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This became a reality in the Zionist commitment to redemption. , In fewer than 30 hours, 40 Israeli planes transported more than 14,400 of our black fellow Jews to their freedom in Israel. Their ex- ile ended with citizenship that identified them as Israelis. Such dramatic develop- ments inspire poetic impres- sions of the experiences. Most memorable is the depiction by a well-known author in Hebrew. David Grossman's impression of Operation Solomon was in an English translation by Marsha Weinstein in the New York Times entitled "The Spark and the Flute." It concluded with a message not to be forgotten. The Ethiopians passed between those who stared at them. A trying test of their natural shyness, their dignity. It seemed as if their souls closed a bit. Not in fear, in caution. Even the adults among them became children in the face of the genial, knowing bustle of those who received them. But then a boy burst through the doorway of the plane, a boy of 5 or 6, shaved head, very black, a large wooden flute in his hand. Standing at the head of the ramp, he began to play. For a mo- ment, all activity stopped, a few photographers even forgot their flashbulbs. He stood and played in earnest, with intent. Perhaps it was a shep- herd's tune he had played in his village, with his flock. Perhaps it was a melody he had prepared for the moment. With his song, one live, shimmering spark flew out from under the anvil of our lives. For one whole day, from within the jarr- ing dissonance of our in- ner sound system, we produced one true note, one clear, harmonious note; enough to evoke the entire melody.Operation Solomon is a continuity of the historic hopes that were marked by the statehood of modern Israel. Jacques Faitlovitch: Explorer of Falashas. The immediate experi- ences of ending the exile and calling a halt to home- lessness is an appeal for unity in Jewish ranks. We suffered too "long from disuni- ty. An old, never published oc- currence in local Jewish ranks is now worth men- tioning. It was in 1939 when Anna Slomovitz secured the con- sent of one of our esteemed rabbis, Dr. Leo M. Franklin, to have a garden of trees planted in the Jewish na- tional home, then Palestine, by the Jewish National Fund. She organized a gardens committee. A call for participation in the project was written by Anna Slomovitz as secretary and several hundred were printed — a copy of the original is in my archives — but never mailed. The invitation for par- ticipation said in part: The approaching an- niversary of Dr. Leo M. Franklin's ministry in Detroit is a signal for nationwide honors to be accorded Temple Beth El's spiritual leader .. . A committee has therefore been selected to plant the Leo M. Franklin Gardens in Palestine, and in this way to aid in the land redemption and reforestation program. All funds derived from this project will be used toward the Jewish Na- tional Fund program to redeem land in Palestine and to make the Jewish settlements habitable for refugees settling there . . The Saturday night before Jan. 16, 1939, the telephone rang in our Stoepel home. Leo Franklin called from Cincinnati at a meeting of Reform rabbis and friends. They reprimanded him for submitting to the JNF re- quest. He asked to be reliev- ed of his acceptance. He asked to have the mail- ing stopped and he said he would pay all expenses in- curred. Let it be known that Dr. Franklin, the non-Zionist, responded in all sincerity to a JNF appeal. Meanwhile, we recall the interest that was aroused in the rescuing of Ethiopian Jews when the American Pro-Falasha Committee was first organized by Professor Faitlovitch. In his pamphlet "The Romantic Story of an Exotic Jewish Group," Professor Faitlovitch commenced his revelation with the follow- ing: A band of Jewish exiles, fleeing the shores of Palestine about twenty- six hundred years ago, then under oppressive Babylonian rule, seeking Calling a halt to homelessness is an appeal for unity in Jewish ranks. refuge in Egypt and along the cataracts of the Nile, pushed on into the deserts of the Dark Continent and ultimately penetrated the highlands of that distant land, known today as Abyssinia or Ethiopia. For centuries they were compelled to battle for the survival of their group and for the preservation of their cherished, ancestral culture. After years of intermittent war- fare they succeeded in gaining a foothold in that part of the world and in founding a new home on alien soil. Descendants of these hardy, intrepid warriors constitute the group know today as the Falashas of Abyssinia. This name was given by the Abyssinian autochthons to those ear- ly Jewish immigrants whose descendants con- stitute the remnant of six- ty thousand Jews living in Ethiopia. That's how the historic rescue movement commenc- ed. It is Israel as the product of Zionism that corrected the sins of centuries. Therefore, those of us who share in the rescue movement earn a role in having made it possible for a redeemer coming from Zion. ❑