Page Sixteen Friday; February 25, 1944 - g UNRRA Scope and Functioitit By HARRY GREENSTEIN Chief, Welfare Branch, Division of Program and Requirements, UNRRA Editor's Note: Mr. Greenstein's important state- ment on the scope of the UNRRA is reprinted from News and Notes of the Council of Jewish Federations and Welfare Funds. It serves to clarify the functions of the UNRRA in its relation to Jewish and other social service agencies. O N NOVEMBER 9, 1943, upon invitation of the United States Government, delegates from 44 nations, representing approximate- ly 80 per cent of the population of the world, met in the East Room of the White House and attached their signatures to the Agreement creating the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration (UNRRA). The Agreement stipulates that each member government, insofar as its appropriate, constitutional body shall authorize, shall contribute to the support of UNRRA, in order to: "Plan, coordinate, administer or arrange for the administration of measures for the relief of victims of war in any area under the control of any of the United Nations through the provision of food, fuel, clothing, shelter and other basic necessities, medical and other essential services; and to facilitate in such areas, so far as necessary to the adequate provision of relief, the production and transportation of these articles and the furnishing of these services . . ." The Agreement further provides that while hos- tilities or other military necessities exist in any area, UNRRA shall not undertake activities therein with- out the consent of the Military Command of that area and subject to such control as the Command may find necessary. The determination that such hostilities or military necessities exist in any area shall be made by its Military Commander. Committees Set Up The policy-making body of UNRRA is the Council, composed of one representative from each of the 44 nations, and those associated with them in the war. It meets not less than twice a year. The executive and administrative work is in the hands of a Director General, elected by the Council. The following important standing committees have been set up: a Committee on Supplies; a Committee on Financial Control; and two Regional Committees— one for Europe, and one for the Far East. These, together with five technical standing committees, will assist and advise the Director General on matters of policy. Twenty Years Ago This Week Compiled From the Records of the Jewish Telegraphic Agency WARSAW—Jewish deputies in. the Polish Par- - liament are gratified at the resignation of War Minister Kazimierz Sosnkowski, who has been succeeded by former Premier Wladyslaw Sikorski. The Jewish Sejm Club had decided to oppose the government because of the inclusion of Sosnkow- ski, but has now decided to reserve judgment. JERUSALEM—Colonel Frederick H. Kisch, po- litical advisor to the Zionist Organization in Pales- tine, has decided that the Zionists would agree to a national representative government in Palestine, as stated by Naj-el-Assil, when the latter reported concerning the draft of a treaty between the King of the Hedjas and the British government. Nuj-el- Assil is King Hussein's London representative. (Editor's Note: Brig. Kisch, chief engineer of the British 8th Army, was killed in action in Africa four months ago, after _ assisting in the Allied conquest there.) BERLIN—Concurrent with the approaching elections to the Reichstag a wave of anti-Semitism has spread throughout Germany. Anti-Semitic forces have triumphed in practically all elections to provincial parliaments and a sweeping anti- Jewish campaign is expected to be launched as part of the election campaign for the Reichstag seats. WARSAW—Plans for the formation of an autonomous Jewish State in the Crimea are going forward and a report is expected shortly from the commission appointed by the Soviet government to investigate the feasibility of the project, it is learned here. The Jewish Telegraphic Agency correspondent in Moscow reports that Dr. Joseph Rosen, director of reconstruction activities in Russia for the Joint Distribution Committee, who is now in Moscow to liquidate the JDC activities, believes that if the plan for a Crimean Jewish State is carried through, it will be possible to spur lagging interest in the United States con- cerning the Russian Jews. WASHINGTON—If the Jewish people combine to defeat the immigration bill proposed by him, "their children will live to regret it," Congressman Albert Johnson, chairman of the House Immigra- tion Committee told a Jewish Telegraphic Agency correspondent. He did not elaborate. Jewish groups are opposing the bill which sets the quota at two percent of the 1890 figure, a year during which there was little Jewish immigration. Influential sections of the press and Secretary of State Charles Evans Hughes have come out against the measure_ NEW YORK—Participation by American non- Zionists in the Jewish Agency for Palestine seemed assured this