THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, December 27, 1985
SHABOT
SHALOM
Detroit's Hometown
Supermarket
for Over 30 Years
mail could give me the same sense
of security as the helmet of truth
and the shield of righteousness."
These ethical wills reflect a
time when a Jew, no matter how
turbulent his world, lived at peace
with himself and was able to die in
peace. He knew_that he could be-
queath to those who bore his name
a great legacy of faith, Torah, and
morality. That legacy, unlike his
material possessions, could not be
destroyed, taxed, or confiscated.
Since the Jew lived for ideals that
went beyond himself, he could
transmit to his descendants the
values that would bind the gener-
ations one to the other. We, who
have achieved a level of material
blessing that far surpasses our
ancestors, would do well to emu-
late the example of Jacob, and
thereby offer blessing to the gen-
erations who will follow up.
the Premier on behalf of Brigham
Young University. Ford is not a
Mormon.
The university has given a sol-
emn, written undertaking and
public assurances that it does not
intend to carry out missionary ac-
tiviites in Israel; nor have the
Mormons engaged in such ac-
tivities during the many years
they have maintained a branch of
their church in Jerusalem. The
Mormon creed requires church
members to devote a year or two of
their lives to proselytizing. But
the church contends that it never
undertakes missionary activities
in countries -where they are for-
bidden by law.
In a related development, the
World Union of General Zionists,
concluding its third Pan-
American convention in Hol-
lywood, Fla. last week, rejected
the proposed merger of Israel's
Liberal and Herut parties. The
WUGZ is closely associated with
the Liberal Party.
In a resolution adopted unani-
mously by some 200 delegates
from North and South America,
the World Union said it "neither
favors nor encourages the Liberal
Party to merge into any other
party." The resolution was intro-
duced by Jacques Torczyner, pres-
ident of the World Union, who
said his group, "welcomes the con-
tinuation of the Gahal agreement,
which supports the unity of the
Likud bloc in Israel."
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CANDLE LIGHTING TIME 4:48 P.M.
CRYOVAC EMPIRE
TURKEY DRUMSTICKS
Proposed Mormon Center
Angers Religious Parties
Jerusalem (JTA) — The Aguda
Israel party renewed. its threat
last week to introduce a non-
confidence motion in the Knesset
despite far-reaching concessions
by Premier Shimon Peres to de-
mands by the religious parties in
his unity coalition government.
The outstanding issue is the
Mormon educational center under
construction opposite the Hebrew
University campus on Mt. Scopus,
sponsored by Brigham Young
University, an affiliate of the
Mormon Church headquarted in
Salt Lake City, Utah. The or-
thodox fear it will be a center , for
missionary activities.
The Chief Rabbinate called on
Israelis and overseas -Jewry last
Thursday to mark last weekend's
sabbath as a day of protest against
the Mormon enterprise. The Agu-
da's tough line followed a meeting
of religious Knesset members
with Yitzhak Shamir, the Deputy
Premier and Foreign Minister
who is leader of Likud. Shamir
told them there was no legal way
to halt the construction while a
ministerial committee is set up to
consider the issue. Peres and
Shamir had promised the religi-
ous MKs such a committee would
be established.
Sources close to the premier
said Peres' idea of a committee
was not intended to reconsider the
project but to ensure that no mis-
sionary activity is undertaken by
Brigham Young University. But
Interior Minister Yitzhak Peretz,
leader of the religious party Shas,
said the orthodox lobby would
consider such a committee mean-
ingless unless construction work
on the Mormon Center was halted
first.
Shamir tried to explain to the
religious MKs that this was not
feasible because Brigham Young
University has received the re-
quisite building licenses and au-
thorizations from the various
municipal and government de-
partments.
Shamir, when he was Prime
Minister, before the unite gov-
ernment was formed, supported
the Mormon project. He said can-
celling it now would set off a pow-
erful backlash against Israel in
American public opinion. The
Mormons officially known as the
Church of Jesus Christ of the Lat-
ter Day Saints have considerable
political clout in the U.S. Sources
close to Peres disclosed this week
that former President Gerald
Ford had appealed personally to
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New York (JTA) — Leadership,
devotion to duty, decisiveness and
perseverence under stress ap-
peared to be four significant
characteristics that dominated
among the personalities of 77 Is-
rael Defense Force soldiers who
received decorations for bravery
following the 1973 Yom Kippur
War.
The disclosure, reported in the
December issue of Psychology
Today magazine, was made by
Reuven Gal, then chief
psychologist of the IDF and cur-
rently director of the Israeli Insti-
tute of Military Studies. He pre-
sented his paper in Albany, N.Y.
at the Northeast Regional Con-
ference of the Inter-University
Seminar on Armed Forces and
Society.
4.
51
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