COMMUNITY Professor Says Israel Must Face Nuclear Issue ELIZABETH APPLEBAUM Features Editor F A luncheon sponsored by the Metro Detroit Israel Bond Women's Division saw over $1,422,000 in Israel Bond subscriptions in tribute to honoree Florine Mark-Ross. Shown at the event are, from left, Doreen Hermelin, Linda Goldman, Ms. Mark, Barbara Stollman and Meryl C. Podolsky. Sherman and Mary Shapiro received the 1989 Jewish National Fund Jerusalem Award at the 17th annual auction Sept. 17. Shown are, from left, Sue Ellen Eisenberg, Max Sosin and the Shapiros. HMC Will Honor 'An Unsung Hero' George Mantello, of Italy, one of history's "forgotten" heroes who saved thousands of lives, will be honored by the Holocaust Memorial Center at its dinner November 12, at the Westin Hotel. Mantello, saved thousands of Jews yet remained virtual- ly unnoticed until now, when he will receive the Center's Righteousness Award at the dinner which will be a "Tribute to he Rescuers." Rabbi Charles H. Rosenz- veig, founder and executive vice-president of the Holocaust Memorial Center, said the 87-year-old Mantello was the first person to "break the official silence on the Holocaust." As El Salvador's secretary general in Switzerland from 1942 to 1945, he circulated a 30-page description of Auschwitz, after which the deportation of Hungarian Jews to concentration camps was immediately halted. Additionally, he is credited with producing and distributing 15,000 Salvadoran citizenship documents free-of-charge for Jews and non-Jews through- out Switzerland. "The actions of George Mantello were truly remarkable," said Rabbi Rosenzveig. "And history has not given this man the credit he deserves." U.S. Representative Charles E. Schumer recently propos- ed that Mantello be given the Congressional Gold Medal, Congress' highest award. The Fifth Anniversary din- ner will be chaired by Jane Sherman, General Chairman, and David Mondry. rom government leaders to men on the street, Israelis appear to be united in silence about one critical topic, according to Professor Avner Cohen of the Tel Aviv University philosophy department. "We talk about the in- tifada, we talk about all kinds of things that stand on the agenda of the Middle East," he said. "But we do not talk about Israel's nuclear capability." Cohen, visiting professor at Kalamazoo College and co-editor of Nuclear Weapons and the Future of Humanity, spoke last week on "Facing The Unavoidable — Israel's Nuclear Monopoly Re- visited" at the Workmen's Circle. His visit here was sponsored by Wayne State University's Center for Peace and Conflict Studies. Cohen said he, like many other Israelis, became con- cerned about Israel's nuclear capability in the early 1980s. The impetus for the change was Israel's invasion of Lebanon. "The time had come to face the issue," he said. "Israel, like the rest of the world, had tended to ignore it for many years." This posture of ignoring Israel's nuclear capability began with President Richard Nixon, who "put the issue off of the American- Israel political agenda," Cohen said. Throughout the following years, it continued to remain on the back burner. The situation changed in October 1986 when Mordechai Vanunu was charged with selling secrets of Israel's nuclear capability to The Sunday Timesof Lon- don. Vanunu, an Israeli citizen and former technician at a nuclear facility in Dimona, Israel, had moved to Australia and converted to Christianity. "Then he look- ed for someone to tell his story," Cohen said. Israelis were curious about what kind of man Vanunu was and why he had spoken to The Times. Yet the infor- mation he gave to the paper — such as the revelation that Israel owns more than 100 nuclear warheads — proved of little interest to anyone, . including the Israel and the U.S. governments, Cohen said. Cohen said the Israelis' reaction to the Vanunu af- fair illustrates the "sense of bonding shared by policy makers, elected officials and the general population" not to discuss the country's nuclear capability. "It's as though everybody in Israel possessed some kind of a secret." Israel's position since 1965 has been that it will "not be the first nation to introduce nuclear weapons to the Mid- dle East," Cohen said. "But what does 'introduce' mean? Does it mean test? Develop? Threaten? Assemble?" Israel may soon be forced to clarify this stance, Cohen said. Any upcoming war in the Middle East is bound to mean the use of nuclear weapons; "One has to be a fool not to face that reality." Imagine a situation in which Israel had sustained hundreds of casualties in the Golan Heights from Syrian forces. Now suppose that Syria began to call on its allies for support. A strong possibility exists that Israel's war cabinet would consider the use of nuclear weapons, he said. Israel feels confident now because it has a monopoly on nuclear capability in the Middle East, Cohen said. "But that kind of arrogance cannot exist forever." . Cohen said Israel's nuclear situation should be discuss- ed in a political context with U.S. mediation. He said American representatives would be able to solicit Arab and Israeli views about nuclear weapons. In the past, he said, a kind of "nuclear taboo" existed after the massive destruc- tion at Hiroshima- and Nagasaki. Now, however, as more nations gain power and nuclear capability, that taboo is vanishing. Israel's weapons are "part of the nuclear age and can no longer be put under the table," Cohen said. ❑ Schnipper Leads Off Rabbis' Lunch-Learn The B'nai B'rith Council, Jewish Community Council, Michigan Board of Rabbis and the Midrasha-College of Jewish Studies are sponsor- ing a series of four lectures in a lunch and learn series. The first lecture will be held Oct. 12 and will feature Rabbi A. Irving Schnipper of Congregation. Beth Abraham Hillel Moses. He will speak on "Judaism in the Nuclear Age: Last Chance for Sur- vival." Subsequent lectures will be held on Thursdays. Nov. 9 Rabbi Lane Steinger of Tem- ple Emanu El will speak on "lb Be or Not to Be: Freedom of Choice in American Jewish Life;" Dec. 14 with Rabbi David Nelson of Congrega- tion Beth Shalom speaking on "The December Dilemma — Living as a Jew in a Chris- tian World;" and Jan. 11 with Rabbi Bruce Aft, director of the Midrasha — College of Jewish Studies and principal of the Community Jewish High School, speaking on "The Vision of Mordecai Kaplan — Reconstructing American Judaism." All lectures will be held from noon to 1:30 p.m. in the Sarah and Morris Friedman Conference Room at the United Hebrew Schools. The Rabbi Schnipper cost of the lectures includes a kosher lunch. For information, call Bobbie Levine, B'nai B'rith Council, 552-8177; or Marion Bron- stein, Midrasha — College of Jewish Studies, 352-7117. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 43