0cfotier 26, ,1 945 Truman's Plea for 100,000 Zion Certificates Rejected Retains Hope Suggestion Will Yet Be Met Favorably Byrnes Releases Correspondence Between F. - D. R. and Ibn Saud; Arabs and Jews to Be Consulted Page Three THE JEWISH N-EWS Weekly Review of the News of the World (Compiled From Cables of Independent Jewish Press Service) AMERICA Archbishop Francis J. Spellman of New York, warned America to be constantly on guard, lest wartime hysteria give rise to politic- al, religious and racial bigotry. . Sayinc, that the "war has demonstrated that men of all races, creeds, and colors have died in order to perpetuate freedom for all peoples," Rep. Charles A. Buckley, (D.,N.Y.) attacked anti-Semitic prejudice and hate as "a menace to our American form of Government . . . This should not be tolerated in the• United States . . . " During the course., of the debate in the Senate on the Palestine issue, Sen. Burton Wheeler, (D.Mont.), made the following ob- servation about the city of Tel Aviv: "As chair- man of the committee of four which visited Palestine last June, .I was very much surprised to see the great improvement which had taken place in that area since I had been there before. We stayed overnight at Tel Aviv, which is one of. the cleanest and finest cities to be found there, much cleaner than any other. city in the vicinity. It is a very beautiful place, built up entirely by the Jewish people." WASHINGTON, D. C., (JPS)—President Truman, at a White House press conference, told reporters that his suggestion that the British Government admit 100,000 Jewish refugees to Palestine is still under consideration, and even though Prime Minister Attlee does not want to admit so many, he has hopes that the suggestion may yet be acted upon favorably. He stated that he did not wish to press the British unduly. Asked whether a figure of 1,800 a month for Jewish immigra- tion into Palestine was an accurate approximation of Mr. Attlee's counter-proposal, he replied that the Prime Minister suggested a slightly higher figure. Officially confirming, for the first time, his request to the British Prime Minister, President Truman said there had been no communication between him and Attlee recently, but that they had carried on a voluminous correspondence on the subject. He said he didn't think the time was ripe to make this correspondence public. No Final Decisions Without Consulting Jews, Arabs In a prepared statement, following President Truman's press conference, Secretary of State James F. Byrnes said that "we shall continue to explore every possible means of relieving the situation of the displaced Jews of Europe," but stressed that "it would be the PALESTINE policy of this Government not to reach final conclusions without full The London correspondent of the newspaper consultation with Jewish and Arab leaders." Mr. Byrnes released crrespOndence between King Ibn Saud (dated March 10, 1945, and Haaretz reports that member's of -the Jewish containing virulent attacks on "Zionists") and the late President Agency Executive in London, Jerusalem and Roosevelt (April 5, 1945), who assured Ibn Saud that no final deci- the United States will soon be polled on a proposal, submitted to the Agency office in sion will be made without consulting both Jews and Arabs. London, that Dr. Chaim Weizmann, resign Secretary Byrnes' statement reads: from the Presidency of the Jewish Agency "On several occasions this matter has been the subject of oral in protest against British policy in Palestine. and written discussions with various Jewish and Arab leaders. The substance of the Government's position has been that this Govern- ' Dr. Bernard Joseph, acting chief of the ment would not support a final decision which in its opinion would Palestine Department of the Jewish Agency affect the basic situation in Palestine without full consultation with for Palestine, commenting on reports in the both Jews and Arabs. Arab press that Jews in Arab countries have "At a press conference last week President Truman referred to gone on record as •opposed to Zionist 'aims, his exploration with Prime Minister Attlee of ways and means of stated that if these reports are true, the Jews alleviating the situation of the displaced Jews in Europe, including • there have evidently succumbed to state pres- sure, which has included threats to their consideration of Palestine as a possible haven for some of these homeless Jews. There is general agreement that it is our duty to security. Land