By EDWIN EYTAN (Copyright, 1962, Jewish Telegraphic Agency, Inc.) * * * Editor's Note: For the first time since the creation of Israel another country is receiving the bulk of a Jewish emigration movement. Ten thousand Tunisian Jews have fled their homes since the Bizerte crisis, and have settled in France. This article describes the emergence of these new refugees. 5: * someone I knew very well and who is trustworthy." For the Tunisian Jews these cases denote a violent break with their past of cooperation in con- fidence with their Moslem neigh- bors. The Bizerte crisis was the traumatic shock which dispelled their illusions. Many thought at the time "if this can happen to the French who are powerful and well protected, this will hap- pen to us too." Tunisia is a Moslem Arab country—the constitution's Para- graph Six clearly states the will of the Tunisian nation "to re- main faithful to the teachings of Islam, to the unity of the Grand Maghreb, to its unity with the Arab family of nations" — and many Jews feel that this ten- dency becomes more concrete with every passing day. Economically the Jews .have been hard hit. Mainly members of the middle class, they have suffered incomparably more than the rest of the population • from the stringent economic restric- tions adopted by the government. PARIS—Since the end of the war, Marseilles has served as the main port of departure for Eu- rope's surviving- Jews. Over half a million embarked there to flee the persecutions and the .memo- ries of the Old World's holocaust for a new life in a new country. Now, the old Phoenician har- bor on the Mediterranean Sea has become a point of arrival. Ten thousand Tunisian Jews, fleeing their homes, have reach- ed it since the Bizerte crisis, July last. By a strange paradox, the pier of the Trans-Mediterranean Line —whose ships ply between France and North Africa — is adjacent to that of the Israeli Jewish families fear for Zim Line, from which hundreds of thousands have left for Israel. their children. Already, young: The first view of France the ref- sters experience considerable ugees have is that of a few cus- difficulty in attending high toms and police sheds, in front schools and universities. A "de of which a small crowd of rela- facto" numerus clause prevails in state institutions. Jewish tives and friends are massed. There is the eternal and tragic schools such as the Alliance picture of refugees on the move: Israelite Universelle and ORT women carrying pats and par- are being Arabized. Over all these factors looms cels, sometimes a baby in their arms, children tense and nervous, the fear that the country's gates men clinging to their heavy suit- cases, their arms full of coats. A few elderly people are helped down the slippery planks by so- cial workers, two hospital cases are carried down on stretchers. may one day close on them as they have on their Moroccan City of Hope Discovery May Shed New Light on Hereditary Diseases brethren. The French consulates in Tu- nisia grant visas on the spot to all Tunisian Jews, and the au- thorities are not trying to pre- vent their departure for the time being. A few categories of peo- ple, termed "indispensable," such as school teachers and engineers, are not granted their passports, however. Travel documents are obtainable in two to three weeks after application, but Jews, like all departing citizens and tour- ists, are not allowed to export local or foreign currency, and must pay exit dues on their be- longings. And so they arrive in Mar- seilles, often alone and lost in the new world which greets them with unfamiliar cold, rain and wind. A new theory about the X- chromosomes of women may shed new light on the bio- chemistry of human heredity and explain puzzling variations in the occurrence of certain hereditary diseases like hemo- philia. Proposed by Dr. Ernest Beut- ler, chairman of medicine at the City of Hope, the National Medical Center alder Jewish auspices at Duante, Calif., the theory is based on his test- system using an enzyme called glucose - 6 - phosphate dehydro- genase, or g-6-pd, found in red blood cells. W. German Republic Honors Jewish Leader BONN, (JTA) — The Grand Service Cross, one of the high- est awards of the West German Federal Republic, was con- ferred on Dr. Heinrich Georg Van Damm, secretary-general of the Central Council of Jews in Germany. In a citation accompanying the award, President Heinrich Luebke praised Van Damm's ef- forts in the reconstruction of Jewish life in Germany. Beutler suggests, however, that one of the two X-chromo- somes becomes genetically in- active—apparently at random— while the female is still in the embryonic stage of life. From that point forward, each of her cells contains only one active X-chromosome. In some cells, this is the X inherited from her father; in others, it is the X inherited from her