week following a conference between non-Zionist leaders led by Louis Marshall, Her- bert Lehman and Cyrus Adler, with Dr. Chaim Wei zmann and other Zionist leaders. On the clay following the signing of the UNRRA Agreement, the delegates of the 44 nations, their ad- visers and assistants arrived in Atlantic City, and for a period of three weeks settled down to the serious business of trying to solve a post war relief and re- habilitation problem more vast, more complicated than the world has ever known. Epidemics Widespread Reports presented in Atlantic City by the dele- gates from the war-ravaged countries related in detail the appalling toll that war has exacted in their re- spective countries. Millions are undernourished and dying of slow starvation, easy victims of epidemics. Hunger and disease are the two central problems in all the occupied countries. Typhus fever is wide- spread in eastern Europe; malaria is highly epidemic in the southeastern part; tuberculosis has increased on the continent from 50 to 200 per cent. Dr. Thomas Parran, Surgeon General of t h e United States, in a report to the Conference stated "that pregnancy has become a virtual sentence of death because food is inadequate to support life for mother and unborn child." Professor Andre Mayer pointed out in the French report that life expectancy in France has fallen by 10 years, that half of the Frenchmen between 20 and 40 who die are victims of tuberculosis. Unprecedented Destruction The Polish report called attention to the un- precedented policy of attempted extermination of the entire nation by the Nazis who are applying a policy of systematic persecution expressed in mass murders and imprisonments. The report stressed the specially tragic situation of the Jews and the Jewish children who have perished together with their parents and relatives during the liquidation of the ghettos in Poland. These children died with the adults, mowed down by machine guns, perishing in sealed death trains, executed by electrocution and in gas chambers. The reports indicated further that in most of subjugated Europe there is long drawn out famine and chronic hunger, the devastation of continuous exploitation, people stripped of practically all their possessions. The number of human beings uprooted and ren- dered homeless by the European war alone was put at 20 to 30 million. There is nothing to compare with the havoc and destruction which has thus far taken place, with greater destruction still ahead of us. The scope of UNRRA was limited to relief and rehabilitation measures and a distinct line was drawn between them and long-range economic reconstruc- tion. Each country which has not in itself been - a battlefield will contribute, where possible, one per cent of its national income. This will place the cost to the United States at about $1,350,000,000. All ap- propriations to be made by the member nations must, of course, be approved by their respective govern- ments. Distribution of Relief Nations which have gold and foreign exchange will pay for their supplies, but the richer countries will not be permitted to buy up short supplies that are needed for immediate relief to the poorer coun- tries. Relief will be extended to enemy countries but they will be compelled to pay in full and to yield any surplus they may hold. In the distribution of relief—there is to be no discrimination because of race, religious creed, and a firm stand will be taken against the use of food and supplies as a political weapon. Emphasis will not be put on the raising of pre- war standards of relief in the countries to be aided but rather on the giving of immediate assistance to meet emergency needs. Every effort will be made to help countries to. help themselves as rapidly and as completely as posL sible. The Council also went on record indicating its desire "to enlist the cooperation and to seek the par- ticipation of appropriate foreign voluntary relief agencies to the extent that they can be effectively utilized in relief activities for which they have special competence and resources, subject to the regulation of the Director General and in consultation with the respective governments." Private Agency Role It is interesting to note that the voluntary relief agencies in the Middle East, in England in the United States have recognized the need of planning their activities in relationship to the international relief and rehabilitation program. In Cairo the Council of Voluntary Relief Organizations has been created. Certain British organizations have formed a Council of British voluntary societies. This Council is a con- sultative body serving as a channel through which the British societies, while retaining their own in- dividuality, can place their resources at the service of UNRRA. Within the past few months voluntary relief agencies in the United States and also abroad have formed an American -Council of private agencies with a similar purpose in mind. • The tasks facing UNRRA will be so vast that