at Tiberias, 4,200 dunams, acquired take energetic measures to assist these unfortunate victims of Nazi some time ago by Keren Kayemeth, Jewish persecution. National Fund, has been occupied by a group "As the President pointed out today, this matter is still under of 25 members of Hanoar Haoved, who are consideration. We shall continue to explore every possible means undertaking land reclamation activities in pre- of relieving the situation of the displaced Jews of Europe. "Should any proposals emerge which in our opinion would paration for future settlement by returned Jewish servicemen. The area is one of twelve change the basic situation in Palestine, it would be the policy of this Government not to reach final conclusions without full consultation set aside by Keren Kayemeth for returned servicemen, and will eventually support a vil- with Jewish and Arab leaders. This policy was stated, for instance, lage of 50 . families. in a letter which President Roosevelt addressed to King Ibn Saud -on April 5, 1945, and the text of which I have been authorized to 410•••1110111MIIHNINHINNIN140011 make available. Discussed Suliject with Attlee . "In confirming that this suggestion was for the admission of A store devoted exclusively • 100,000 displaced Jews to • Palestine, Mr. Truman said he had dis- to unusual furniture for the clthsed the'subject with Mr. Attlee. "Because of the deliberations in London, President Truman also living room, foyer and li- refused to give out his letters to Mr. Attlee or the latter's replies." brary. Purveyors of fine Mr. Roosevelt's letter reads in part: "Your Majesty will recall that on various occasions I com- objects d'art. municated to you the attitude of the American Government toward Palestine and made clear our desire that no discussion be taken with respect to the basic situation in that country without full consulta- tion with both Arabs and Jews. "Your Majesy will also doubtless recall that during our recent conversation I assured you that I would take no action, in my capac- ity as Chief of the Executive Branch of this Government, which might prove hostile to the Arab people. "It gives me pleasure to renew to Your Majesty the assurance which you have previously received regarding the attitude of my Government and my own, as Chief Executive, with regard to the question of Palestine and to inform you that the policy of this Gov- ernment in this respect is unchanged." Newspaper PM Scores Byrnes' Statement The newspaper PM lashes into Secretary Byrnes' latest state- ment on Palestine by placing the late President Roosevelt's letter side by side with Ibn Saud, assuring him that the Jews and Arabs would be consulted on Palestine, and President Rciosevelt's Jewish Commonwealth pledge addressed to the convention of the Zionist Organiaztion of America October 15, 1944. A banner headline over these statements reads: "If this commitment (to Ibn Saud) is valid and binding, then why isn't this one (to the ZOA) ?" Byrnes' state- ment, Barnett Bildersee, PM writer charges, "Means that if Presi- dent Roosevelt's Ibn Saud statement is taken as a guiding American policy, then his statements to Arabia are given more weight than his solemn promises to the American people." Allege Arabs Murdered for Selling Land to Jews TEL AVIV, (JPS)—Assassination of Arabs selling land to Jews is alleged to have become one of the methods by which Arab ex- treme nationalists, through hired assassins, seek to prevent Jews from acquiring additional landholdings in Palestine, Dr. A. Gran- ovsky, chairman of the board of directors of the Keren Kayemeth (Jewish National Fund) stated at a press conference here prior to his departure for America. He was referring specifically- to the Arab Umma Land Fund, set up in direct competition to the Jewish Na- tional Fund which purchases land in' Palestine as the inalienable property of the Jewish people. The Umma fund, he said, has hitherto raised $320,000 and purchased 5,000 dumans. It is alleged to have used methods of intimidation, and coercion to force Arabs to sell at prices Bet by Umma, with murder one of these methods. An area of 650 dunrnas of Jewish National Fund land near the settlement of Naharia, in northwestern • Palestine, was settled Oct. 17, by a group affiliated with the Hashomer Hatzair Organization and engages in mixed agricultural and industrial activity. The group consists mostly 9f persons from Romania and Poland. For more than six years they lived in a temporary encampment near