8 Friday, January 1, 1983 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Your Guests Deserve :::The Finest At Your Party Hussein Joining Peace Talks Linked to WB Freeze To Add A Touch Of Elegance Include (Continued from Page 1) The Jordanian ruler is expected to visit the White House again before Begin's visit now scheduled for the third week of February. Begin was to have met with MUSIC Call BOB WEINBERG 559-7742 TamaRoFF Leasins co INFLATION BUSTERS! 1982 BUICK REGALS, SKYLARKS AND CENTURY COMPANY CARS All Equipped With:, Radio, A/C, Auto Trans. PS, PB, Rear Defroster and More Priced from $ 1 9 95 .0. 4% Use Tax • 36 Mo. Closed End Lease • 15,000 Mi. Per Year • FREE Service Loaners • $300 Refundable Rebate Deposit • License Plates Incl. We Lease All Makes & Models TamaRoFF LEaSInG CD 28585 TELEGRAPH RD. Across From Tel-12 Smithfield (313) 353-1300 Ow • 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 161— 50% Reagan in November but was forced to cancel because of the death of his wife, Aliza. Quandt, who met with Hussein before coming to Israel, said the King would seek to obtain maximum support from other Arab leaders before entering the peace talks. He also said he was more optimistic over the prospects of the talks getting underway than he was four their successful outcome. Israel Foreign Minister Yitzhak Shamir warned Tuesday night that if Hus- sein entered talks with Is- rael under an all-Arab mandate, his proposals would be unacceptable "even to the most moderate Israeli." Addressing the sixth international convention of Bnei Akiva, the youth movement affiliated with the National Religious Party, Shamir said Is- rael's experience showed there could be peace with an Arab state only when that state freed itself from pan-Arab pres- sures, as the late President Anwar Sadat of Egypt had done in = WO = Me M EM UN Me IMMO Off On ALL Drycleaning' 3 locations to serve you 23043 Beech 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1977. According to Shamir, in terms of hopes for peace, an Arab man- date or a PLO mandate "was an illusion." Shamir claimed that over the years, Hussein's posi- tion over territorial com- promise, in secret contacts with Israelis, was always "not an inch." The Foreign Minister implied strongly that this was also Israel's position. "Israel has no need for such slogans," he told his audience of Orthodox youth. "We say Eretz Israel (Land of Israel) and I don't have to tell you in Bnei Akiva what that means," he declared to wild applause. "We learned about it, we yearned for it, we lived it and we shall live it in the future. We shall settle it and it shall all of it be ours." William Quandt told his Tel Aviv audience that he had asked the Jordanians what message he should take with him to Israel. He quoted the following re- sponse: "Tell them that this would be an historic oppor- tunity which should not be missed. After many hesita- tions, we are now willing to accept Israel and we feel that we can develop much better relations with her than those which now exist between Israel and Egypt. "If this opportunity is at 9 Mile, Southfield DIAMONDS Camp David accords. Nor was it clear whether Hussein's recent consulta- tions with PLO chief Yasir Arafat resulted in a man- date, direct or implicit, for Jordan to represent Pales- tinian interests in peace talks with Israel. Most observers in Jerusalem and in Washing- ton believe that if Hussein joins the peace negotiations, his chances of getting U.S. weapons would improve considerably. Until now, the King has- spurned the Camp David peace process. He still con- siders himself bound by the 1974 Arab League summit conference in Rabat, Morocco, which designated the PLO to be the sole and legitimate representative of the Palestinian people. The Arab League summit in Fez, Morocco last Sep- tember did not rescind that decision. Meanwhile, in Cairo,. Arafat was quoted in the Egyptian political weekly Rose al Yussef as saying that the PLO would continue its mili- tary "option" against Is- rael because the U.S. will not pressure Israel, "even within the limits of the (Reagan peace) plan which it put forward." But he added, "We sup- port every constructive as- pect in any offered initia- tive." Historic Israel TV Documentary Pillar of Fire' Released as Book By J. CHESKY World Zionist Press Service Israel Television's largest project, the 19-hour Hebrew 31555 W. 10 Mile at 9 Mee, Oak Park series aired last year on the at Orchard Lake. Farmington history of the Zionist movement and the estab- lishment of the state, is now in book form. Uoupon must be iiresentea with order — Expires January 21st In Ea IN •••1111111•1•111111=1•11111111111111 1011111111=111•1101111 • 1•01110 =1 • 111•=1111111111•11=111• The 550-page picture • • •• •, • • • • • • • • • • • • .