PURELY COMMENTARY Assuring Dignity Continued from Page 2 missible but obligatory that it express its reserva- tion by turning to the heads of the State, the political bodies, or the media in Israel. What I cannot accept, and disgustedly reject, is the phenomenon of Jewish leaders turning to non- Israeli media in order to voice criticism of Israel's policies. It sometimes seems that we are quickly forgetting the history of the rise of Israel, the seven Arab ar- mies that assailed us, and the War of Liberation that was forced upon us. Even then we extended the hand of peace, and then, too, it was rejected. We forget, as well, that in 1967 we did not initiate the conquest of the terrorists as we now administer, since then, too, our Arab neighbors gave us a negative answer. Have we forgotten that it was the Arabs who brought large concentra- tions of troops up to our border, while Nasser pro- claimed that those troops were intended to throw us into the sea? Has the simple fact been forgotten that between 1948 and 1967 the ter- ritories were under Jorda- nian and Egyptian rule, and that neither Jordan nor Egypt recognized Palestinian rights nor set up a Palestinian state? Ac- tually, then as now, the last thing they wished to see was a Palestinian state. What state in the world would agree to yield its sovereign rights to impose law and order? That is both its right and its duty. Nor is the duty confined to the area of Israel itself; ac- cording to international law, it extends to territories administered by the State •• • Israel has never aimed to rule another people, nor has a policy of that sort ever been included in the political program of any Israeli government. As you know, the ques- tion of whether or not to negotiate with the PLO is extensively debated in Israel, as is the question of whether the PLO has undergone fundamental change. Many Israelis are most doubtful that Arafat and his colleagues seriously in- tend to do what they say . . . Many who have ex- amined Arafat's statements have concluded that after every apparently moderate 38 FRIDAY, AUGUST 17, 1990 statement he finds an op- portunity to issue to another audience a state- ment which is the precise opposite of the first .. . Part of the Israeli people remain ready to talk with Arafat and the PLO, and to give them an opportunity to prove that they are ge- niunely transformed. Others among us are not prepared to endanger what they see as their future and the future of their children by relying on words — and on Arafat's declarations. — which have indeed proved tht the PLO remains faithful to its Cove- nant calling for the destruction of the State of Israel .. . If Arafat is sincere in his what protestations, As long as there was a faithful resistance to the accumulated hatreds, there was the strength to survive. prevents him from conven- ing the Palestine National Council and urging its members to introduce changes in the Palestinian Covenant, as the Socialist International, for example, recently suggested, so that the three clauses calling for the destruction of the State of Israel be annuled? I know of three occasions in the past when the coun- cil was convened to amend the Covenant. Why should it not be possible to do so again? . .. Ours is a free society: fac- ing it is a society torn by violent strife in which no one will risk his life by speaking or arguing freely or making a statement in- consistent with the ex- tremist line of the terrorist organization which hap- pens to dominate at any given period. That, in my opinion, is the source of the problem today. The basic facts thus outlin- ed must not be ignored. Let them be added to the necessi- ty of assuring respect and dignity to Jewish com- mitments and loyalties. U.S. Jewry Continued from Page 2 there is another illuminating example that will fascinate the reader. When an eminent early American theater critic treats us well, we must remember him. Dr. Marcus draws attention to this reproduced advertisement: 11 E NV: BENEVOLENT HEBREW COMEDY. • u■ NEW TIMATRC,...."..,••,.. ...... 1[1:11/1.7.0 CUM:WWI-AY 46A...f Z.R. a., fa t• Clam .1:nams Tit 11,14,... : ..... so. Ne....PT CO .0. 