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April 12, 1985 - Image 39

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1985-04-12

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

• Friday, April 12, 1985

THE CUT THE LOOK THE PLACE

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others through the ages wanted to
exterminate the Jews.
"The Saudi participant's re-
marks stunned the United States
participant in the seminar and
elicited his sharp rejection," the
U.S. said in its letter of protest.
"The United States believes it is
important that the UN-Center for
Human Rights, as sponsor of this
seminar, repudiate these objec-
tionable remarks by Al-Dawalibi
and ensure that the records of the
December seminar do not give
them any formal standing."
The letter went on to say that
the U.S. has learned "from credi-
ble public sources" that Al
Dawalibi "was a collaborator with
the Hitler regime during World
War II," and spent the war years
"as the personal secretary to Nazi
collaborator Amin Al-Hussayni,
the former Mufti of Jerusalem."
Al-Dawalibi, the letter added,
"was a known anti-Semite and
served as an informer for Hitler's
security police."
The letter concluded: "The
United States government re-
quests a full explanation from the
Center for Human Rights on how
an individual of Al-Dawalibi's
background could have been
allowed to participate in a UN
seminar designed to promote reli-
gious tolerance. We would also
like to know why the center and
the seminar's chairman did not
immediately disassociate them-
selves from Al-Dawalibi's re-
mark. We urge that in the future
activities of the center such unfor-
tunate episodes are not repeated.
The JTA has learned that a few
days ago the U.S. Mission to the
UN received a reply from Herndl
in Geneva. Herndl said that he
agrees that every effort should be
made to avoid such incidents in
the future, noting that episodes
like that give the UN bad public-
ity. He did not respond, however,
directly, to the demands made by
the U.S. government in its letter.

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Difficulty relating with
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• Underachieving

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Recommendations and goal setting
School intervention
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SCHOOL PROBLEMS

Washington (JTA) — Prime
Minister Turgut Ozal of Turkey
told a delegation of Jewish leaders
last week that, except for Egypt,
Turkey was the only Moslem
country to maintain relations
with Israel and would continue to
do so. Given its relations with
both Israel and the Arab world,
Ozal said, his country has an im-
portant role to play in the Middle
East.
The Jewish representatives,
who met for an hour last Wednes-
day with the Turkish leader, de-
scribed the meeting as "cordial
and straightforward." The focus of
the discussion was on the possibil-
ity of increased trade between the
two countries.
Ozal reportedly spoke of this
country's Jewish community and
the "many contributions" made
by Turkey's Jews to the life of the
country.
The Jewish delegation included
Kenneth Bialkin, chairman of the
Conference of Presidents of Major
American Jewish organizations,
and Israel Singer, executive di-
rector of the World Jewish Con-
gress.



INC

Ce3

Turkey Pledges
Israel Support

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39

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