12 Friday, March 11, 1983 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS UN's Double Standard on Israel Is Reviewed By JULIANA PILON (Editor's note: Dr. Juliana Geron Pion pre- pared this report for the Washington-based Heri- tage Foundation's United Nations Assess- ment Project.) The United Nations is waging a war against Israel and has been doing so for years. The recent anti- Israeli moves at the Inter- national Atomic Energy Agency, the International Telecommunications Union and even the General As- sembly, are only the latest instances of this. It is not necessary to con- done all the policy decisions of the Isareli move into Lebanon to recognize that the UN's treatment of the Jewish state in recent years aMounts to sheer harass- ment. Secretary of State George Shultz's determina- tion to leave any UN body that expels Israel, echoing the near-unanimous deci- sion of Congress to that ef- fect on May 13, 1982, amounts to a refusal to go along with the UN's double standard. Although the UN main- tains an eerie silence about such blatant human rights violators as the Soviet Union, Cuba, Pol Pot's • Kampuchea, and Idi Amin's -Uganda, Israel was con- demned in 1982 as a "non- peace-loving state" — the only UN member so named. Since the Charter restricts UN membership to "peace- loving" states, this lan- guage opens the door to Is- rael's expulsion from the UN. The UN's campaign against Israel can be traced back at least to 1967, following the Six- Day War. Since then, nearly 200 resolutions hostile to Israel have been adopted in the Se- curity Council, the Gen- eral Assembly and the Commission on Human Rights. In recent years half the time of the Secu- rity Council and half the total of its resolutions have condemned the Jewish state, with practi- cally no mention of PLO and other Arab contribu- tions to Middle East ten- sions and violence. The double standard is glaring. A proposed Secu- rity Council resolution in 1975 to condemn Israeli raids on Palestinian targets in Lebanon failed to men- tion Arab violence against Israel. The anti-Israel campaign pervades the entire UN sys- tem. In the last decade Is- raeli participation has been attacked in virtually every example, is no longer a member of the Commission on Human 'Rights though most of the commission's members have far worse human rights records than Israel. Israel is also the only country in the world subject to special sanctions by the UN Educational Scientific and Cultural Organizattion (UNESCO). Though Israel and South Africa were con- demned as "an unholy al- liance" by the General As- sembly in Resolution 3151 G (XXVII) of Dec. 14, 1973, not even South Africa is subjected to such sanctions. The watershed year at the UN was 1974: on Nov. 13, the General Assembly ses- sion was addressed by PLO chief Yasir Arafat. For the first time in its history, the UN extended observer status to a non-nation. In November and De- cember of that year, UN- ESCO's general conference approved a series of resolu- tions condemning Israel on various grounds and block- ing its requested member- ship in the organization's European regional group- ing. UNESCO specifically condemned Israel for al- legedly endangering Mos- lem monuments in Jerusalem — a charge later shown to be unfounded. The organization then cut off all funds for Israeli projects. A year later, UNESCO inserted into an official document a reference to the infamous "Zionism is racism" General Assem- bly resolution 3379 (XXX), a document that infuriated even long-time UN's new majority. Ig- noring, at times, both facts and legal pro- visions, this majority has chosen to chastize Israel while worse human rights offenders go com- pletely without reproof and Arab hostilities and terrorist acts go unmen- tioned. Whatever its transgres- sions — and surely no state is devoid of sins — Israel does not deserve to be de- nied participation in the General Assembly and membership in the UN agencies. Hit does, so do the great majority of UN mem- bers. What does the UN have against Israel? It is a puzzle — despite the thousands of hours of rhetoric devoted to the issue. Indeed, it seems that the UN can make no solid, juridical or moral case against Israel. As such, the UN majority — cowed by the Soviet bloc and radical Arab states — resorts to a sordid double standard. Israel deserves better. So does the UN. supporters of the UN. On May 17 1976, the World Health Organization refused to consider an ex- pert committee's report that health services in Israeli- occupied Arab territories, far from having deter- iorated, have seen a "slow but steady" improvement since 1967. This conclusion was not what the Third World majority at WHO was look- ing for. It was therefore re- jected despite the fact that two of the three experts on the committee were from countries having no dip- lomatic relations with Is- rael. Since 1975, the UN majority has escalated its attacks on Israel. About 40 resolutions passed by the 36th General Assembly in 1981 dealt with the Middle East, invariably chastising Israel while not mentioning PLO attacks on Israeli civi- lians, including women and children. For at least a decade- and-a-half, Israel has been badgered by the Centennary Marked for Zionist Poet Laureate Jesse Sampter By DR. DAVID GEFFEN World Zionist Press Service JERUSALEM — "Life here feels new, wonderful and free," Jessie Sampter wrote in 1933 in- her intro- duction to the volume "Modern Palestine." "Someone asked me whether I planned a sepa- rate chapter on the youth movements of Palestine, but the whole of Jewish re- construction in Palestine is a youth movement, which does not mean that all its workers are young. The time of youth predominates, but even more — the spirit of youth." Then she pointed out the key challenge that had to be faced, modern yet eternal. "The chief anxiety and test of the Halutzim, the young pioneers, is the education of their children in their own spirit. The first pioneer children are now growing up. They are staying in Palestine, staying on the land. Hope follows their movements." When she was born in New York on March 22, 1893' to a secular family with no special Jewish iden- tification, it was impossible to predict that Jesse Sampter would become an American Zionist poet laureate. After an early childhood