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THE HUNTINGTON LEARNING CENTER -

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= 398-3605 --.—

1986. Huntington Learning Centers, Inc

THE SIDDUR OF THE
CONCENTRATION CAMP

Out of the horrible years of World War II, of the Nazi terror, and the death
camps, have come inspiring tales of bravery and heroism. One of these is about a
Prayer Book composed in an extraordinary, wondrous manner.

The prisoners ofCamp Treblinka, although tortured and
i- amished, Thanac...;e,1 somehou.;
keep on account of the
Jac. tnh Calendar, year, Ac-ttr cc rl CL2 ,'In secret.lheii wicpered.

r - The // /y <idy± 1.4.//// be here

4/e mi n t pla7) J

Yarn iii/y)ar. .5erv/ce.

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Dues 9,c,'/ie remember the
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Let us each tdirdi•
aAat we 5//j/ rernemket; o
prdyei , d by/1111, Cr eye') a
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(.77/ ,lia,ii. d 1; , aer iirick.

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Carnp -Trrbiinka

was created. c:n scraps a p , - )1 ,L• 101110 ) I h c4

cornered
their

Vic- her ra 5ecreT, at the •, ,,k u s-
hej trembl;ns19 wrcielhk.u.

Arld en 'Yuri) K ■ pi.lul , eve, I')
iturninaling the preslouS .5,r/riur
.dllh a flash lic;h1, led a hushed, pItiirvi
cLryegation ir) a fervent serviLc•

The hazan,

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out r l the depths / cad TAee •
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3Elt ( 144J,fiEl

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LI-42g and

f og oul cPalloc-Ez to aff

Mr. and Mrs. Max Stottman
Mr. Philip Stattman
and Families

54

Friday, April 10, 1987

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

The Pollard affair has betrayed the
United States as well as Israelis and
American Jews

HELEN DAVIS

Special to The Jewish News

j erusalem — Jonathan
Jay Pollard, jailed in
the United States on
charges of spying for Israel,
may justly feel that he has
been abandoned by Jerusa-
lem. Abandoned, perhaps,
but not forgotten.
The "Pollard Affair" has
become a ubiquitous item on
the Israeli agenda; an issue
that simply will not go away,
no matter how passionately
Israel's political leaders deny
prior knowledge of this
"rogue" operation which, they
insist, was conducted without
their authorization or ap-
proval.
The affair has now mush-
roomed into high drama, a
full-blown political scandal
that is threatening to tear
apart the fabric of mutual
confidence that has developed
between two close and
trusted allies.
Editorials, articles and let-
ters to Israeli newspapers
relentlessly analyze and
argue the merits of the
Pollard case: its impact on
United States-Israeli rela-
tions; on relations with
American Jewry; on Israel's
much-vaunted security ap-
paratus; on the need for
reform within Israel's
decision-making processes.
Long-time critics of Israel's
inbred and cumbersome poli-
tical system — which has
allowed national leaders to
shrug off responsibility for
one intelligence "lapse" after
another — have seized on the
Pollard case to press their de-
mand for a complete overhaul
of the political establishment.
Indeed, almost everyone in
Israel appears to have some-
thing to say about the affair.
And they are saying it loud
and clear.
Some who might be cate-
gorized as inhabiting the
hard-line, right-wing of the
Israeli political spectrum,
believe that Israel has
nothing to apologize for.
"Running" a spy — albeit
an American Jew — deep in-
side the United States in-
telligence establishment was
no less than a matter of vital
national interest. Their only
regret — the only problem
with the operation that they
will concede — is that he was
caught.
The United States, they

RNS Pliotol Wide World

-

• Draperies
• Bedspreads
• Blankets (cleaned or laundered)
• Window Shades
• Lampshades
• Pillows
• Venetian Blinds

Jerusalemites donating to the
Pollard defense fund.

say, has no room for com-
plaint. In the first place, they
have "run" their own agents
in Israel; in the second, they
have long enjoyed a rich
bounty of intelligence that
was officially transferred to
them from Israel.
Moreover, they argue, if the
United States had been pro-
viding Israel with the quali-
ty and range of information
that Pollard handed over,
Israel would have had no
cause to mount an espionage
operation.
According to Professor
Paul Eidelberg, a political
scientist at Bar-Ilan Univer-
sity and one of the most ar-
ticulate exponents of this
school of thought, supports
his position with some im-
pressive documentation.
He quotes the former head
of United States Air Force in-
telligence, General George
Keegan, as having declared
that Israeli intelligence
passed on to the United
States was worth "ten CIAs."
And he quotes Senator J.
William Fulbright — no lover
of Israel — as having con-
ceded that Israeli information
about Soviet weaponry was
"worth more than all the
military and economic
assistance she receives from
the United States."
"Yet Israel," notes Pro-
fessor Eidelberg, "is accused
on ingratitude, of biting the
hand that feeds it. These are
words for children, not for
men who deal in the coin of

