A BENTLEYYOU CAN OWN BEFORE YOU'RE BUSINESS RICH AND FAMOUS. XIV,: Or S , r t S 7 Introducing a motor car that gives you Bentley power and prestige for a surprisingly affordable price, $138,500*. Bentley presents the Brooklands, the ultimate union of advanced technology and the craftsman's 'skill. BEN T L E Y The Akatsi State Farm in Ghana is running in cooperation with a team of Israel agriculturists. BENTLEY • ROLLS ROYCE MICHIGAN'S EXCLUSIVE BENTLEY ROLLS ROYCE DEALER 40475 ANN ARBOR RD., PLYMOUTH, MICHIGAN (313) 453-7500 LOTTERY WINNER SPECIALS © Rolls-Royce Motor Cars Inc., 1992. The name "Brooklands" is a trademark, and the name "Bentley" and the badge and radiator grille are registered trademarks. *Manufacturer's suggested retail price. Taxes, title and registration fees additional. Beautify And Protect Your Marble And Stone THE DETRO IT JEWISH NEWS RADISSON ON THE LAKE 8 Bring your marble and stone back to life by using Union Carbide MARBLE LIFE technologies which include stripping of waxes and chemicals, lip- page removal, scratch, scar and stain removal, crack and chip repair and leaving a luxurious slip-resistant finish. Advertising in The Jewish News Gets Results Place Your Ad Today. Call 354-6060 Cooperative Aid Makes Friends YITZCHAK DINUR SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS I srael has participated in projects of development and assistance abroad almost from the time of its creation as an independent state. Its chief motivation has been the desire to participate as fully as possible in what it considers to be one of the most promising and challeng- ing fields of international relations — cooperation in development. Israel's motivation is much more basic than a simple con- cern with the economic, the political and the social spheres. It has very much to do with a modern and prac- tical application of a time- honored, still-cherished belief in the initial and ultimate brotherhood of man. When searching its collective soul prior to each Independence Day, reflecting on its actions and endeavoring to decide what had been done badly and what well, one area of endeavor that Israel can be consistently proud of is its programs of assistance to other developing nations. Israeli aid to other coun- tries at first was not at Israel's initiative at all, but developed in response to in- terest originating from other newly independent nations, or from national in- dependence movements. In- deed, only in early 1958 was a special Division for Interna- tional Cooperation establish- ed within the Ministry for Foreign Affairs. The earliest evidence of in- terest in Israel's developmen- tal successes came from a Burmese delegation to the In- ternational Trade Union Con- gress in Belgrade in 1950. The second was from Ghana, which achieved its in- dependence in 1957. In 1968, Golda Meir, then foreign minister, made her first visit to Africa. She was deeply moved by the enor- mous challenges and pro- blems facing the young African states following their independence and insisted that Israel had a duty to help fight these nations' grave pro- blems of health, unemploy- ment, education, housing and malnutrition. Israel's pro- Israeli aid to other countries at first was not at Israel's initiative at all. gram of technical cooperation was both spontaneous and altruistic. Said Mrs. Meir, simply, upon her return, "They (the African states) are in great need and we must assist them." The empathy and concern she expressed then still govern Israel's con- duct in this area of interna- tional relations today. Dr. Shimon Amir, former long-time head of the Israel Foreign Office's Division for International Cooperation, tells us that "The reason for this mutual awareness of shared problems and objec- tives between Israel and other developing nations are