• Page Twenty THE J E W I SH NEWS Friday, October 5, 1945 Army Spurred to Ease Displaced Jews' Condition Harrison Recommends Settlement in Palestine Maj. Nadich Reports Position More Hopeful tives there while others, having experienced intoler- ance and persecution in their homelands, feel that only in Palestine will they be welcomed and find peace and quiet and be given an opportunity to live and work. In the case of the Polish and the Baltic Jews, the desire to go to Palestine is based in a great measure of the cases on a love for the • country and devotion to the Zionist ideal. - Three weeks after The Jewish News, together with other Jewish newspapers nationally, had revealed that Earl G. Harrison, president Tru- man's personal representative, had submitted a report more than six weeks ago, exposing the tragic plight of the Jews of Europe and urging the opening of Palestine's doors for the settle- ment of the survivors of Nazism, Mr. Harrison's report was made public in Washington last Sat- , urday. "It is also true, however, that there are many who In the course of his report, Mr. Harrison states: wish to go to Palestine because they realize that their "As matters now stand, we appear to be treating opportunity to be admitted into the United States or the Jews as the Nazis treated them except that we do into other countries in the Western Hemisphere is not exterminate them. They are in concentration limited, if not impossible. Whatever the motive which camps in large numbers under our military guard causes them to turn to Palestine, it is undoubtedly instead of SS troops. One is led to wonder whether true that the great majority of the Jews now in Ger- the German people, seeing this, are not supposing that many do not wish to return to those countries from we are following or at least condoning Nazi policy." which they came .. . "Specificially, in the days immediately ahead," Prompt Planning Should Be Made Harrison said, `the Jews in Germany and Austria "With respect to those who do not, for good should have the first claim upon the conscience df the reason, wish to return to their homes, prompt people of the United States and Great Britain . ." planning should likewise be undertaken. In this connection, the issue of Palestine must be faced. He emphasized the urgency of the situation which Now that such large numbers are no longer in- he said obviously would not be satisfactorily handled volved and if there is genuine sympathy for what if referred to the United Nations organization. these survivors have endured, some reasonable ex- Harrison, dean of the University of Pennsylvania tension or modification of the British White Paper law school and Philadelphia attorney, formerly headed of 1939 ought to be possible without too serious the government's alien registration program and served repercussions. For some of the EuroRean Jews, as commissioner of immigration • in the Justice De- there is no acceptable or even decent solution for partment. their future other than Palestine. This is said `Assembly. Camps' Now Operating on a purely humanitarian basis with no reference Maj. Judah Nadich, special consultant to Gen. to ideological or political considerations so far as Eisenhower on Jewish activities,- stated on _Monday Palestine is concerned. - in Frankfurt, Germany, that plans to- establish Jews "The Jewish Agency of Palestine has submitted in their- own camps in Germany 'is working out well. to the British Government a- petition that 100,000 ad- A number of such Jewish "assembly centers" are ditional immigration certificates be made available. A. already operating. memorandum accompanying the petition makes a per- Chaplain Nadich, a former Chicago rabbi, stated suasive showing with respect to the inuriediate absorp- that the picture of the Jewish position is already more tive capacity of Palestine and the current, actual man- hopeful and added: "I do not think that Jews' are power shortages there. going to., have a rough time because the. Army now "While there may be room for difference of opinion is really personally concerned about them." as to the precise number of such certificates which Chaplain Nadich said that Jews do not want to might under the circumstances be considered reason- return to Poland. He stated that 80 per cent of the able, there is no question but that the request thus refugee Jews in Germany desire to settle in Palestine made would, if granted, contribute much to the sound and he declared that migration there is the soundest solution for the future of- Jews still in Germany and long-term solution to their problem. Austria and even other displaced Jews, who do not wish either to remain there or to return to their Eisenhower Orders Seizing of German Dwellings countries of nationality. WASHINGTON (JTA)—Acting in accordance with "No other single matter, is therefore, so im- Sharp directives from President Truman • to improve portant from the viewpoint of Jews in Germany the plight of the displaced persons in Germany, espe- and Austria and those elsewhere who have known cially tens of thousands of Jews, Gen'. Eisenhower the horrors of the