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June 12, 1987 - Image 30

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1987-06-12

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

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Friday, June 12, 1987

Hours: Mon.-Sat. 10-5
Thursday 1 0-8

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

352-8622

Continued from Page 28

choice of pickled beets, din-
ner salad or cole slaw, plus
a starch, vegetable, roll and
margarine. Entreees change
daily. A recent sampling in-
cluded: sweet and sour
chicken, stuffed cabbage,
fried chicken, roast stuffed
chicken, chicken stir fry and
pepper steak. The most ex-
pensive dinner on the list
ran $6.90.
While not licensed as a
restaurant, the Jewish
Welfare Federation has both
a meat and dairy kitchen at
its downtown offices under
the supervision of Sinai

Hospital's mashgiach. The
kitchen accommodates
Federation staff and other
agencies in the building,
and observant attorneys and
businesspeople often lunch
there. Visitors from out of
town who have no other ac-
cess to kosher meals also
eat at the Federation. No
one is turned away and
there is a charge. The kit-
chen is closed during the
summer.



Cover photograph: Jerome
Zuroff, mashgiach at Sara's
Deli.

Kahane Is Ousted
From Knesset Seat

• 4116

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Palatable Possibilities

ml Aviv (JTA) — Rabbi
Meir Kahane, leader of the
Kach Party, was ousted last
Monday from the Knesset for
refusing to take the oath of
allegiance to parliament and
the State as required by law.
Knesset Speaker Shlomo
Hillel said Kahane would be
barred from entering the
Knesset building as a
member and stripped of his
right to speak or vote in
Knesset deliberations.
The Knesset House Com-
mittee will decide later
whether Kahane will lose
other privileges such as free
postage, travel, telephone and
housing allowances. The
Committee is waiting for the
Supreme Court to rule on
Kahane's appeal against his
ouster.
If it stands, his privileges
may be revoked retroactively
to the date of his election to
parliament in 1984. That
means Kahane would have to
reimburse the Knesset for
allowances paid to him since
then.
When Kahane entered the
Knesset chamber, he was
summoned to the podium by
Hillel to take the oath.
Holding a Bible open to the
Book of Psalsm, he said, "I do
so undertake" — the proper
response — but added "to ad-
mit the supremacy of the
Almighty?'
It was the second time
Kahane refused to pledge
allegiance to the State. When
he was sworn in to the
Knesset three years ago, he
used the same formula. The
oath at that time was ad-
ministered by Yosef Burg of
the National Religious Party,
who said he heard the words
"I do so undertake" and ac-
cepted them as satisfactory.
But Attorney General Yo-
sef Harish ruled that if
Kahane again refused to take

the proper oath he should be
removed from parliament. A
month ago, MK Eliezer Gran-
ot of Mapam and several
other MKs testified at an
American court hearing that
Kahane should lose his
American citizenship because
he has sworn allegiance to a
foreign country. Kahane
stated at the time that he had
taken no such oath.

Italian Jews'
Story Told

New York — Mention the
Holocaust, and several coun-
tries come immediately to
mind — Germany, Poland,
Austria — but probably not
Italy. Yet Italy also has a
story to tell. It is a story of
6,800 Jews who perished, but
also of 38,400 Jews, or 85
percent of the Italian-Jewish
population, who survived be-
cause of the heroic efforts of
Italian non-Jews.
The author of a just-
published book on this sub-
ject recently elaborated on
this previously untold piece
of history. Susan Zuccotti,
author of The Italians and

the Holocaust: Persecution,
Rescue, Survival (Basic

Books), traced the develop-
ments that brought the
"silver age of Italian Jewry to
a sudden and dramatic close."
"In the 1920s and '30s Ita-
lian Jews were highly assimi-
lated, in fact virtually indis-
tinguishable, from non-Jews,"
said Zuccotti. "The Italian
society as a whole was devoid
of anti-Semitism. When Mus-
solini imposed racial laws in
1938 to ingratiate himself
with Hitler, the years that
followed brought emotional
hardships but no physical
dangers to Jews. But starting
in 1943 with the German oc-
cupation, and ending some

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