Ferguson Joins 1 U.S. Senat • Leads Protest Against USSR Persecution (Copyright 1953, JTA, Inc.) Throughout the free world last week, governments and men raised powerful voices against the anti-Semitic campaign un- leashed b y t h e Communist rulers in the Soviet Empire be- hind the Iron Curtain. T h e United States Senate adopted a resolution condemn- ing the "vicious and inhuman campaigns" conducted by the Soviet government and its pup- pet regimes in satellite states against racial and religious mi- norities. The resolution noted "the increasing persecution of the people of the Jewish faith." The resolution, which calls for United Nations action, was amended on motion of Sen. Irving Ives of New York, to call on the United Nations to adopt a resolution specifically con- demning the Soviet actions. Sen. Alexander Wiley, chair- man of the Senate Foreign Re- lations Committee, who brought the resolution to the Senate floor after it had been unani- mously approved by his com- mittee, briefly reviewed the transformation of the resolu- tion from what had orginally been a condemnation of Com- munist anti-Semitism into a condemnation of Soviet persecu- tion of all minorities. He refer- red to the Prague trials, the Moscow attack on Jewish doc- 4ors and the events culminating in the Soviet rupture of diplo- matic relations with Israel. The Soviet attack on the Jews, he said, was part of a policy of persecution of all minorities, Sen. Wiley said. These persecutions, he charg- ed, were aimed at all peoples who stood for human rights. "No religion is safe when one is in danger," he declared. "A despotism that will attack one group today will attack another group tomorrow." He described the Soviet campaign against minorities as "geno- cide." In discussing the Soviet- Israeli break, Sen. Wiley said it was not beyond belief that the bombing of the Soviet Le- gation in Tel Aviv—the imme- diate pretext for the Soviet break—was the work of Com- wurusts. In one of the speeches de- lacks a belief in the spiritual values, a belief in human progress, in freedom and in the dignity of the human be- ing. The Soviets believe that the state is supreme, and that the human being amounts to nothing at all. In other words, he is to be dealt with by the state as the state deems best. "We must remember the di- vine rights of the people—not the divine right of the king, who represents the state; not the divine( right of the Soviet Union. If the peoples of the world will recognize the divine rights of the people, then there will be safeguarded the spiritual values which are the basis of human progress and human freedom." The United Nations General Assembly was given a foretaste of what to expect when Com- munist treatment of the Jews come up for discussion in its a g e n d a. Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge Jr., making his initial speech to the Assembly as head of the American delega- tion, minced no words in his comment on Communist racial and religious persecution. (See Editorial, Page Four) The upper house of the Colo- rado Legislature unanimously adopted a 'resolution calling on President Eisenhower, Congress and the State Department to "condemn publicly the persecu- tion and brutal treatment of Jews living behind the Iron Curtain." Last week, Israel Ambassa- dor Abba Eban addressed both houses of the Colorado Legis- lature. His address was greet- ed with tremendous ovation. In Istanbul, political aides saw the Soviet anti-Israel campaign as a move to attract the Arab states into the Communist camp and to prevent creation of a Middle East command. These circles, however, are confident that the USSR will fail in this maneuver. Turkish government circles are sympathetic to Israel in the current situation, and feel that Turkey and Israel are united in a common cause in that both are concerned about Soviet de- signs in the Middle East. The Turks also feel that - Moscow's campaign should convince all livered during the debate in Middle East countries including support of the resolution, Sena- the Arab states, of the necessity tor Homer Ferguson of Michigan for immediate organization of a declared: Middle East defense set-up. "The Soviet Communists are The Voice of America reported not only against minorities; mass meetings protesting the they are even against the ma- Communist drive and the pic- jority of the people of Russia. keting of Soviet offices in New When we see that people are York. These demonstrations are compelled to flee Soviet ill not "mere negative protests treatment, persecutions, and against Stalin's copying of Hit- even death, we realize that we ler," the broadcasts said. "They must condemn such actions in are also proof that