concentration camps as is the ordered that lodgings are to be requisitioned for Jews, disposition of the Palestine question." it is reported from Frankfurt. Simultaneously with the release of the Harrison report, President Truman directed Gen. Eisenhower "to clean up the shocking conditions" affecting the displaced Jews in Germany, outside of the Russian zone. On Sunday, however, a spokesman for Gen. Eisen- hower stated in Frankfort, Germany, that "we have nothing to apologize for" in connection with the Jew- ish sufferers in concentration camps. This spokesman maintained that. the Jewish camps "are in splendid shape now as compared with a few months ago. " Harrison's Report Came Late The contention was that the Harrison report came late and that conditions had improved. Mr. Harrison's report stated that displaced Jews ' were held in camps behind barbed wires, guarded -by U. S. soldiers, under conditions that were un- sanitary, the food poor and insufficient, with the military more concerned with other. matters. It was on the basis of this report that President Truman directed a personal appeal to Prime Minister Attlee urging the immediate opening of Palestine's doors for 100,000 survivors of Nazism. Mr. Harrison reported that people in the camps are desperate, that unauthorized movements must be expected unless proper remedial action is taken. The opening of Palestine's doors to the surviving Jews is urged by Mr. Harrison. His statements on Palestine, taken from his report, reads: "With respect to possible places of re-settlement for those who may be stateless or who do not wish to return to their homes, Palestine is definitely and preeminently the first choice. Many now have rela- 80 Pct. of Survivors Desire to Go to Zion World Informed of Plight of Europe's Jew Showdown on Palestine Expected in Few Days Prominent Christians Join Jews in Appeal The tragic position of the surviving Jews of Europe, brought to the attention of the civilized world by American newspaper and news service correspondents, and especially by the report on the status of the Jews of Europe submitted to President Truman by Earl G. Harrison, is- forc- ing attention upon the issue affecting the status of Palestine, with the result that a speedy solu- ion may be forced during the coming few days. Highlighting the news from London affecting Pal- estine's status is the report that Foreign Secretary Ernest Bevin and members of the Executive Committee of the British Labor Party will confer this week Dr. Chaim Weizmann and a .delegation representing the World Zionist Organization, President Truman is reported to have re- ceived tens of thousands of messages from all parts . of the country calling upon him to continue to act in behalf of the survivors of Nazism. Last Saturday, President Truman received two delegations with whom he discussed the tragic position of the Jews of Europe—one representing the American Jewish Committee, consisting of Judge Joseph M. Pros- kauer and Jacob M. Blauston, and another represent- ing the American Zionist Emergency Council, consist- ing of Drs. Abba Hillel Silver and Stephen S. Wise. The text of the statement issued by the Amer- ican Jewish Committee delegation read as follows: - "The President received Joseph M. , Proskauer, 'president, and Jacob Blaustein, chairman of the execu- tive committee, of the American Jewish" Committee. It 'was represented to the President that there was a sharp' distinction between the importance of Pales- tine as a place of homeland and refuge and the ques- tion of statehood for Palestine, and that the tragic events of the summer have sharply accentuated the need for opening the doors of Palestine to substantial further Jewish immigration. "The President was informed that the committee's reports from Europe indicate that this is now becom- ing a stark matter of saving human lives. The ques- tion is not one now of political ideology. Increase in immigration is necessary to give hope of life 'to the unfortunate remnants of European Jewry which have managed to survive. . "The President expressed his' deep interest in the program to save human life by the securing of prompt issuance of a substantial number of certificates for Jewish immigration into Palestine. He stated that he was using the good offices of this country to effectu- ate that result. Using Best Influence of Government President Truman, whose appeal in behalf of the Jews of Europe has aroused a great deal of action in " England, has informed the delegations that he is using the best influence of our government in an effort to' obtain a prompt and substantial increase in the num- ber of certificates for Jewish immigration into Palestine. The many thousands of appeals addressed to Presi- dent Truman include a strong message from the In- ternational League for the Rights of Man. Many prominent Christians joined with their Jew- ish friends in Detroit in urging our government to act. Mayor Edward J. Jelfries of Detroit addressed his appeal to the President urging unlimited Jew- ish immigration to Palestine. Members of the Michigan Chapter of the Am- erican Palestine Committee