JEWISIPI E Flight and Panic—Our Grave Problem Editorial, Page 4 CD `Transition Years' t)y Dr. Israel Goldstein Review, Page 4 Vol. XLI I, No. 9 1=2 C D 1 T WS NA A Weekly Review Students of German Affairs Evaluate Position of Jewry I Jewish Events Commentary, Page 2 M:_chigan's Only English-Jewish Newspaper—Incorporating The Detroit Jewish Chronicle Printed 7 100% Union Shop I / 1 00 on" shop W. 7 Mile Rd. — VE 8-9364 — Detroit 35, October 26, 1962— $6.00 Per Year; Single Copy 20c Russia Sentences 6 Jews to Death by Firing Squad Warsaw--Aftermath of Holocaust; Depressing Realities of New Era. By PHILIP SLOMOVITZ WARSAW, Poland.—There were hundreds of Jewish com- munities in Poland in pre-war days. More than 3,500,000 Jews formed the great collective community that took pride in many yeshivoth, in a progressive Jewish school system out of which emerged noted Hebrew scholars. Today, there are 22 small Jewish communities left. They are listed in the luakh—the Jewish calendar that is freely dis- tributed by the religious Jewish community in Warsaw—in order to advise their congregants on the licht benshen—the time for the lighting of the candles on Sabbath eve—in the respective kehilloth, these 22 surviving Jewish communities. This luakh is in itself a symbol of the difference that exists between the Communist state of Poland and Soviet Russia. In the USSR, it has been stated time and again, Jews crave for prayerbooks, calendars to advise them on the occurrence of holidays, taleisim (prayershawls) and tefillin (phyllacteries). Many visitors must have taken heed of such purported re- quests. As a result, due undoubtedly to pressure, only a few days before the last Rosh Hashanah, Chief Rabbi Yehudah Levin of Moscow issued a formal protest against such impor- tations, charging visitors who had brought with them such religious articles with having brought about a black market in religious objects. Poland's comparative "religious freedom" becomes appar- ent in the free distribution of the luakh. The "religious free- dom" may well be part of the libertarian principle applied to the Catholic church in Poland whose influence over the people is so great and whose dignitaries have been granted great free- doms. But insofar as the Polish government is concerned it is equally apparent that the principles pursued are those of "render unto Caesar what is Caesar's . . . " and give the church its unrestricted sway over its worshipers—up to the point of not permitting it ever to gain a political foothold. So—if the church has the freedoms granted it, what harm is it to give the impoverished, the dwindled Jewish community, a luakh and religious rights? This is, indeed, the dwindled Jewish community. This is where Hitler achieved his goal of the near-total extermination of the Jewish people. It is mostly in the crematoria that were established in Poland that the Nazis murdered three million Continued on Page 32. Direct JTA Teletype Wire to The Jewish News LONDON — A Chernovitz court has sentenced six Jews to death and given prison terms to nine others on charge of speculation in gold and foreign currency, according to reports received here Wednesday from Moscow. Sentencing followed conviction after a two-week trial, according to the Soviet Ukrainian newspaper Pravda Ukrainy, which had noted that many of the 150,000 Jews of Chernovitz have relatives abroad. All personal property of the 15 defendants was ordered confiscated. The six sentenced to die will be executed by shooting. The indictment charged that 55 pounds of gold ingots, diamonds and foreign currency was found in possession of members of the al- leged ring. One of the defendants was an 81-year-old man, Alter Bronstein, who was accused of currency dealings amounting to more than $100,000. He was one of the six sentenced to death. The other five were listed as Yefim Margoskes, Moishe Meyer, Zayats Srul Zimilevich, Isaak Ronis and Felika Mester. Those sentenced to varying prison terms were Hersh Shternberg, Esther Weinbern, Enzel Koifman, Samuil Levental, Mendel Flomenboim, Hersh Nagel, Leonid Sherman and Yankel Kohen. The name of the 15th defendant was not publicized. The indictment accused the defendants of having had contacts in Moscow, Lvov, Kiev, Kishinev, Minsk and Brest, all cities with large Jewish populations. Chernovitz is a city in the Bukovina which was an- nexed to the Soviet Ukraine after World War II. Probe of Soviet Anti-Semitism Urged at United Nations