RUN UP Jonathan Aaron Is Leaving Guardian Industries Corp. The son-in-law of the late William "Bill" Davidson is parting ways with Guardian Industries Corp. of Auburn Hills, the com- pany that Davidson nurtured into one of the world's largest manufacturers of auto and architectural glass. Jonathan Aaron, 42, of Bloomfield Hills, who is married to Karen Davidson's daughter, Mary, will join the Velvel Group in Southfield July 1. The company specializes in financial planning and life insurance. He declined to elaborate on reasons for his departure from Guardian. Aaron, who has a law degree, was assis- tant to the president under Davidson and was Guardian's CEO. Both positions were eliminated in a succession plan imple- mented after Davidson died March 13. The company now is run by a board of directors elected by key Guardian employees, accord- ing to Davidson's wishes. Aaron continues as head of the multi-million-dollar William Davidson Foundation that will fund the many phil- anthropic endeavors of the late billionaire businessman/sportsman. - Bill Carroll, special writer Peres, Netanyahu Speak On Iran Tehran/JTA — Israeli President Shimon Peres voiced his support for the protest- ers in Iran. "The Iranian people are trying to reclaim their culture's image," Peres said Sunday during a speech at the Jewish Agency meeting in Jerusalem. "Let the young people speak. Let the women — such a courageous group — voice their thirst for equality "You never know what will disappear in Iran first — their enriched uranium or the wretched government. We hope it's the gov- ernment," he said amid reports of continu- ing unrest in Tehran. Appearing Sunday on NBC's Meet the Press, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he supported President Obama's handling of the situation, which has been criticized by members of Congress. Netanyahu stressed that while Israel and much of the world support the protesters and want a change in government in Iran, it is most important to prevent the sit- ting government from developing nuclear weapons. The Israeli leader said he believes Obama is committed to preventing Iran from becoming a nuclear power. Mubarek Says Peace Is Possible Cairo/JTA — Hosni Mubarak said a historic peace settlement between Israel and the Arab world is ever closer. 'A historic settlement is within reach, one that would give the Palestinians their A16 june a2009 Exercising For A Cause Joan Provizer of Farmington Hills is seated in the center of friends and family at the 30th annual walk and run benefiting the Scleroderma Foundation/Michigan Chapter, of which she is a past president and development director. A member of Joan's Team - named in her honor - Provizer participated in the June 7 event at the Detroit Zoo in Royal Oak. The team was the top online fundraiser for the walk-run, raising $2,454. Provizer is one of 300,000 Americans suffering from scleroderma, a chronic connective tissue disease generally classified as one of the autoimmune rheumatic diseases. For information on scleroderma, access the Scleroderma Foundation Web site at: scleroderma.org . To make a donation, go to: www.firstgiving.com/30thwalk, mail a check to Scleroderma Foundation, 30301 Northwestern Hwy., Farmington Hills, MI 48334, or call (248) 865-7259. state and freedom from occupation while granting Israel recognition and security to live in peace," wrote the Egyptian presi- dent in an op-ed Friday in the Wall Street Journal. "With President Obama's reasser- tion of U.S. leadership in the region, a rare moment of opportunity presents itself Egypt stands ready to seize that moment, and I am confident that the Arab world will do the same." 'Mubarak said the Palestinian issue requires the greatest urgency, but said that many of the details of a final settlement are well known, while the Arab Peace Initiative provides a regional framework for such a settlement. The Arab initiative offered Israel full rec- ognition in the Arab world if it retreated to the 1948 borders and agreed to a just reso- lution of the Palestinian refugee issue. "Success of these negotiations will depend on firm commitments from both sides to uphold the credibility of the pro- cess," Mubarak wrote. "Israel's relentless settlement expansion, which has seriously eroded the prospects for a two-state solu- tion, must cease, together with its closure of Gaza. For their part, the Palestinians must