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(313) 398-4560 faucet set; Kohler whirlpool bath; and the Heated Towel Warmer by Paul Associates, which hooks up directly into your hot water tank. We have everythirg for every budget. Visit our showroom where you can view our large selec- tion and receive savings of 20% and more. HOURS: 9-5:30 OCLL FOR A SPECIAL APPOINTMENT ANYTIME MON/FRI, 9-3 SAT 4.4 20 FRIDAY, SEPT. 18, 1987 I Chief Of Zulu Nation Strongly Backs Israel CHARLEY LEVINE Special to The Jewish News Kwazulu, lundi, South Africa (JTA) — The man who could well emerge as South Africa's first black president is an outspoken supporter of Israel. "Israel is indeed a land of miracles," enthusiastically declared Chief Mongosuthu Gatsha Buthelezi, who claims the support of South Africa's largest ethnic group, the six million Zulus, whose ances- tors fought the British irr the 19th Century. "It is miracul- ous to see what Israel has achieved in 38 years in the face of great adversities and hostilities." Regarded by more radical blacks as an apologist for apartheid, by liberal whites as an authentic voice for compromise, and by the South African government it- self as a responsible, but an- noyingly independent cham- pion of black power and pride, Buthelezi has led the proud Zulus for 30 years. He is chief minister of his tribe's important Buthelezi clan, and head of Inkatha, a militant cultural-political organization that boasts a paid-up mem- bership of a million. - Inkatha activists wear military-style uniforms, attend demonstrations armed with spears, clubs and shields, and have engaged in several, well publicized bloody clashes with followers of the outlawed African Na- tional Congress (ANC), an organization committed to the violent overthrow of white rule in South Africa. In sharp contrast to Buthelezi's Inkatha move- ment, the ANC, which admits to Soviet backing, has adopted a generally anti- Western and specifically anti-Israel line. South Afri- can officials attribute the ANC's position on Israel to support that the underground group has reportedly received from the Palestine Liberation Organization and Libya. According to both South African and Israeli experts on international terrorism, the PLO and the Libyans have provided the ANC and the smaller, perhaps even more radical, Pan-African Congress with arms, money and mili- tary training and logistical support for over five years. "I would say that Libya's Col. Qaddafi is today part of the ANC," Buthelezi said during the course of a lengthy interview conducted at his ministerial headquar- ters in Ulundi, capital of Kwazulu. "The ANC de- scribes itself as anti-Zionist, not anti-Semitic, like many African groups. But anti- Zionism and anti-Semitism are one and the same thing, I have always found. "Anti-Zionism, equating Zionism with racism — all this is really a cover for anti-Semitism. It's an abhor- rent, abominable thing." An articulate, urbane leader, who advocates power sharing for South African blacks, instead of revolution, and remains committed to non-violent change — for practical as well as moral reasons — Buthelezi makes no secret of his admiration for Israel and his view of the country as a model for other developing nations. "I am deeply inspired- by what I saw in Israel," he said, referring to his visit there last year. "I returned home with increased hope and a realization that people facing adversity can become ingenious beyond all predic tion. In addition, visiting Is- rael for me, my wife and those who accompanied us was a very spiritual experi- ence for us as Christians." He said that he was moved in particular by his visit to Yad Vashem, the Holocaust memorial in Jerusalem, add- ing that as a result of the visit and his reading of the history of the Holocaust he is especially sensitive to the newly-risen strength of the neo-Nazi AWB, an Afrikaner extremist group that sports brown-shirted uniforms and Waves swastika-like banners. "They really cause my flesh to crawl because I say, 'God help us if we're going to have a repeat performance of that kind of racism which cost the world so many lives,' " Buthelezi said. Buthelezi is quick to take issue with Anglican Bishop Desmond Tutu, who recently likened apartheid to the Nazis' genocidal program. "One can hardly say apar- theid is the same as Nazism," the Zulu chief said. "I mean, apartheid is based on a racist premise and bad enough, but it's hardly murderous." He pointed out that while the Nazis sought to extermi- nate the Jews, South African policy seems bent on preserv- ing its black majority, but as second class, or subservient, citizens. "I believe as you do in the God of Abraham," Buthelezi declared, "and I believe that we are all creatures of His creation. The Jewish people may not be in a position to