UNITED NATIONS, N.Y., (JTA) — A formal request for a "relentless" United Nations investigation of "government-instigated anti-Semitism in the Soviet Union" was filed here by the International Confederation of Free Trade Unions, an organization which has con- sultative status before the Economic and Social Council. • As a group with such status, the ICFTU has a voice, but not a note, in matters dealing with economic and social affairs around the world. In filing the request, backed by a 5,000-word memorandum, Irving Brown, ICFTU representative here, attacked the "ever-expanding program of Soviet anti-Semitism" which, he declared, is "aided, abetted, encouraged and legalized by the, Soviet government." He chargd that the USSR "is engaged in a program against a large, defenseless minority of its citizenry which can only be characterized as cultural and spiritual genocide." Brown requested that the United Nations Social Commission order the investigation of official, Soviet anti-Semitism and stated that, if none of the 18 members of the Social Commission introduces a resolution calling for the probe, the ICFTU would take the matter directly to the Commission's parent body—the Economic and Social Council. The United States is a member of the 18-nation body. "Our submission," he declared, "is one which should lead to an uncompromising, relentless investigation, the repressions by the Soviet Union of the rights, guaranteed by the UN Charter, of all men Continued on Page 2 Krakow Story-ENNA Commun i0 T Doomed . By PHILIP SLOMOVITZ KRAKOW, Poland.—Dating back to the year 1304, there was a Judengasse in this former capital both of Galicia and of Poland. The Krakow community and its immediate environs had grown to a population exceeding 60,000, and some quoted the figure of 80,000,. just before the last war. Today, there are 2,000 people left here-1,300 of them of the ages of 60 to 65 and older. There are only 10 children in the religious school. It is a dying community and the squalor that is in evidence here is most depressing. There will be a constant flow of visitors here because Oswiecim (Auschwitz) and Birkenau are 40 miles from here—and to the credit of the Polish government let it be said that it is retaining as imper- ishable memorials the concentration and extermination camps that were set up by the Nazis and were used by them as assembly places not only for Polish Jews but for all Jews from all-European countries who were marked for extermination. It is not with the death camps that we are now concerned with. Anyone who has read current history is acquainted with them. The living are the objects of concern. Their lives are bitter, the religious element is dwindling, the youth among the so-called "cultural" group are abandoning their people, and few have a desire to go to Israel. The dedicated group that sought freedom as Jews has already gone to Israel, and a very small percentage of the remaining will seek taVP11111 have_n_i_n_icrA pi So—as in Warsaw—Krakow's story is depressing. But it is even more depressing in Krakow than it is in Warsaw, and the nearness of Oswiecim - Birkenau has not helped to arouse greater loyalties to Jewry and to Judaism among the Jews there. In Krakow one sees evidence of the available rights to religious observance. There are outdoor shrines, and your correspondent was witness, on the early morning. of the day of the visit to Krakow, of passersby kneeling before the shrine and depositing coins for the church. • There is no doubt that • such rights to freedom of religious observance are available also for Jews. The proof is to be found in the announced plans for the establishment, with government and American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee assistance, of a Jewish Home for the Aged in Warsaw. The 'plans are to have a synagogue in that home and a kosher kitchen with a mashgiach,— a supervisor for kashrut. That being the case, it is evident that religion is not suppressed in Poland—that where it has declined it is voluntarily abandoned by the members of the Jewish community. Near the Catholic shrine referred . to is a Russian memorial to heroes of the last war. A number of graves of former USSR generals are in that memorial area,. and the Russian inscription over one of the graves lists General R.ogov. It seemed to be evidence of the admitted large participation of Jews in the anti-Nazi armies and the rna nv c (14_11A7_17113_11'__Y_Wiatlia onlion of fpn.fintri