joined in appeals to President Truman in behalf of free Jewish im- migration to Palestine. Among those who- sent telegrams was Richard T. Frankensteen, vice-president of International UAW- CIO, and R. J. Thomas, CIO president. Terrorism Mounting in Palestine In the meantime, the situation in Palestine has be- come acute, with terrorism rising and the British gov- ernment sending an- air-borne division of the British Eighth Army into the country as vanguard of heavy troop reinforcements to prevent possible disturbances. New regulations for the maintenance of peace con- ferred additional power upon the local Palestine ad- ministration. A Jewish Telegraphic Agency report from Jeru- salem states that the Jewish population in Palestine is amused by exaggerated reports sent from Palestine by American non-Jewish news agencies about tanks "rolling through the streets of Palestine cities, after demonstrations by Jewish nationalists." The truth is that nothing but police radio cars which have been patrolling Palestine for nine months are seen in the streets, and the reported "demonstrations" are amicable joint Arab-Jewish labor gatherings in Tel. Aviv' and a march by several thousand bearded orthodox Jewish pilgriiris from all parts of Palestine to -the Wailing Wall in Jerusalem on Succoth carrying lulovim and ethrogin. The Jews of Palestine are not' indifferent, how- ever, to the reports froth London that immigration is to remain restricted. The- iistadruth summoned a special conference for Monday to discuss the present political developments. Jews of Palestine also are excited at the repert, published this week, that Arab leaders who were exiled from Palestine in 1937 for inciting anti-Jewish and anti-British riots, including Jamal Husseini, have re- ceived British permission to proceed to an unspecified Arab country in the Middle East. These leaders, who have been held in Rhodesia, now will be able to direct the Arabs in Palestine from nearby countries, it is feared. London Zionist circles have' revealed that U. S. Secretary of State James F. Byrnes, while in London attending the meeting of the Council of Foreign Ministers, received Dr. Chaim Weizmann with whom he discussed Palestine problems at length. Continue to Urge Partition Leading British newspapers, including the Lon- don Times, continue to urge a partition of Palestine so that a small Jewish State should be established as Bevin, Dr. Weizmann Conference Reported • / • • a means of solving the problem. The belief is express- ed that the Arabs would consent to a partition scheme. In a letter to the London Times, Dr. Judah L. Magnes, president of the Hebrew University, rejects partition and reiterates his demand for the establish- ment of a bi-national state based on the numerical parity of Arabs and Jews. Dr. Magnes urges the immediate transfer of- the European Jews to Palestine and advocates that the country should be set up under a United Nations trusteeship. The American Zionist Emergency Council, in,- an open letter to Prime Minister Attlee, the text of which was published in a number of newspapers, including the Detroit Free Press, warned the British govern- ment' that the 'Zionists are at "the very end of our patience"- and that "no palliative solutions will be ac- cepted by American Jewry or by what is left of European Jewry." Christian World's Responsibility • Signed by Dr. Silver and by Dr. Wise, the letter declares that the entire Christian world bears the res- ponsibility for allowing Hitler to massacre hundreds of thousands of Jews, and Britain particularly because of its refusal to allow Jews fleeing Europe to enter Palestine. The letter recalls the Labor Party's pro- Zionist stand before its election and demands that it fulfill its pledges. Rejecting the British offer of a small amount of additional Palestine immigration certificates monthly, and the government's plea that it is beset by many more pressing problems, the Council says that one of the Labor Government's first steps Should have been the opening of Palestine to free, unrestricted immigra- tion and the proclamation of a' Jewish State. The influential Swiss Journal de Geneva also urges the formation of a bi-national state. . David Ben Gurion, chairman of the executive of the Jewish Agency, in a cable to representatives of Jewish organizations in Palestine, from London, called the Palestine situation "most critical" and urged resist- ance to the continuation of enforcement of the White Paper. Bernard Joseph, legal adviser of the Jewish Agency, declared that "every -Jew has the right to return to the Jewish Homeland; that is why Britain was given the Palestine Mandate!' Publication of a two column letter in the Ne York Times in which Rabbi Morris S. Lazaron o Palestine again attacks efforts for the establishmen of a Jewish State has aroused resentment. It is gen erally felt that in a time like this, when all people should unite to secure a speedy solution of the prob lem of the 1,250,000 Jewish survivors of Nazism, an3 negative note will serve to impede progress in effor to assure an open door policy for Jewish immigrant' in Palestine.