2 Friday, January 21, 1983 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Purely Commentary Documentaries as Recorded History During Distress Fact-finding becomes a duty in a time as filled with distress as the present. So much bitterness has enveloped a large portion of mankind that differing views are both expected and are acceptable. In the matter of the horrible massacre in the refugee camps in Lebanon, there have been distortions in present- ing the facts as well as bias that added to the pains result- ing from inhumanities. There must be clarification, and it will become evident very soon. This is not an expectation marked by dreams but they are inevitable realities. Whatever the report from the Israel commission of inquiry, it is certain to add to a basic fact: that it is being compiled by representatives of and spokesmen for a genuine democracy rooted in Israel's being. Therefore, the account must include the TV Closeup which took into account the attitudes of all elements in- volved in the disputes, backgrounds, aspirations, prej- udices, guilt, realities. It could not possibly cover every- thing, and there may be some resentment over some ap- proaches, but the ABC Closeup showed specifically that the murders were conducted by Christians exacting vengeance from Moslems. The Israeli failures to act on time to prevent the massacre: The ultimate verdict must come from the Israeli inquirers. The Israeli Contributions Towards Lebanon's Revival Was Israel's purpose on ending the PLO threat suc- cessful in the serious war which was marked by so many hatreds, misrepresentations, distortions and, indeed, lies? The PLO is not finished and the forces seeking Israel's demise may have made some gains in having been granted hearings on a "diplomatic" basis. But Lebanon certainly gained from a task very costly to Israel but profitable to the Lebanese. A measure of freedom from the terrorists who domi- nated their -country has been achieved for the Lebanese. Now they are profiting economically. The proof is everywhere and there is fact in an article from Beirut written for syndication by the Associated Press. The entire Terry Anderson report is filled with a glorious account of great progress now being enjoyed by Lebanon, as evidenced in this brief excerpt from that report: Large pockets of deep and irreparable de- struction from this summer's war can be seen in some areas — the former Palestinian camps in southern Beirut districts and the 100-yard-wide "green line" zone that separated east and west Beirut for eight years. Elsewhere in the crowded capital, with rub- ble and broken glass cleared away, shell holes . filled and new paint, neighborhoods that during the fighting appeared devastated and unlivable have quickly been brought back to life. For small-businessmen, shop and restaurant owners, the release of a flood of money kept tucked away by the Lebanese during the war years has put the reconstruction in full swing. Even in this illuminating report there was nothing to acknowledge the fact that Israel's costly and bloody opera- tion in Lebanon is what brought prosperity and a new freedom to the nation that was virtually shackled and enslaved by the PLO terrorists since 1975. The Testing of Israel's Soul and U.S. Jewry's Response The testing of Israel's soul and the morality of the People Israel began as a sport and continues in the media and in public forums-. While Jews themselves add to it and indeed multiply it, time will surely prove the unity in Israel's defense that is unbreakable. Of course, there are the dissidents, the defectors, the enemies within — and the latter need not be printed in quotation marks. They exist. Typical among the latter is an Israeli member of the Knesset. Charlie Bitton, leader of the Israeli Panthers, who was elected to the Israel Parliament on a ticket together with the three Communist members, came to the United Nations to consort with the PLO, to undermine Israel's status, to advocate everything that is platformed by the Communists in their anti-Israel programs. Himself a Moroccan Sephardi Jew, he is the troublemaker in Israel who has transferred his poison to the international organ- ization at its headquarters in this country. The media should properly identify him, as the Com- munist who benefits from Israel's democratic electoral sys- tem, who is not denied the right to be a Communist and speak as such in the Knesset. If the privileges are remem- bered, that he is a free Israeli, free to travel and to speak as he chooses, even poisonously about the country that will even welcome him back to his haven in Israel, then the damage will be lessened. As long as the facts are in the record: that's what counts. Studies in Ethical Approaches to Grave International Issues and to Israel's Role -Involving the Media and the Official Treatmeat Accorded the Press in Time of War Meanwhile, the democratic way of life, the soul of the Jewish people, the morality ethically pronounced and per- petuated by the Jewish people, becomes evident in the American Jewish community. The American Jewish Committee has just given such evidence. How effective were the Israeli treatments of the media during the Lebanese crisis? Together with the Hebrew University Communications Center, the American Jewish Committee examined the many issues related to the press treatments, including the views of 34 news correspondents who covered the events. They included 12 who worked for television, four for radio, 10 for newspapers, four for maga- zines, two for wire services, one for an Israeli newspaper and one photographer. A statement outlining the results of these studies ex- plained that "the general treatments of the Lebanese crisis in the Western media has disturbed many American Jews and Israelis, who have been questioning the effectiveness of Israel's press relations." It is on the basis of such an ap- proach that the AJCommittee review of the events prompts the following brief excerpt, which contains many lessons for both the Israeli authorities and their critics: Almost unanimously, the correspondents complained of Israel's unpreparedness, lack of planning, inefficiency and neglect to meet the needs of the press in modern war, and placed the heaviest responsibility for these failures on the Israeli Defense Forces. There was an influx of several hundred foreign correspondents, some of the top people in the world, "and they just couldn't handle it," said one. Another said, "Yes, they tell the truth. But the entire mechanism for providing information — military, political, and so on — is just simply absolutely non-existent." .Discussing the escort officers provided by the IDF, the correspondents found some of them ex- cellent, but many incompetent or indifferent, with little knowledge about their government's posi- tion, sometimes even less about the historical background