it will need to mobilize the resources of both public and private agencies that can be made available. Only in" this way can we hope to avoid chaos and starva- tion abroad and achieve the peace and economic se- curity for which we are striving. Weekly Review of the News of the World (Compiled From Cables of Independent Jewish Press Service) AMERICA See Also Page 3 Differences over the language of instruction in the school of Bengazi, North Africa, have developed between the British authorities and the Jewish community, it is revealed in a letter received by the World Jewish Congress. The schools there are about to open after being closed since the outbreak of the war. The Bri- tish authorities want to have Arabic as the - language of instruction in the schools: The Jewish community demands that Hebrew schools be established for the Jews, with Hebrew as the language of instruction, and Arabic and English to be included in the curriculum. A Nazi plot to sterilize all Jews surviving in Czechoslovakia, was revealed by Dr. Herbert Ripka, Czech Minister of State, in a short wave broadcast from London to his compatriots in their occupied homeland, according to the World Jewish Congress. Rear Admiral Monroe Kelly, -Commandant . of the Brooklyn Navy Yard, was accused by the newspaper PM of blocking an investigation i by the regional office of the Fair Employment Practice Committee into allegations of dis- criminatory practices at the Navy Yard. Edward Lawson, regional director of the FEPC, reported at a forum that despite edu- cational campaigns to eliminate economic dis- crimination "the tendency to deny persons employment at their highest skill because of their religion is mounting, rather than dis- appearing." The memory of 93 girls, pupils of the ultra- Orthodox Beth Jacob Schools of Poland, who by a collective suicide last year frustrated - a Nazi plan to ship them to military brothels, will be commemorated by the establishment of a village in Palestine. Albert Glasstal, inmate of the Home of Old Israel, raised $129,410 in War Bonds and Stamps, topping his pledge of $1,000 for each of his 101 years. The Nazis have completely exterminated all Jewish children in Poland and "scores of thou- sands" of Polish children in a "diabolical at- tempt to exterminate the Polish nation," the United Press reports in a dispatch from London quoting Wladislaw Banaczyk, Polish Minister of the Interior. - S/Sgt. Tony Saffa felt that he would dis- tinguish himself even in o r e, if he had a Mezuzah around his neck in the Italian fight- ing. He spied one on Pft. Philip Fruchtman, formerly of this city, and asked .him where he too could obtain one. "I've been trying hard as anything to get one," he said. He then told that he is a Catholic, an Italian-American, but had lived. for years among Jews and re- spects and trusts their religious symbols. Pfc. Fruchtman wrote his wife and asked her to mail a mezuzah . to S/Sgt. Saffa. It is already on its way to Italy. .PALESTINE It is expected that 320,000 persons will par- ticipate in the forthcoming elections for the Assephath Hanivcharim, Jewish Palestine's. General Assembly or "Parliament," as com- pared with 80,000 who voted in the last elee tions held in 1931. The elections . will take place on May 24. A loan of £300,000 has been granted to the Jewish National Fund by a group of banks headed by the Anglo-Palestine Bank. The loan, at 4 per cent annual interest, is to be repaid half at the end of six years and the balance in seven years. Zvi Amramoff, 33, a barber, died after he had been shot when returning home in the Kerem Abraham quarter of Jerusalem. He was shot by a British policeman who challenged him for fcrentification. It has been established that Amranoff was an innocent victim. OVERSEAS Mahmud Ghana in, Egyptian Minister of Commerce, arrived in Jerusalem at the head of an Egyptian delegation to negotiate the exchange of manufactured goods and other commodities between the two countries. Eighty more French and Arab' educators were dismissed from the staffs of government schools in North Africa after they were found to have participated in pro-fascist activities and in the dissemination of anti-Semitic propa- ganda along Nazi lines, it was announced in Algiers by the French Committee for National Liberation. Forty French and Arab pro-fascist judges Were dismissed, and 20 Jews were appointed to judgeships in Morocco and Al- geria. The Paris radio announced that 70 persons, of whom 43 were Jews, will go on trial shortly on charges of sabotage and armed attacks against members of Germany's armed forces. German news sources report that Hungarian government has begun the evacuation of Jews from Budapest. Fifty thousand are scheduled for deportation to Carpatho-Ruthenia. The London Daily Sketch . reports from Ankara that Nazi diplomats in Turkey are giving this simple explanation for the deser- tion of three of their number to the British. Embassy. The wife of Karl Alois von Kleckow- ski, one of the three; is Jewish.