Americans no uncertain words. believe in the essential dignity "1 am particularly glad that of the individual, and in the certain language has been in- right of every human being to serted in the resolution which live in a society free of fear and goes to the crux of the situa- oppression." tion, and should receive major consideration. The resolution says that the persecutions `deserve the strongest con- demnation by all peoples who believe that spiritual values are the bases of human prog- ress and freedom.' "That is the thing which the Soviet philosophy lacks. It In Chicago, Adlai Stevenson told the Decalogue Society that th _ e Soviet Union's anti- Jewish policy does not arise from feelings of insecurity but from its interest in the old lands of the Arab states of the Middle East. mnation. of Anti-Semitism the Jews, one sour . note was struck in the Western World when a member of the Bevanite, leftwing faction of the British Labor Party sought to spike a resolution pending in the House of Commons condemning anti- Semitism behind the Iron Cur- tain. S. 0. Davies introduced an amendment to the resolution which would place the House on record as deploring the "un- founded charges" against the Soviet Union and the "people's democracies" and asserting that such charges had been "em- phatically repudiated" by rep- resentative Jews in the USSR, including the Chief Rabbi of Moscow." New Soviet anti-Jewish charges included some originat- ing with Izvestia, accusing Hen- ry Morgenthau, Jr., Rep. Eman-. uel Celler and Rep. Jacob Javits of having conspired to work out plans to make Israel the major anti-Communist stronghold of the United States in the Middle East. An indication of the strategy to be pursued by Israel in deal-1 ing with the Communist anti-1 Semitism issue in the United Nations was given when Am- bassador Eban unex p e c t e d l y voted with the Soviet bloc to place a Polish proposal on "measures to implement peace" third on the Political Commit- tee agenda. The motion failed. Speaking in New York, Harry Zinder, members of the Israel delegation, said that Israel would present its case against anti-Semitism in Soviet Russia and its satellite nations before the General Assembly the "sec- ond week in March." Even the anti-Zionist Amer- ican Council for Judaism has been stirred to make a formal statement. Its president, Les- sing Rosenwald, stated in New York that the Soviet cam- paign, although labeled "anti- Zionist,!' can have serious anti-Semitic repercussions in Eastern Europe because of the historic, latent anti-Semitism in that part of the world. A dispatch from Munich re- ported in the London Observer indicates that Jews in the Sov- iet Union have been considered a "security risk" by the Krem- lin since 1950, and measures to remove them from strategic in- dustrial centers have been car- ried out in quiet since that time. Based on testimony of refu- gees who escaped from the Iron Curtain, the report collated by Radio Free Europe—says that tens of thousands of surviving Jews in Communist countries "are threatened by a policy of deportation." It is estimated that about 30,000 Jews were deported to the Biro-Bidjan region in 1950-51, including many from former Polish territory, Bessarabia and the Baltic countries. They are not treated as prisoners, but are forbidden to leave the area. Meanwhile, it was reported from New York, a group of leaders from 38 countries rep- resenting 7,500,000 Jews, will participate in a three-day Jewish EMergency Confer- ence, called by the Jewish Agency for • Tuesday, at Zu- rich, Switzerland. Measures will be planned to alleviate the plight of Jews trapped in countries behind the As Moscow continued to Iron Curtain. Invitations to the broadcast attacks on Israel and conference have been accepted from the following countries: Algeria, Argentina, Austria, Brazil, Canada, Columbia, Cuba, France, Great Britain, Holland, Italy, Luxemburg, Morocco, Nor- way, Portugal, Rhodesia, Switz- erland, Tunisia, United States and Yugoslavia.. Arrange Sunday's Carnival-Dance 40;;,fre - The Jewish Center post-Purim carnival and da ' ace, sponsored by the Teen-Age Council of the Dexter-Davison Center, will be held 3;30 to 8 p.m. Sunday. On the committee, left to right: ELAINE WEINER, tickets; ESTELLE EPSTEIN, supervisor, teen activities; BETSY WILSON, publicity; SHIRLEY KATZ and DAVID 20—THE JEWISH NEWS RUBEN, decorations, Friday, March 6, 1953 Shaarey Zedek to Break Ground Sunday for New School Branch 7 ' Shaarey Zedek New School Branch Charles Rubiner, president of Congregation Shaarey Zedek, announces the groundbreaking for its new branch school will take place Sunday at 2:30 p.m., at Lesure, two blocks west of