of the war. "One would think," a newsman said in exasperation, "that out of 3% million Jewish Israelis, you could find a hundred guys who (a) can speak English, and (b) could be told how to put the government line across." In the early weeks of the war, virtually all the correspondents agreed, the Israeli authorities were withholding crucial information. Explain- ing how false casualty figures could be widely disseminated by the media, a significant number of reporters expressed opinions like "Israel could have provided some estimate of the killed and wounded . . . We were getting figures from the Red Cross, and only later discovered that they were being provided by the Red Crescent (a PLO agency). But the Israelis simply weren't putting anything out to counter them." One correspondent said he had "pleaded" for such information and been turned down; another By Philip Slomovitz said that "failure to correct (false PLO figures) was the failure of the apparatus — bad organiza- tion, bureaucracy, censorship." Again and again, the correspondents men- tioned the scarcity of press briefings — "no high level briefings at all during the whole time, no political and no intelligence briefings whatsoever to the foreign press . . . nothing about the coun- try's objectives or considerations. Not the Prime Minister, not the Foreign Minister, not Defense. None." About half the reporters attributed this failure to "a deliberate policy" of withholding in- formation. These evaluative criticisms have special significance in the ultimates which affect Israeli policies, as well as the attitudes of American Jews vis-a-vis the Israel govern- ment. In the first instance, it must be admitted that even admist censorships when they involve the state's security, the democratic aspirations leaning towards freedom of speech and press are never stifled. They always emerge and predominate. In Diaspora Jewish involvements, this dedication to highest ethical ideals are never stifled. Else, why would an American Jewish organization undertake the study under consideration? The AJCommittee-Hebrew University testing of Is- raeli treatments of the press during the Lebanese warfare summarizes with these interesting conclusions: Regardless of their opinions about which side of the Lebanese war was right or wrong, and whatever their difficulties with Israel's informa- tion services, the respondents to the survey of- fered practical suggestions, in good faith, for im- proving the nation's press relations. Many of their recommendations were techni- cal — like the need to improve facilities for both print and broadcast media. But above all, they suggested learning more about what the foreign media look for and why, greater trust and open- ness, and the establishment of a Ministry of In- formation with a professionally-trained staff as the central source for information. As one re- porter said: "We are a pipeline to the world that's begging to be used." There is much for concern and little to fear from the developing events as they relate to the morality of Israel and her friends as it had been challenged in recent months, especially from the dissidents in Israel. Tragically, much of the condemnation stemming from the disillusioned ele- ment in Israel is traceable to political enmities. They have a scapegoat in Menahem Begin and a target in the militarism of Ariel Sharon. The Israeli progressively democratic policies will surely resolve them. The hope is that the Lebanese entanglements will end speedily. The commendable treatment of the issues by the American Jewish Committee, cooperatively with the He- brew University, will be on the record as a notable contri- bution to Jewish self-respect and to Israel's high ethical devotions. Holocaust Events Heighten Awareness By REV. FRANKLIN LITTELL National Institute on the Holocaust PHILADELPHIA — As time is running out on my generation, more and more persons are stepping for- ward to insist that the story of the Holocaust and the les- sons of the Holocaust must be written large in our so- cial memories. Some see it as a matter only for Jews, and an event only in Jewish history. But more and more it is understood and taught that the lessons — like the lessons of the Exodus and Sinai — have a message for all persons of conscience. In April there will be held in Washington, D.C., in connection with the Days of Remembrance, an Ameri- can Gathering of Survivors. The occasion of the gather- ing is two-fold, for this will also be the time of the 40th anniversary of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising. A half- dozen survivors of that event will be present. Among the thousands of fellow-survivors who will participate, and the many liberators and other in- millions of gentiles perished Aware of what? Will they terested parties who are at the hands of the Nazi kil- understand this massive present at the nation's lers — although their event, the Holocaust and its capitol, along with the mil- deaths and the deaths of the lessons? Or will it only sur- lions who are reached in one 6,000,000 targeted Jews face from time to time, like a way or another by the Yom were of a different order and kind of family tale which be- Hashoa observances, will meaning. longs in the closet, a tale of be found at this time hu- which little is known but With the announcement manity's tribute to the little shame? of the Anne Frank House in band of heroes who in battle Those who have launched joined 40 years ago held up Philadelphia there has been the massed forces of the a major eruption of the Anne Frank House are Nazi Third Reich longer enthusiasm by survivors, agreed: the story must be than the whole French na- liberators and teachers of told, and the lessons must the older generation. be drawn for the well-being tion. Everyone seems to have of children - and children's In the spring of 1984 come individually to the children. What we could there will be held at the same awareness: time is hardly deal with at all must University of Washington fleeting; the children are become, with the passage of (Seattle), in connection grown; the grandchildren time, to the healing of the with the 50th anniversary are becoming aware. peoples of the earth. of the founding synod of the Confessing Church's resistance to Hitler, an international symposium on the church struggle By THOMAS EYLES and the Holocaust. It is important to re- member that there were How can Israel hope for peace some Christian witnesses with the Arabian, his brother? against Nazism, though not When nations on the outside enough; that the first mil- strike trouble twixt each other! lion Germans incarcerated Supplying arms to both sides in concentration camps to keep their economies stable, were put there before the No need for weapon-testing sites .. . Holocaust began at all; that while Cain is killing Abel! Peace Interference