mother. Every woman would thus rep- resent a mosaic of cells in terms of her X-chromosomes, Beutler notes in a report in the It has always been thought that the two X-chromosomes in human female cells are equally active in the process of development. , current "Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences." Following up on previous research by Susumu Ohno, Ph.D., also of the City of Hope, Beutler found evidence of two distinct types of red cells in the blood of a group of women whose body cells were known to have on their X-chromosomes one normal and one abnormal gene. One type showed normal g-6-pd levels, the o t h e r, deficient levels. Beutler suggests that perhaps a similar process involving the mutant gene for hemophilia, or other sex-linked hereditary dis- orders, may explain marked differences in the development of disease symptoms in dif- ferent individuals. Co-authors of the present paper with Beutler are Mary Yeh, B.A., and Virgil F. Fair- banks, M.D., both of the City of Hope. Miami Jewish Group Sponsors Negev City MIAMI—The establishment of a new city in Israel's Negev Desert will be sponsored by the Greater Miami Jewish Commu- nity, it was announced by Leon J. Ell, president of the Jewish National Fund Council here. Want ads get quick results ! They arrive for their new life 'with only one dinar (the equivalent of $2) in their pock- ets, and no foreign currency whatsoever. Most of them man- age to take with them a few pieces of family jewelry and large quantities of new winter clothing. They look well fed and well dressed. Most of them belong to the once prosperous middle class: shopkeepers from Sfax, bank and insurance officials who once worked for the large French cor- porations, government officials from Tunis, artisans from Bi- zerte. The rich and the poor have stayed behind; the former be- cause they are unable to dispose of their property and businesses, even at a considerable loss; the latter, because they are too poor even to afford the fare and the heavy winter clothing they will need in France. In spite of their former pros- perity, those not expected by rel- atives or friends queue up before the Jewish welfare fund desk in the port. Most want a small loan to pay for their taxi into town and for their first nights at a local hotel. "I never thought Fd come down to this," a well dressed middle aged man tells me. His wife, accompanied by two chil- dren in their teens, adds: "It is better, however, than staying on in Tunisia." "We are surrounded by Arabs and feel that the country is incessantly moving towards an Islamization. Since the rap- prochement between Tunisia and the Arab League, we know that our days are numbered," a former lawyer says. An economist, who served for many years as head of the Gov- ernment's Investment Authority, adds: "We relied on Bourguiba, but with the start Of the Bizerte crisis we felt that he was losing his grip. The Destour's (main political party) Young Turks are taking over. We believe them to be xenophobic and anti- Jewish." A woman in the queue breaks in: "Bourguiba is mortal like all of us. And after him there is nothing left for us." A few more cite instances of discrimination and anti - Jewish measures. Police brutalities are also evoked, but most of the cases recalled happened "to Abraham I ona raham Jonas was When, in the 1850 and Quincy, Illinois, practicing law an whose name was also another youn Abraham— e Lincoln— as doing much the same ng at Spring Both re elected to ture wh e they met an friends. n 1856, for e elected and at and ne a nominate e famous large part, Lincoln-Douglas • ebates on slavery which were to play such an important part in bringing Abraham Lincoln to the atten- tion of the country. And at the nominating convention of 1860,. again with Abraham Jonas' help, the man who was to become one of our greatest presidents this time ake Lincoln President won the nomination. ate So, from their earliest days in t e his col legislature, till the d arted on s frien n from which e long , Abraham Jonas he w:o4d n s side. vas ev r at Li r forgot his friend and poli- Lincoln er. During the Civil War, in tical am Jonas' family, too, "brother was arrayed against brother." The son who was a Confederate had been captured by the Union forces. In the Lincoln papers there is this note which not only expresses the affection he felt for his old friend, but also Abraham Lincoln's great humanity. "Allow Charles H. Jonas, now a prisoner of war at Johnson's Island, a parole of three weeks to visit his dying father, Abraham Jonas, at Quincy, Illinois. A. Lincoln." P. LORILLARD COMPANY ESTABLISHED 1760 OLD GOLD SPIN FILTERS 1:ING St?.. • First with the Finest Cigarettes through Lorillard research 61962 P. I.oritiardt04 1 1 — THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS -- Frida y, February 16, 1962 Tunisian Jewry in Flight