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Call for FREE In Home Estimate " Southfield We'll Come To Your Place And Double Your Space "The Closet People" Advertising in The Jewish News Gets Results Place Your Ad Today. Call 354 6060 - THE LUBAVITCHER REBBE ON CABLE T.V. commemorating the Chassidic festival of "Yud-Tes Kislev," the day on which Rabbi Schneur Zalman of Liadi - the founder of.the Chabad-Lubavitch movement - was liberated from Czarist prison (where he was incarcerated because of his chassidic teachings) RABBI MENACHEM M. SCHNEERSON • ANN ARBOR COLUMBIA CABLEVISION SUNDAY, DECEMBER 21 5 1986 Channel 6 9:30 P.M. GRAND RAPIDS GR TV • • CONTINENTAL CABLEVISION Channel 23 Channel 11 ALSO CAN BE SEEN FREE OF CHARGE AT: CONG. MISHKAN ISRAEL NUSACH H'ARI LUBAVITCHER CENTER 14000 WEST NINE MILE ROAD 28 Friday, December 19, 1986 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS OAK PARK, MICHIGAN 48237 NEWS Wiese! Accepts 1986 Nobel Peace Prize Oslo (JTA) — Elie Wiesel, the author, lecturer and humanitarian who has devoted most of his life's work to bearing witness to the Holocaust, received the 1986 Nobel Peace Prize here last week and, in his acceptance speech, urged help for the Palestinian people, for whom terrorism was no answer. He also linked the internal exile of Soviet dissident An- drei Sakharov, the denial of Polish Solidarity leader Lech Walesa's right to dissent, and the imprisonment of Black South African civil rights leader Nelson Mandela as "disgraces" of identical magnitude. "Human rights are being violated on every continent. More people are oppressed than free," the 58-year-old Wiesel, a survivor of Ausch- witz, told the assembled dignitaries from all parts of the world. "And then, too, there are the Palestinians to whose plight I am sensitive but whose methods I de- plore," Wiesel said. "Violence and terrorism are not the answer. Something must be done about their suf- fering and soon," he said. "I trust Israel, for I have faith in the Jewish people. Let Israel be given a chance, let hatred and danger be removed from her horizons, and there will be peace in and around the Holy Land." Wiesel added, "It would be unnatural for me not to make Jewish priorities my own: Israel, Soviet Jewry, Jews in the Arab lands. But there are others as important . . . Apar- theid is, in my view, as abhor- rent as anti-Semitism .. . Wherever men or women are persecuted because of their race, religion of political views, that place must — at that moment — become the center of the universe." Wiesel, born in Rumania and now a U.S. citizen, is a member and former head of the United State Holocaust Memorial Council. He is credited with being the first to use the term "Holocaust" to describe the Nazi exter- mination of six million Jews. Wiesel spoke of the Holo- caust in his acceptance speech. He was invited to bring his 14-year old son, Shlomo-Elisha, to the podium as a demonstration of Jewish survival. Wiesel put his hand on his son's shoulder, then donned a yarmulke for a brief, simple prayer before begin- ning his acceptance speech. Ibuching on the Holocaust victims, Weisel asked, "Do I have the right to represent the multitudes who have per- ished? Do I have the right to accept this great honor on their behalf? I do not. That would be presumptuous. No one may speak for the dead, no one may interpret their mutilitated drams and vi- sions." Instead, said Wiesel who, according to news reports, fought back tears as he ac- cepted the Novel Peace Prize, he spoke "as one who has emerged from that kingdom of the night . . . This honor belongs to all the survivors, to their children and, through us, to the Jewish people with whose destiny I have always identified." Wiesel said he plans to use the US $250,000 Nobel Prize money to establish a Human Rights Foundation, the first act of which would be to organize a conference on com- batting hatred. Egil Aarvik, chairman of the Norwegian Nobel Corn- mittee, said in presenting the Peace Prize to Wiesel that it was given "In recognition of this particular human spirit's victory over the power of death and degradation and as a support to the rebellion of good against evil in the world." Wiesel said at a press con- ference before the award ceremonies that he was op- timistic about his forthcom- ing meeting with Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev to discuss easing restrictions on the emigration of Jews and non-Jews from the USSR. Israel Sets Up Diplomatic Office In Greece Athens (JTA) — Israel established its first full- fledged diplomatic mission in Greece last week, headed by Moshe Gilboa, a senior For- eign Ministry official from Jerusalem with the rank of Ambassador. Gilboa, 56, presented his credentials to Greek Foreign Minister Karolos Papoulias at a private meeting. Greece has never extended de jure recog- nition to Israel. For that reason, the Israeli envoy presented his letter of ac- creditation to the Foreign Minister rather than to the President of the republic. Greece, moreover, has taken a consistently pro-Arab stand in the Middle East conflict and has, in fact, refused to go along with its European Corn- munity (EEC) partners' deci- sion to impose sanctions against Syria for its involve- ment in recent international terrorist acts. The upgrading of Israel's representation in Athens from consular level to diplo- matic mission, coupled with other recent manifestations of Greek-Israeli cooperation represents a substantial ad- vance in their relations. (