attack of polio left her crippled, it was difficult to foresee that she would come to live in Palestine in 1919. Once there, who would have imagined that she would set up classes for Yemenite girls, adopt a Yemenite orphan; tour the pioneering settle- ments of the Emek ,nad depict them in verse, be- come a member of Kibutz Givat Brenner and con- tribute the funds to build a convalescent home there? Her early years were spent in the serenity of an uptown New York family which was strongly commit- ted to ethical concepts but where no Jewish atmos- phere was in evidence. Quite early Jesse displayed literary talent and in 1897 her first poem was pub- lished. Caught up in the maelstrom of Zionist fervor which filled New York in the first decade of the 20th Century, she came under the influence of giants like Henrietta Szold, Judah Magnes and Mordecai Kap- lan. Henrietta Szold sensed the depth of Zionist feeling in Jesse Sampter and re- cruited her into the newly- created Hadassah organiza- tion in 1912. Jesse was given the responsibility of preparing a basic handbook on Zionism, and she proved herself up to the task. This major project was financed by Justice Louis Brandeis and became-the volume entitled "A Course in Zionism." A collection of essays and, JESSE SAMPTER data on the roots of Zionism, the Zionist movement and its per- sonalities, the book first appeared in 1915. A bestseller because of its clarity and due to the enthusiasm in some cir- cles of American Jewry for the Zionist cause, the book was completely up- dated and reissued in 1920 as "A Guide to Zionism." Following her aliya in 1919, Jesse Sampter was asked to prepare a third edi- tion which came to be known as "Modern Pales- tine." The change in the title reflected not only a new spirit in the wake of the Bal- four Declaration but also the fact that Jesse was now actually residing in the country itself. Jesse initially lived in Jerusalem where conditions were extremely difficult. She endured very heavy badly. Consequently we are snowstorms during her first in great danger% . . We need winter in the city. In Oc- a school of Prophets to go tober 1920, she wrote home out alike to Arab and Jew, about the food situation: "It to dwell as shepherds in the is hard to get good milk, but Arab villages and explain Dr. Helena Kagan has her and expound. They will be own cow, so that problem is opposed by both Arab and solved for us." Jew, yet they will be none While in Jerusalem she the less Jewish for Jewish set up classes for Yemenite opposition." working girls, and even In 1938, Jesse Sampt.A. adopted one, becoming a died at Kibbutz Givat single parent at a- time Brenner where she had set- when the custom was rare. tled in 1933. One of her con- Moving to Rehovot in temporaries penned these 1922, she continued her lines of tribute in the He- intensive efforts with brew press. Yemenite working girls. Who has left us with the Greatly desiring to see death of Jesse. the budding settlements Our friend, but notjust ours. in the Emek, she made a A friend of every flower and tour of them by wagon in every child. 1926 (in spite of her phys- A friend not just of our gen- ical disabilities). Her col- eration, lection of prose poems but a woman in whose heart entitled "The Emek" cap- lived the memory tured the intensity of of countless generations, these new settlements memories of the and depicted the spirit of the pioneers who inha- bited them. Of special interest was her sensitivity to the Arab- TEL AVIV (JTA) — A Jewish question. In her ar- ticle on the "Jewish Ideal of controversial Israeli play Nationalism," she • stressed which religious elements in a number of points in regard Israel sought to have to the Arabs. She wrote that banned will open this year's we must first "make the Edinburgh Festival, re- Arabs realize that our eco- garded as one of the world's nomic interests are identi- top artistic events. - "Nefesh Yehudi" ("A cal with theirs and our polit- ical and cultural aims com- Jewish Soul"), by Yehoshua plementary to theirs." Sobol, presented by the Our second task, she em- Haifa Theater, deals with phasized, "is to develop our the last hours of Otto institutions in such a way Weininger, a Jewish anti- that they will give the Arab Semite who committed masses the impetus and suicide in Austria in 1903, possibility to attain an 'ap- at the age of 23. It includes proximately equal standard three erotic scenes passed of life with our own, that is, by the film and theatre cen- in literacy, economic and sorship board only after its social-hygenic conditions." members had seen a full Jesse realized the diffi- dress rehearsal. The scenes culty of attaining such go- were condemned by reli- als. But in her own dramatic gious leaders as "blasphem- style she called for action. ous and offensive." "So far we have done very The play is to be per- . prophets of Israel and of an- cient visionaries." Then he continued, "In the fullness of her broad in- tellect she had the ability to re-evaluate all the worldy treasures and to draw upon new wells of the spirit." On the centennial of her birth, we may draw upon the spirit of her creativity to give a revitalized sense of direction to that Zionist ideal which burned in her soul and dominated her life, both in"-America and in Eretz 'Yisrael. Over the years, Jesse Sampter's name has per- haps tended to be over- shadowed by other great figures in American Zionism. Yet she is a sym- bol, not only of the Zionist idea, but also of its personal realization, of aliya, of indi- vidual hardship, effort and satisfaction. Surely, this is what Zionism is about. Controversial Israeli Play to Open Festival in Scotland formed on the opening night of the Festival in Scotland on Aug. 22, in Hebrew, with a simultaneous English translation available to the audience. A Haifa Theater spokesman said the invita- tion was extended by festi- val manager John Drum- mond, who has been visiting Israel. The invitation to open the Festival is regarded as a great honor, especially since it is the first time an Israeli play is being pre- sented as an official part of the Festival, though Israeli works have been presented unofficially in Edinburgh during the Festival period. War should never be entered upon until every agency of peace has failed. —William McKinley