The Southern Israelite. (Augusta, Ga.) 1925-1986, July 10, 1970, Image 2
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THI SOUTHERN ISRAELITE
Friday, July 10, 10*6
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SPECIAL NEWS FEATURE
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Denmark Discounts Role
Of Small Powers in Mideast
By VICTOR M. BIENSTOCK
Vice President and Editor of JTA
COPENHAGEN— ‘
Denmark is four-and-a-half
hours of flying time from Israel
but, to an amazing degree, Is
rael’s problems are very much
the concern of this small Nordic
land of five million souls. This
is not so difficult to understand
when, one is reminded of the
strong Danish-Jewish relation
ship, the 'unique role and status
of Denmark’s tiny Jewish com.
munity of 6,000 and the utterly
amazing and unmatched per
formance of the Danish people,
led by their beloved king, in
rescuing almost the entire Jew
ish population from the Gestapo
during the Nazi occupation of
the kingdom in World War n.
* There is a small but growing
commercial exchange between
the two countries, an evidence
of which is the Jaffa orange
on display on every Copenhagen
fruit stand. There is a close
and friendly diplomatic rela
tionship and Israel’s ambassador
here, Miss Esther Herlitz, is one
of the most popular members of
the diplomatic corps. Denmark’s
Foreign Minister, Poul Hartling,
recently visited Israel and repor
ted himself tremendously im
pressed by the friendliness
towards his country displayed by
Israelis. One of the most im
pressive aspects, he told me, was
that every Israeli child seemed
to know the story of how the
Danish King had donned the
yellow Star of David to show
solidarity with his Jewish sub
jects and how the Danish people
saved their Jewish nei^h-
Mr. Hartling also visited Cairo,
and in both the Israeli and
Egyptian capitals discreetly ex
plored the possibility of a role
for Denmark in bringing the two
sides together.
In an interview in his office
in the magnificent old Chris-
tiansborg Palace to which we
went from a Folkethihng session^
Mr. Hartling declared that Den
mark alone or with the other
Scandinavian states, would be
ready to take the initiative in
seeking a settlement of the
Arab-Israeli conflict if it saw
any real possibilities of action.
But, he pointed out, the small
states must be “realistic.” “In
the light of the present reality,”
he said, “it is very difficult to
envisage what results we could
attain which the Four Powers or
the Two Powers could not
reach.”
The Danish Foreign Minister
expressed the conviction that
the best hopes for peace in the
Middle East lay in the desire of
the super-powers to avoid a con
frontation and in the implemen
tation of the United Nations Se
curity Council resolution of Nov.
22, 1967. He recalled that Den
mark, then a member of the
Continued on page 3
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