N EWS Exciting Brilliant Diamonds The Finest Expression of Love One, Two or Three Rows of Diamonds Set In Luxurious 18K Yellow Gold Starting At Phone 642-5575 30400 Telegraph Rd., Suite 134 Birmingham OW= 9725 HOURS: Daily 10-5:30 Thurs. 10-7 Sat. 10-3 1 o CO• spONSQ"Cs °CCM* OM% FALL 1989 CONGREGATION BETH ACHIM 21100 W. Twelve Mile Road, Southfield, Ml CHANGES IN THE COMMUNIST WORLD AND ITS IMPACT ON THE JEWS Tuesdays Instructor: Tuition 4 Weeks, Oct. 10-31 Dr. Zvi Gitelman University of Michigan $34 T30-9:00 p.m. TEMPLE BETH EL 7400 Telegraph Road, Birmingham, Ml FROM THE MELTING POT TO THE SWIMMING POOL: THE IMAGE OF THE JEW IN MODERN LITERATURE, FILM AND TELEVISION Instructor: Dr. Mashey Bernstein University of Michigan Mondays 8 Weeks, Oct. 23-Dec. 11 7:30-8:30 p.m. Tuition $45 Register at the Midrasha-College of Jewish Studies 21550 West Twelve Mile Road, Southfield For Further information call: 352-7117 22 FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1989 Pope Denounces Anti-Semitism Rome (JTA) — Pope John Paul II issued a ringing denunciation of anti- Semitism this weekend, in an apostolic letter addressed to all Catholics. "I want to restate with force that hostility and hate toward Judaism are in complete con- tradiction to the Christian vi- sion of the dignity of man," the pontiff declared. The 20-page letter was released to mark the 50th an- niversary of the start of World War II, when German forces invaded Poland on Sept. 1, 1939. It spoke at length and with poignancy of the horrors of the Holocaust and the par- ticular sufferings of the Jews of Poland, where this pope was born. The letter could be taken as an attempt to ease the ten- sions between the Catholic Church and world Jewry over a convent on the grounds of the former Auschwitz death camp, which the church pro- mised more than two years ago to relocate but never has. While the letter stressed that all groups persecuted by the Nazis should be remembered, the pope was especially eloquent about Jewish suffering. "Among all anti-human measures, there is one which remains forever a disgrace for humanity: the barbaric plan which was ruthlessly launch- ed against the Jewish people," the letter said. "The Jews of Poland, more than others, lived through that calvary: The images of the siege of the Warsaw Ghet- to, like what we know about the concentration camps of Auschwitz, Majdanek or Treblinka, go beyond that which is humanly possible to imaginer the pope's letter said. But if the pope's denuncia- tion of the Holocaust and anti-Semitism was aimed at defusing the convent con- troversy, Polish Cardinal Josef Glemp added fuel to the fire. He delivered a sharp ser- mon Saturday in Czestochowa criticizing Jews for their "arrogant" attitude toward the Auschwitz convent. In his sermon, the Polish Catholic primate asked the Jewish people not to "talk to us from the position of a na- tion raised above all others, and do not dictate terms that are impossible to fulfill." Glemp also implied that Jewish influence was poison- ing the international news media against Poland. "Your power is the mass media at your disposal in many countries. Let them not serve to spread anti- Polonism," Glemp said. Glemp called on the Jews in the media not to glorify the "seven Jews from New York" who "launched an attack against the convent in Auschwitz?' He was referring to a July 14 demonstration led by Rab- bi Avraham Weiss of New York. When the protestors entered the convent grounds to protest its continued presence, they were beaten by convent workers and dragged off the grounds. Shortly afterward, the ar- chbishop of Krakow, Cardinal Franciszek Macharski, an- nounced he was canceling the agreement to move the con- vent to an interfaith center that would be built away from the convent grounds. Palestinian Granted Asylum Tel Aviv (JTA) France granted asylum to one of Five Palestinians deported from the west Bank. Dr. Taysir Aruri, who taught physics at Bir Zeit University in the West Bank until it was shut down by the Israeli authorities, was ex- pected in Paris. He is one of five Palesti- nians whose final appeals against expulsion were re- jected by Israel's High Court of Justice last week. All were expelled. Israel claims that the men, who have records of security offenses and have long been in custody, are leaders of the Palestinian uprising in the West Bank and Gaza Strip. Setting something of a precedent, Israeli authorities permitted the five to select where he wanted to be deported. Aruri, who is a member of the Palestinian Communist Party, chose France. He said he feared for his life if sent to Lebanon, the place where Israel usually expels those it deems security risks. The other four deportees were flown by helicopter to the southern Lebanon securi- ty zone, where they were given medical checkups and some money before friends drove their further north.