11111CIC RIC( 1.041.5 Rh., 04 C.. *.ava•oos. :3111,atat et Ow tr. An ad for 'The Jew' Here is the explanatory note under the advertisement: The Jew by Richard Cumberland (d.1811) is one of the few English plays in which the Jew is not pic- tured as a scoundrel. The collected historical facts are related by Marcus in the following Jewish historio- graphy dealing with the theater: The first Jew seen on the American stage in legitimate drama was the "villain" Shylock, in The Merchant of Venice. That was in 1752 at Williams- burg in Virginia. The pe- jorative indoctrination was interrupted in the latter part of the century when three editions of Cumberland's The Jew were published in 1795 in Boston, New York, and Bal- timore; that same year this comedy about a "benevo- lent Hebrew" moneylender was produced in Boston, New York and Philadel- phia. Jews were among the many liberal-minded citizens throughout the country who were eager to encourage theatrical pro- ductions. Moses M. Hays, of Boston, appears to have been one of the leaders of the group which sought to license a theatre in Boston in the 1790s. The Bostonian argued that plays polished manners and promoted morality. By the 1820s, if not earlier, Jews had begun making their appearance in the United States as theatre managers and as actors playing stellar roles. The year 1826 was a pro- ductive one for them. In Princeton, New Jersey, Dr. A. Borrenstein published the Sacred Dramas of Han- nah More, while Da Ponte republished three of his older musical dramas; one of these, Don Giovanni, reproduced the text in both Italian and English. That same year, as it has been pointed out earlier, Mathias Lopez edited four plays for publication. In 1830, Gustavus A. Myers, then a young man of twenty-nine, wrote a one- act farce based on a story from the French and called Nature and Philosophy, an interesting love story of a young man who had never seen a girl; he had been reared by his father, a misogynist. There is the recollection by Marcus of an effort that was made to establish a Jewish state. The reference to it is with this photo. Mordecai Noah The caption reads: Mordecai Manuel Noah (d. 1851) was probably America's best known Jewish layman. He was a lawyer, a judge, a consular officer, a journalist, a surveyor of the Port of New York, a sheriff, a dramatist, a proto-Zionist. Portrait by John Wesley Jarvis. Original in Congregation Shearith Israel, New York City. Here is how Jacob Marcus deals with the John Adams and Mordecai Manuel Noah episode: Noah in his dream of Restoration had the sym- pathy of the evangelicals. These religionists were sure that the Jews would be restored to the land of their fathers because of the biblical promises. . . . Noah's Zionism actually came to the fore no later than 1818. As has been sug- gested above, Jews throughout history have had their politico-re ligious pseudo-Messiahs who were prepared to reestablish the Jewish state. This desire goes back at least to the first century of the Christian era. In a sense, Noah was a link in that millennial chain. On April 17, 1818, he made an address at the consecra- tion of the rebuilt Mill Street synagogue. A new building was needed; the old one had been erected in 1730 when at the most there were 500 Jewish souls in all of North America; now there were at least 3,000. The editor rehearsed his hopes. The Christian clergy must stop attacking Jews. The Jews here must improve themselves moral- ly and culturally. Let them forsake commerce and go into crafts and farming. The prospects for the Restoration are now ex- cellent with the Turkish Empire about to collapse. One hundred thousand Jews could march on Palestine-Syria, conquer it and establish a state. (This idea of a Jewish army is probably Napoleonic.) And the money to finance this expedition? The Jews are wealthy; they hold the purse strings. As early as Weekly 1816, Niles's Register reported that rich Jews were • ready to buy Palestine. Noah was going along with the myth that Jewish • bankers (the Rothschilds) were power- ful; they could and would supply the necessary funds. But, he hastened to add, until all this comes to pass, America is Jewry's chosen land. Noah sent a copy of his speech to John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, and James Madison. In their answers, all three stressed the freedom accorded the Jews in the United States. Adams in another letter ex- pressed the hope that Noah would put himself at the head of this proposed army of 100,000. Jews in the new state would be able to improve themselves culturally and become liberal Unitarian Chris- tians! In another note to the editor, Adams wrote that he was conscious of the anti-Jewish prejudice that still persisted; he knew several Jews per- sonally; they were fine peo- ple . In the 1830s, Noah con- tinued to concern himself with Palestine and its future as a home for Jews. Somehow or other it was hoped that the unrest in that part of the world*, the growth of state nationalism in Europe, the July Revolt of 1830, would all afford an opportunity for the Jews to reestablish a state of their