Naharia, Where part of its members were employed at agricultural work. During that period the settlers managed to acquire some 'agricul- tural livestock and equipment. The land now occupied by the group is suitable for intensive cultivation, as water is available in large quantities. The Keren Hayesod (Palestine Foundation*Fund) assist-. ed in settling the group, which consists of sixty families, half of whom are engaged in agriculture and half in industry. . • Jews Tell Police: "We Shall Not Surrender 'Illegals' " HAIFA, (JPS-Palcor)--Jewish Palestine has definitely asserted that it will never surrender its immigrants or persons bringing in immigrants "illegally," or recognize any laws based on the White Paper. This assertion was made by the tiny Jewish settlement of Yagur, in a letter to the superintendent of the Rural Haifa Police, .which, the colonists claim, voices the sentiment of all Jewish Pales- tine. The letter was written in reply to police orders that Yagur turn over nine refugees who escaped from Atlith Internment camp, Oct. 6, and give up its settlers who allegedly helped the nine escape again after they were captured by police. OVERSEAS A Hebrew Department has been set up at the Tashkent Institute for the Study of Oriental Manuscripts, affiliated with the Acad- emy of Sciences of the Uzbek Republic. The Hebrew Department has. a collection of 2,000 volumes, including priceless items of ancient and Medieval Hebrew literature, various edi- tions of Mishna, interesting for comparative studies, and old editions of Maimonides Guide to the Perplexed, as well as multi-lingual translations of the Bible. American and Soviet authorities in Ger- many have taken further steps to assure full justice and redress to the Jews in their res- pective zones of occupation. Joseph Shell, Minister of Interior . under the Nazi Szalasi regime in Hungary, responsible for the deportation of hundreds of thousands of Hungarian Jews to Nazi death camps in Poland, was found dead in the cellar of a Budapest synagogue where he had apparently been hiding. The London Daily Telegraph displayed prom- inently the statement of .Lessing Rosenwald, president of the American Council for Judaism, that not all American Jews are united in sup- port of the Zionist plan to establish a Jewish state in Palestine. A Hachshara (training) center for Jews plan- ning to settle in Palestine has opened in Hochenems, in the American zone of Germany. The center houses 52 boys and girls and older displaced Jews. Another Hachshara center has been established in Gailingen, in the French zone of occupation. Gen. Mark Clark has ordered priorities in food, clothing and dwellings for 6,000 displaced Jews now in the American zone in Vienna, as the number of displaced Jews there increases daily. . Foreign Jews who served in French armed forces or in French underground groups dur- ing the German occupation, are entitled to re- ceive employment in France without restric- tions, the French Minister of Interior ordered in Paris. The surviving Jewish community of Mass- tricht, Holland, contributed $1,000 as a gift towards the rebuilding of Catholic churches in Holland destroyed by the Nazis. The gift was presented with an offering of thanks to Cath- olic communities for hiding Jewish children during the Nazi occupation. See Also Page 22 •••••1111,0•4111.11441 /77/74/ elai: Sale! Several Fine Hand Decorated Lamps Reduced For Clearance Mostly One-of-a-kind A brilliant collection of exciting lamps . . . each with that magic manner of adding piquancy to a modern room or grace and charm to a traditional decor. This selling includes some pairs and many individual lamps, but mostly they are singles remaining from pairs. up 195° To $495.00 In our lamp display ... one of the most brilliant in the midwest . . . you'll find Meissen - French Bisque - Capo De Monte - Sevres - Hand Deco- rated Porcelain - Overlay Crystal Lustres - Steu- benware - Carved Crystal of Belgium and Czecho-Slovakia. ii ouie Budget Terms Arranged Open Every Evening A.F.L. Urges Britain Accede To Truman's Request CINCINNATI, (JTA)—The executive council of the American E. Robinson in Charge Federation of Labor, meeting here at a quarterly session, adopted a resolution urging Britain to accede to President Truman's request for 'increased immigration of Jews into Palestine, "looking towards OINNOMON**** establishment of a democratic state there." I J UN 3-8600 AC. 7630 WEST McNICHOLS ROAD Near Pennington . The CHAIR STORE OF AMERICA *OINK