Page 12-The Canadian Jewish News, Thursday, November 12, 1992
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The News in Brief
Women may get breaks
JERUSALEM — The Israeli anny is considering shortening women's compulsory service by two months.:
The army's Manpower Branch is carrying out a study to assess the effects of such a decision. The research had been ordered due to the growth in the number of male and female soldiers being drafted into compulsory service. The shortening of women's army service is aimed at lightening the burden on the already tight defence budget.
Centre for gays
JERUSALEM — The first community centre in the Middle East for gay men, lesbians and bisexuals has opened its doors at 28 Nahmahi Street in Tel Aviv. It is sponsored by the Society for the Protection of Personal Rights (SPPR). which now has about 400 members.
The society is also adding a third hot-line to the two it already runs, A "knitted line" will handle calls on religion and homosexuality.
The opening of the society's centre is another of several social activities now in the running-in stage for gays in Tel Aviv.
Others include a first-aid course, one on gay studies, a compulsive eating group (women only), a support group for lesbians, a Feldenkreis exercise group and a circle for Orthodox Jewish gays.
Italian PM meets with Jews
ROME — Italian Prime Minister Giuliano Amato met last week with the head of the Italian Jewish community 10 express solidarity with Italy's Jews amid a spate of anti-Semitic incidents and a poll saying one in 10 Italians believes the Holocaust never happened.
Amato told Tullia Zevi, president of the Union of Italian Jewish Communities, that the government was alert to the need for attention to "a wori-isome recrudescence" of anti-Semitic acts.
The meeting took place Tuesday, a day after 25 Jewr, ish shop owners in outlying districts of Rome found yellow stickers bearing Stars of David and the slogan, "Out with Zionists from Italy," pasted on their shutters.
It also emerged that a dozen gravestones at a Jewish cemetery in Finale Emilia, near Modena and Ferrara in northern Italy, had been vandalized and that the incident had been kept quiet in ian effort to avert copycat attacks:
Israel to recruit Arabs
JERUSALEM — Israel for the first time is publicly recruiting Arab citizens for its diplomatic service.
Foreign Minister Shimon Peres told Israeli Arab mayors the government would advertise its annual recruitment drive for a diplomatic cadet course in the Arabic as well as Hebrew press.
The Arab municipal leaders reacted with "gratification" to Peres" encouragement of Arab university graduates to apply for the three-year training program, officials .said.
New cabinet secretary
JERUSALEM - Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin will appoint former Ambassador to Spain Shlomo Ben-Ami as his new cabinet secretary next month, officials in the Prime Minister's Office have confirmed.
Ben-Ami, a delegate to the Madrid peace conference and a Labor Party stalwart who was recently named head of the delegation to the multilateral talks on refugees, will replace Elyakim Rubinstein.
His appointment is Rabin's second major personnel decision in the last week. He has already made clear his intention to appoint Prof. ItamarRabinovich. chief negotiator in talks with Syria, ambassador to the U.S.
Rubinstein will continue as chief negotiator with the Palestinians and Jordanians, officials in the Prime Minister's Office confirm. He had been eager to le^ve the cabinet secretaryship:
He had been approved by the previous cabinet as deputy attorney-general. Rubinstein wants to attain legal experience, so he can eventually realize his ambition of being named a Supreme Court justice.
In fact, he had left the post of cabinet secretary before the new government took over, but Rabin asked him to resume his old post during the transition period.
and other evidence gathered in the initial investigation, points to "an act of terrorist arson," said Fire Commissioner Shlomo Cohen.
Gershon Avni, head of the Jewish National Fund's central region, called the blaze the worst incident of arson in the nation's forestssince the 1989 Mount Carmel fire.
Austrians condemn desecration
VIENNA — Austrian leaders. have condemned the desecration of a Jewish cemetery in the eastern part of the country that was described as the largest such act of vandalism since the end of World War II.
President Thomas Klestil voiced abhorrence at the incident, in which vandals daubed swastikas and anti-Semitic slogans on 80 of the 120 graves at Eisenstadt, a once-thriving Jewish community on the Hungarian border.
Police found a pamphlet signed by the " Racist Socialist Aryan Resistance Movement" saluting the head of the right-wing Freedom Party, Jorg Haider. Tombstones were sprayed with "Hitler forgot too many" and other anti-Semitic slogans.
UJA tops list
NEW YORK - The United Jewish Appeal topped the list of America's 400 leading charities for the fiscal year 1991, according to a national survey. I Raising $668.1 million in donations. UJA pulled ahead of last year's leader, the Salvation Army. That organization ranked second with $649 million in donations, down from its 1990 total of $658.7 million.
The Philanthropy 400, a list of the nation's largest nonprofit organizations, arranged in order of how much they received from private donors, appears in the latest issue of the Chronicle of Philanthropy.
Combined^ the top 400 non-profit charities raised $19 billion — up 5.8 percent from the previous year.
Far above the curve. UJA raised 57 percent more than last yeair, an increase that can be attributed to the Operation Exodus campaign to raise money to help resettle Soviet Jews in Israel.
Aliyah up slightly
JERUSALEM — Aliyah from the republics of the former Soviet Union edged upward slightly in October, reaching a new monthly high for the year with 6,832 arrivals.
While that is an improvement over September's figure of 6;725 arrivals, immigration is still way below what it was at this time during the last two years.
By comparison. 9.845 Jews arrived from the Soviet Union in October 1991 and 20,324 immigrated in October 1990. according to figures provided by the National Conference on Soviet Jewry in New York.
But aliyah is more than double what it was last May. when only 3.361 Jews arrived from the republics.
: * ■
German Jews feel threatened
BONN — A substantial number of Jews in Germany feel threatened by rising racism and.anti-Semitism, according to a recent public opinion survey.
About half believe right-wing extremism poses a serious threat to German democracy. a view shared by only 10 percent of non-Jewish Germans.
And some 75 percent said they believed the German government is ineffective in combatting neo-Nazism.
Chemical weapons for Syria?
BERLIN — Syria is producing chemical weapons and developing an advanced version of the Scud missile, according to a German arms control expert.
Wilhelm Dietl, a specialist in weapons sales, said Syria, aided by China and North Korea, is producing over 100 tons annually in chemical weapons and is working on an advanced Scud.
* ■
Arsonists set forest fires
JERUSALEM — More than 1,500 dunams of forest near Beit Shemesh were destroyed last week by a fire probably set by Arab terrorists. The fact that the blaze began in several different spots.
Kahane's widow sues hotel
NEW YORK — Rabbi Meir Kahane's widow has filed
a multi-million doUar lawsuit in a New York State
Supreme Court against the hotel where her husband was
gunned down two years ago.
Libby Kahane charg^jn court papers that the Marri--ott East Side Hotel was "careless" and"negligent" be-^cause it did not provide "reasonable or adequate security
or protection" for her husband. Meir Kahane was mtirdered precisely two years ago,
on November 5, 1990, as he concluded making a speech
in the hotel.