Schaefer, and Seven Mile Road. Contracts have been awarded to the Shefman Construction Co., for architectural work; Thermal Engineering for heating and v e n t i l a t i n g; Phillip Goren, plumbing; G & R Electric Co., electrical work. Alex Kohner is the architect. Construction will commence immediately, and the school will be ready for use with the open- ing of the fall season in Sep- tember. The school will consist of five . classrooms, two nursery rooms, offices and an arts and crafts room. It will be used primarily for the younger child- . ren in • the afternoon Hebrew department of its religious edu- cational system. I The building committee con- sists of Hyman Safran, chair- ', man; Arthur Fleischman, Hy- ' man A. Keidan, Daniel Mendel- ; sohn, Abraham Satovsky, Dr. Leonard Sidlow, Bert Smokier ! and Samuel B. Solomon. Mr. Mendelsohn headed the sub - c ommit t e e on construction planning. Members and friends are ins vited to the brief ceremony of groundbreaking on Sunday. Dr. ' A. M. Hershman is rabbi emeri- tus of the congregation, and Rabbi Morris Adler is its spirit- ' ual leader. 7 Change in Election Laws Asked for Absentee Balloting During Passover The Jewish Community Coun- cil has requested a change in the state election laws to permit absentee voting on the basis of religious observance. This most recent action by the Council follows similar action which was taken in 1950 when the date of a primary election coincided with Rosh Hashana. At that time an amendment to the state election laws was se- cured which permitted the use of the absentee ballot for per- sons who were unable to vote because of their religious con- victions. The amendment to the law in 1950 was made valid only for that calendar year. There had been no conflict with the Jewish religious calen- dar since that time and until this year when the city election date of April 6 coincides with the seventh day of Passover The Council has asked for the removal of the limiting_ phrase "for the calendar year 1950' from the present state law which defines reasons for ab- sentee balloting. The Council request following consideration of the problem by its internal and community re- lations committees and its ex- ecutive 'committee, was directed to the majoefty and minority leaders of the le g islature be- cause of th non-partisan char- acter of the appeal. 7 Chance to Reply to Anti-Jewish Talk Demanded of EConomic Club Continued from Page 1 He proceeded to say that of the $145,000,000 asked of American Jewry by the UJA this year, $130,000,000 is to go to Israel, and while he added that "drives for Israel are not so successful," he left the impression that the $145,- 000,000 is in the bag—as a weapon against the Arabs. An additional shock came when, while referring to the rich harvests of American Jewry's drives for Israel, Mr. Weller made a comparison, incitable prejudice, by stat- ing that while the UJA is campaigning for $145,000,000, less than this amount is requested by the combined $92,- 000,000 Red Cross and $41,000,000 March of Dimes cam- paign. To top it off, Mr. Weller made the charge that the Export and Import Bank, in extending a loan to Israel, whose "imports exceed exports by a ratio of nine to one," is unbusinesslike. He called the Export-Import bank's friendship for Israel "looseness," and accused its man- agers of being "in politics rather than acting as a hard- boiled business" organization. He admitted that Israel WAS repaying the $135,000,000 loan granted the Jewish state by the Export-Import Bank. He repeatedly referred to the "destitute" Arabs, and made one gratuitous reference by paying "honor to the Israelis who try to take care of Jewish immigrants." His explanations of Russia's anti-Semitism sounded shallow after his own anti-Jewish outbursts. Even in this area, he made it a point to refer, time and again, to "Jew- ish Communists," never failing to indicate which Commu- nist leader is Jewish, without indicating that he had the slightest knoWledge that the Jewish Communists were themselves purged and that they were themselves among the leaders against Zionism and Jewish cultural aspirations. Allen B. Crow, president of the Economic Club, is being bombarded with demands that he provide an op- portunity for a Jewish spokesman to reply to Mr. Weller and to present the true facts to an unsuspecting audi- ence that has been misled by misrepresentations. Leaders in the Detroit Round. Table, who were asked to recommend a group of Jews 'to sit at the speaker's table at Mr. Weller's address, were apologetic and expressed re- gret that they should have been misled into cooperating with the venture at which outrageous attacks were made on American Jews. 7 „-