press and were proven exaggerations, such as hundreds of thousands of victims of Is- rael's operation that began with the aim of ending the PLO threats-, Therefore, when Timerman appeals for a Jewish tribunal when an Israeli one is in progress, it is especially regrettable. He also asserts: "What else can be done in this infernal oven that is Tel Aviv? We sign petitions, we collect money, we demon- strate on the streets, we support politicans who have not allowed themselves to be drawn into the shameful nationalistic paranoia. "And I think, one more time, that out of so much pain, our own and that of others, important changes must emerge." The enemy of Israel; seeking ammunition, finds it in these pages. Throughout, it is again "Begin the terrorist," and the judges are those who gave a bad image in the press and those who were the guides in attacks on Is- rael and, inter alia, often on Jewry, who are portrayed as the mesmerized fund rais- ers. There is something ironic also in Timerman's expla- nation that he had not been able to learn the Hebrew language when taught by a man who later was mur- dered by Palestinians in the Negev; his aim to study the language again by devoting much time to it; the asser- tion that he still finds it dif- ficult to learn the language but he will begin to study Arabic. It is as if one were to say that if he can't learn swimming he will turn to diving. A very able journalist has dipped his pen into venom. It is indeed deplorable. His new book will be harmful to Israel and to Jewry. \silk° board- walk ..„.4,,, ......„. ,.,,.. ., ... • Stage & Co.—Restaurant & Deli • R.. 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