UP FRONT MSU Arab Demonstration Timed For Holocaust Week ELIZABETH KAPLAN Staff Writer ast Lansing — It was no coincidence that a demon- stration, initiated by Palesti- nians and held Monday at Michigan State University, fell the same week as Holocaust Memorial Day. The General Union of Palestinian Students, which sponsored the event, planned it that way. "We're not saying that people should forget the Holocaust," said one demonstrator, who asked that her name not be used. "What we want is for people to learn from the Holocaust. You know, the Jewish peo- ple always think that just they have been persecuted!' The demonstration began not long after noon just outside MSU's In- ternational Center. It was split into two distinct groups: the Palestinians, carrying signs which equated Israel with South Africa and the Israeli government with the Nazis, and Jewish students, who staged a counter-demonstration. The one exception was Eric Sturm, a Jewish student who march- ed with the Palestinians. Sturm said he joined the Palestinians because, "I'm against all killings. It's an issue of humanity. I'm protesting in the name of the children and mothers killed!" Walking beside Sturm was demonstrator Lawrence Awwad, who carried a sign illustrated with a swastika inside a Star of David. Awwad, one of about 40 Palestinians who participated in the protest, said Bob McKe own E Holocaust survivor Rudolf Leiser lights a candle on Sunday for the six million Jewish victims of the Nazi Holocaust. The annual memorial academy sponsored by Shaarit Haplaytah — Survivors of 1945 — was held at the Maple/Drake Jewish Community Center. Editor Urges U.S. Jewry's Involvement In Middle East ELIZABETH KAPLAN Staff Writer illel Schenker's parents had a dream. They wanted to move to Palestine and live on a kibbutz. But the young activists, both of whom were members of the Hashomer Hatzair youth movement, were among those Jews forbidden by the British government to immigrate to Palestine. So the two set up shop, so to speak, in their Brooklyn home. They H created an "urban kibbutz" their son said, and even spoke Hebrew. This is where young Hillel was raised. Today, Hillel Schenker is senior editor of New Outlook, a magazine representing the views of the Israeli peace movement. A member of the central committee of Mapam, a socialist-Zionist party, he also helped found Peace Now When Schenker immigrated in 1963 to Israel, he fulfilled his parents' dream: He became a member of Kib- butz Barkai. Continued on Page 12 ROUND UP Israel Events Sell Slowly Tickets for upcoming events marking Yom Ha'atzmaut, Israel Independence Day, are selling slowly but surely, ac- cording to Jewish Communi- ty Center staff who are coor- dinating the sales. "We expect a heavy pickup at the end," said Center Ex- ecutive Director Morton Plotnick. At midweek, 711 tickets had been sold for Sunday's performance of the Inbal Dance Theatre at the 1,790 seat Music Hall. Other events, slated for late April and early May, have sold about one-quarter of available tickets, Plotnick said. Israel's Orot Hashcuna singing group will appear April 25. Former United Na- tions Ambassador Jeane Kirkpatrick will speak May . 1. Also on May 1, an Israel Trade and Travel exposition will open at the Tel-Twelve Mall. Jackson Refusal Brings Dismay New York (JTA) — The Rev. Jesse Jackson's apparent refusal to meet with Jewish groups prior to Tuesday's New York Democratic primary has prompted statements of dismay from the umbrella organizations that extended the invitations. Lester Pollack, president of the Jewish Community Rela- tions Council of New York, and Malcolm Hoenlein, ex- ecutive director of the Con- ference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organiza- tions, also denied a charge by Jackson's campaign manager, Gerald Austin, that the Democratic presidential can- didate had been invited only to be "harassed" by Jewish leaders. Jackson, meanwhile, re- sponded for the first time to repeated attacks by New York Mayor Ed Koch, who said that Jews would have to be "crazy" to vote for the candidate. Speaking at the breakfast meeting Monday, Jackson said Koch's remarks threaten to rupture race relations and that "we deserve better leadership than that?' Said Jackson, "lb raise up a race or a religious litmus test does not contribute to he • feels the sign is appropriate because Israel's leaders want to "weed the Palestinians out of the country. Maybe they are doing it a dif- ferent way (than Hitler), maybe they are doing it more slowly. But the goal is still the same." The analogy between Israel and the Nazis particularly offended many of the Jewish students who -par- ticipated in the counter-demon- stration. "It's in very poor taste," Michelle Sage said. "'lb compare the Holocaust with what's happening in Israel now is very irrespectful, and it's going to hurt a lot of people." One of the Jewish marchers car- ried a poster depicting a mass grave of Nazi victims. "There is no com- parison" was written below the picture. Jewish students learned of the demonstration only three days before it was staged. According to Joel Hersh, a member of the Student Coalition for Israel, they saw an an- nouncement in campus paper The State News which invited students to "Join us in our demonstration suppor- ting the Palestinian civilians fighting genocide." Then they began planning the counter-demonstration, which includ- ed preparing the posters and flyers printed with Palestine Liberation Organization chief Yassir Arafat's quote, "Peace for us means the destruction of Israel. Revolutionary violence is the only means?' Earlier in the week, the Palesti- nian students had posted bright Continued on Page 12 healing, which is what I'm in- terested in doing!' Red Cross Is Satisfied Geneva (JTA) — An official of the International Commit- tee of the Red Cross has said the organization is well satisfied with the cooperation it is receiving from the Israeli authorities during the cur- rent unrest in the West Bank and Gaza Strip. Michel Amiguet, head of the Geneva-based ICRC's Middle East operations, said that since the Palestinian uprising began last Dec. 9, the ICRC has lodged 150 com- plaints with Israeli authorities, and these of serious cases of abuse. expressed Amiguet understanding of the reaction of Lsraeli security forces in dif- ficult circumstances. "We do not protest when a boy throw- ing stones is beaten up, but when a person in his home, away from any demonstra- tion, is beaten up seriously, we protest," Amiguet said. Appeal Follows Expulsion United Nations (JTA) — Secretary General Javier Perez de Cuellar appealed to Israel Tuesday to allow eight Palestinians it deported Mon- day to return to the West Bank and Gaza Strip and to rescind expulsion orders issued to 12 others. Britain also sharply criticiz- ed Israel on Tuesday for ex- pelling the eight Palestinians to Lebanon. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 5