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July 09, 1993 - Image 54

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1993-07-09

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

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FOR THESE LLTURIOUS CARS!

GAZA FIRST page 53

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Gaza first otherwise is a
political trap and Israel
will only give up Gaza," he
said.
Mr. • Quandt, now a
se'nior fellow at the
Brookings Institution, also
cautioned about what
might happen if the
Palestinians came to feel
that too much time had
dragged between their
gaining control over Gaza
and their obtaining similar
autonomy or independence
in the West Bank.
If that were to happen,
he said, Gazan
Palestinians would be
under "tremendous pres-
sure" to help West Bank
Palestinians, "perhaps
even with arms. That's
why we need a quick follow
up to settle the West
Bank's final status."
A myriad of details
would have to be worked
out prior to any Israeli
withdrawal from Gaza, be
it negotiated or unilateral.
For example, a great
many Gazans are economi-
cally dependent upon
wages earned from jobs in
Israel — jobs most of them
have been unable to get to
since Israel closed the ter-
ritories in response to this
spring's wave of terrorist
attacks.
If Gaza became indepen-
dent, Gazans, would
become alien workers in
Israel and some arrange-
ment would have to be
worked out between
Jerusalem and the
Palestinian leadership,
forum speakers noted.
Massive foreign invest-
ment in Gaza would also
be required to help the
area form a workable econ-
omy of its own. Robert 0.
Freedman, the Baltimore
Hebrew University gradu-
ate school dean, who mod-
erated the forum, said one
possible source of the fund-
ing might be Japan, which
is casting about for a way
to assume a larger role on
the international stage.
Despite the many unre-
solved details, Gaza first,
concluded the forum
speakers, is worth pursu-
ing.
Mr. Sandler noted that
Israelis have little of the
emotional attachment to
Gaza that many of them
have to the West Bank.
Because Gaza was never
part of ancient Israel, it
has no religious signifi-
cance, he said. And
because there are only
about 4,000 Jewish settlers
living among some 700,000
Palestinians, it does not
require the movement of a

large number of Jews. The
West Bank, by comparison
has 140,000 Jewish set-
tlers.
Still, he conceded, the
Israeli right wing, would
"go into the streets" were
Gaza to be abandoned.
"They would feel this was
the first step, with the
West Bank, the Golan and I
even east Jerusalem next,"
he said.
Mr.
that,
Despite
Sandler said he agreed
that a negotiated with-
drawal from Gaza first is
worth exploring. "It's a
topic that at least should
be debated," he said. ❑

Polish Memorial
At Auschwitz

New York (JTA) — The
theater building at the edge
of the Auschwitz death
camp, used as a Carmelite
convent for the past decade,
was supposed to have been
vacated by now.
Instead, efforts are under
way to turn it into a
memorial to Polish victims
of Naziism.
The mother superior of the
convent has leased the
theater building, which her
group has inhabited since <
the early 1980s, to an ob-
scure Polish nationalist K.
group, which wants to turn
the building into the ar-
chives of Polish victims of
World War II.
Since 1989, at the height of
the international controver-
sy over the Carmelite nuns'
presence at Auschwitz,
Mother Therese has told
visitors she would refuse to
move to a new convent that
has since been built away
from the death camp, across
the road.
Six nuns are now living in
the new convent, which is
part of a complex including a
conference center. It is not
clear how many, if any, of
N
the 13 nuns who have been
living in the old convent re-
main.
June 30 had been the
deadline for the removal of
the nuns from the building,
which was used by the Nazis
to store the Zyklon B gas for CN
the gas chambers at
Auschwitz, where over a
million Jews were
systematically murdered.
The Society for the Victims
of War, which contracted
with Mother Therese to
lease the building, re-
portedly intends to convert

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