continue to develop their institutional capacity while overcoming their division to achieve their aspirations for statehood." He continued, "While full normalization with Israel can only result from a compre- hensive settlement, including the Syrian, Lebanese as well as Palestinian track, the Arab side stands ready to reciprocate serious steps towards peace undertaken by Israel." Obama's Help Sought On Shalit lVashington/JTA — A Father's Day letter- writing campaign urged President Obama to help bring home a kidnapped Israeli sol- dier. Jewish groups asked their constituents to send thousands of cards and e-cards on behalf of Gilad Shalit to Obama on June 21. Shalit was taken hostage in June 2006 near Gaza in a cross-border raid by Hamas terrorists. He has been denied access to the International Red Cross during his nearly three years in captivity. The goal of the campaign, initiated by the Council of Young Jewish Presidents, is to raise the issue on Obama's priority list. In his Father's Day card to Obama, Shalit's father, Noam, wrote, "From one father to another, I ask you to please use the power of your presidency to free my beloved son, Gilad. Because to have Gilad home again would make every one of my days Father's Day." Electronic messages can be sent to the president at www.whitehouse.govicontact/. Sample messages can be viewed at the CYJP Web site. The campaign was coordinated by the Jewish Community Relations Council of New York, Jewish Council for Public Affairs, Dor Chadash, Friends of the Israeli Defense Forces, StandWithUs and the Zionist Organization of America. Pope Pius XII Helped Jews? Rome/JTA — A New York-based founda- tion says it will release original documents showing that controversial wartime Pope Pius XII worked to aid Jews during the Holocaust. In a June 16 statement, Pave the Way Foundation President Gary Krupp said the 2,300 pages of documents, dating from 1940-45, were discovered through the foundation's private research and provide "strong support to the argument that Pope Pius XII — Eugenio Pacelli — worked dili- gently to save Jews from Nazi tyranny" Krupp said many of the documents were discovered in a monastery in Avellino, Italy. Krupp, who is Jewish, has close ties with the Vatican and twice has been named a papal knight. He announced last year that Pave the Way, a nonsectarian founda- tion that promotes interfaith cooperation, would investigate the papacy of Pius XII by interviewing eyewitnesses and gather- ing publicly available documentation and newspaper accounts. The aim of the investigation is to dis- prove critics who accuse Pius of having turned a blind eye to Jewish suffering dur- ing the Holocaust. In his statement, Krupp criticized his- torians with "private agendas" for having "let down" the public by failing to research properly Prison Bar Mitzvah Furor New York/JTA — A New York City Corrections Department official and a prison chaplain have resigned in the wake of a lavish bar mitzvah held in prison. The departments bureau chief for facility opera- tions, Peter Curcio, who allegedly approved the bar mitzvah for inmate Tuvia Stern's son, submitted his resignation on June 15, the New York Times reported. Curcio told the New York Post, the day after his resignation, that head chaplain Imam Umar Abdul-Jalil signed off on the bar mitzvah. On June 16, Rabbi Leib Glanz, a chaplain for city jails who arranged the bar mitzvah, also resigned over the scandal, the New York Post reported. Glanz was in the middle of a two-week suspension over the scandal when he announced his resignation. Glanz is a prominent member of the Satmar Chasidic community who has ties to law enforcement and city and state political figures, according to the Times. The catered event for 60 non-prisoners, including several prominent rabbis, was held Dec. 30 and included a band, china and a performance by Orthodox Jewish singer Yaakov Shwekey. Answering Israel's Critics The Charge While in Gaza last week, former U.S. President Jimmy Carter criticized Israel's blockade of that territory, say- ing its residents are treated more like animals than human beings The Answer All Israeli soldiers and civilians were withdrawn from Gaza in 2005. The ter- rorist Hamas movement is completely responsible for the conditions there. - Allan Gale, Jewish Community Relations Council of Metropolitan Detroit Jewish Renaissance Media June 25, 2009