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Advocates of armed struggle clearly out- numbered those who turned out to support peace talks with Israel. The largest pro-peace rally drew about 500 Palestinians and Israelis bearing olive branches to the Friends School in Ramallah. Held under the banner, "Two Peoples Speak Peace," the rally, inspired by Peace Now, described itself as the largest joint peace demon- stration ever held by Arabs and Jews. But it was dwarfed by a rally of several thousand Pa- lestinians in Nablus pro- testing the Madrid peace conference under the slogan, "The Land is our identity; liberate it with the gun and the Koran." That gathering, and several others of the anti- peace camp, were organized by the Islamic fundamenta- list Hamas movement, which had agreed in advance not to interfere with the ral- ly in Ramallah. At a demonstration of about 500 Palestinians in Arraba near Jenin, the featured speaker was Ali Abu Hilal of the radical Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine, a breakaway faction of the Palestine Liberation Organ- ization. He urged the PLO to withdraw its support from the U.S.-sponsored peace talks before -it is forced to make more concessions. Mr. Hilal, a recently returned deportee, had been proposed for membership on the official Palestinian dele- gation to the Madrid peace conference. Israel allowed him to return to the West Bank in exchange for the body of Samir Assad, the Israeli Druse who died of unknown causes while held in Lebanon by the Dem- ocratic Front. But Mr. Hilal, who had been deported to Jordan five years ago for terrorist ac- tivities, did not take part in the talks, partly because of his own opposition to the peace process and partly be- cause Israel would probably have refused to accept him. The Democratic Front has, in fact, split over the peace process. Opposing the talks is a group led by the former head of the whole DFLP, Nayef Hawatmeh. That is the group to which Abu Hilal belongs, according to Ha'aretz Washington cor- respondent On Nir. Meanwhile, a group of about 70 Arab and Jewish peace advocates was forced to move its rally from the Israeli town of Givat Haviva to a site on the 1967 "Green Line," the unofficial boun- dary between Israel proper and the West Bank. Peace Now said the site had to be changed because the Israel Defense Force refused to allow West Bank Arabs to enter Israel. Man Caught With Bombs Nwe York (JTA) — Police in Buenos Aires apprehend- ed a man last week in front of the Ciudadela Jewish cemetery who was found to be carrying four powerful time bombs, the Anti- Defamation League re- ported. The timer on one of the bombs had already been ac- t iv at ed. When police detonated the bomb in an empty lot, the resultant ex- plosion broke windows and was felt as far as 20 blocks away, ADL said. The three other bombs were defused. The bombs were made of trotyl, a powerful explosive used in the military. The man arrested, Jose Maizon, about 40 years old, was apprehended after cemetery officials became suspicious of his repeated entry into the cemetery. Rabbi Morton Rosenthal, director of ADL's Latin American Affairs Depart- ment, praised the "prompt response of the police, which prevented the possible loss of innocent lives and the mas- sive destruction of tomb- stones." According to Rabbi Rosen- thal, the Ciudadela cemetery has been attacked three times in recent years: in 1987, 1988 and 1990. Another Jewish cemetery outside Buenos Aires was at- tacked April 30 by a neo- Nazi group that destroyed about 100 tombstones. In- vestigators are looking into whether Maizon has ties to this or any other extremist group that has previously attacked Jewish cemeteries.