• book is reviving many of the .• ,• • controversies that sur- • • rounded the "Pillar of Fire" • documentary epic. "Pillar of Fire" was con- ceived in the wake of the LAWRENCE M. ALLAN President Yom Kippur War and the UN resolution of November 1975, equating Zionism GEMOLOGIST & DIAMONTOLOGIST with racism. The creator and script writer, Yigal Lossen, who was an Israel • Radio and Television re- • porter in the early 1970s, • was appalled how few Is- • raelis were equipped to GOLD BEAD • argue the country's case NECKLACE & against anti-Zionist claims. • EARRINGS "I realized that our educa- A SUPER tion in Israeli schools was • deficient," he explained. VALUE! • • "We learned about battles for Israel's establishment, • but not about events like • the Evian Conference of • 1938." • That meeting was called by U.S. president Roosevelt to try and find a solution for OUR SPECIALTY the thousands of Jewish • 30400 TELEGRAPH • BIRMINGHAM refugees from Hitler's • LOCATED AT 12 1 /2 Mile SUITES 104/134 Europe who plied the high seas aboard rickety refugee Awarded Certificate by GIA in Grading & Evaluation ships in search of a haven. 642-5575 The book outlines the controversy between • • • .• ..••'. ,•\ ;:fa'; ,•••: Theodor Herzl and Ahad __ momossomm,_ 22185 Coolidge missed, we do not know whether our young gen- eration, which is much more extremist than us, will be ready to do in 10 years what we are pre- pared to do now." Quandt expressed confi- dence that Hussein would indeed join the peace talks because he realizes that maintaining a passive atti- tude would cause him more harm than becoming in- volved. However, Quandt added, prior to announcing Jor- dan's participation in the talks," Hussein would seek to obtain maximum support from other Arab leaders — and at least a tacit agree- ment from the PLO. The only country which Hussein feels will not support him in this venture is Syria, Quandt said. He predicted a "big argument" between Israel and the United States, should Hussein decide to enter the peace talks, over the issue of Israeli settle- ments on the West Bank. During his visit to Washington last month, Hussein reiterated his support of President Reagan's Mideast peace plan. But after meeting with Reagan, there was no indication that the Jordanian monarch was willing or able to join the U.S., Egypt and Israel in negotiations based on the Haam near the turn of the that some of the problems century. Herzl wanted a the Jewish people are haven for the Jewish struggling with today, such people, foreseeing the as justifying the existence of tragedy that was to befall the State and the problem of them. On the other hand, assimilation, have answers Ahad Haam wanted a . . . in the past." land for the spiritual re- When Lossen started vival of the nation, with research for the series its own language and cul- seven years ago, he went ture. to then Prime Minister "Pillar of Fire" has been Yitzhak Rabin and later criticized for stressing to Prime Minister Begin Herzl's point of view in and to numerous Israeli , Zionism. Lossen argues that Zionist and Jewish in- the impression left by the stitutions. None of them film was an emphasis on the would provide funds for negative reasons for found- the project. So it was ing Israel. However, he done on a shoestring maintains this is due to the budget of $2 million, ap- nature of the medium and proximately one-tenth that the book gives a better what such a production balance. would cost in the United Another major criticism States. is that the series did not put "In making the series, we enough emphasis on the scoured the film archives of role of the Oriental Jews in Europe and the U.S. and the creation of the State. brought home more than The matter was even taken 1,500 films that have histor- to court by a group that de- ical importance to the manded equal time with Jewish people." European Jewry, arguing Lossen is currently trying that Sephardim comprise 50 to raise funds to have the percent of the population of series translated into Israel. The case was thrown English. He believes the out on the grounds that the film has enormous educa- judiciary could not inter- tional / value for the Jewish vene in television broad- communities of the Dias- casting. pora. Within the coming Lossen believes the main months he will tour Jewish effect of the series is that it communities outside Israel popularized Zionism, mak- to try and raise the money. ing the facts available to Is- The best education in the raelis who do not read his- tory books. "In bringing world is that got by struggl- Zionism into every Israeli ing to get a living. —Wendell Phillips home," he says, "we showed