Friday, November 1, 1963—THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS-2 Purely Commentary The Yeihivah Schools Their Guest Speaker Yeshivath Beth Yehudah schools, since the merger of the after- noon sessions with the United Hebrew Schools, appear to have acquired a wider measure of support, and the annual event on Nov. 10 apparently has a more varied appeal than the previous events had enrolled. The community-spirited approach to our educational needs has helped in the mustering of new supporters, and the schools'. expansion program apparently has gained from the inspiration created by the Yeshivah's devoted leadership. The approaching Nov. 10 function undoubtedly will gain adherents because it will have as guest speaker the U. S. Senator from Connecticut, Abraham Ribicoff. It was under Senator Ribi- coff's leadership that 59 Senators sponsored a resolution repudia- ting the anti-Semitic actions of the USSR and appealing to the Soviet Union, "in the name of decency and humanity," to put an end to the persecution of Jews for alleged economic offenses. The local audience will be interested in the reactions to that reso- lution and to its chances of adoption, and on his appearance here, Senator Ribicoff may report on the results of his efforts to put an end to Soviet persecutions. — JTA's Role . . . Vote By Philip YE S Tuesday .. Y e s ht jv sa sh R lc i f e l o n l s e r . . SIOMOVitZ All persecutors have had their defenders. Vergelis undoubtedly is a convinced Communist, and it may well be that he is not con- scious of having served as an apologist for the persecutors. In reality he has done just that. * * The Duty of All Citizens to Vote YES Tuesday There will be only one item on the ballot Tuesday: the pro- posal for a renewal of the 7.5 mills tax rate for our schools. It is not a new tax proposal, but a request for a renewal of the tax that was approved in 1959 . The votors should know that the YES vote that is so vital will in no sense increase the existing tax rate. Because the only source of income for our schools is a property tax, it is urgent that every citizen go to the polls on Tuesday and vote YES. In 1962 there were 292,000 children in our schools. This year the number has risen to 295,000. The need is greater than ever, and the funds are lesser. In the event of a disapproval of the proposal on Tuesday, our schools will lose a third of the available budget—a sum amount- The topic chosen by Senator Ribicoff for his address here ing to $40,000,000—after next July. That would be a calamity be- —"Soviet Persecution of Jews—Challenge to World's Con- cause the educational program would have to, be reduced for all science"—indicates that he will speak frankly on an issue pupils in our schools. that has begun to attract worldwide attention. His visit here No other means of support is in view for our schools, and the therefore is certain to be of great significance in clarifying— obligation to vote YES on Tuesday is obvious. Any other verdict the serious problem involving more than two million of our will be calamitous and will brand our community with a mark kinsmen. of shame. The assistance that will be given the Yeshivah schools with the financial aid provided by the annual dinner continues a tradition JTA's New Role on World Scene that helps educational efforts in increased measure. Transfer of ownership of the Jewish Telegraphic Agency to the newly-formed board of directors composed of representatives Jewish Defender of the USSR Policies A In all ages and all climes, there have been Jewish defenders from many Jewish communities in no sense changes the basic of the malingers of their people. They were to be found in anti- position of the most vital Jewish news agency in the world. What it should do is create a better climate for JTA by in- Semitic Poland and Czarist Russia, in Nazi Germany and Nasser- creasing interest in it and assuring the support it needs to serve ruled Cairo. Another of their ilk has just emerged in Moscow as a Soviet world Jewry. There is no other medium through which our people every- Daniel come to judgement. Aron Vergelis, editor of the b1 • monthly Soviet Yiddish periodical Sovientish Heimland (Soviet where can be kept informed about themselves and can be linked Homeland), writing in Literaturnaya Gazeta, the literary Soviet as an entity in the best interests of Jewish cultural, defense and magazine, went to great length to emphasize that Russian Jews philanthropic needs. Without the JTA services world Jewry would be completely do not seek a return to their Jewish heritage, that they are "Marxists in outlook" and that they "would never agree with deprived of all means of acquiring information about Jewish those who pull the Jewish people back to the ghetto, back to the communities. Without JTA there not only- would be a total sever- ance of connections between American and World Jewries but Middle Ages." It was a safe way of charging that anyone who desires to also between ourselves and the other Jewish communities in our adhere to Jewish traditions is returning to the ghetto, and such land. It is through JTA's recently expanded domestic news and misrepresentation, which is a typical approach of those who be- feature services that we now are so closely linked that there are little their own people, leaves those in the USSR who would better prospects for American Jews to learn one from another like to retain some sort of kinship with Jewry on unsafe ground. how to improve our school systems, how to assure proper income Equally typical of the repudiation of all semblances of loy- for our major causes, how to serve our people everywhere. If it were not for the JTA, Israel's needs would not be known, alty to Jewish traditions in Communist as in any other anti-Jewish ranks is Vergelis' implied charge that anything pro-Jewish and the Israeli position would be kept in the dark, and many Jewish anti-Russian in the accusations of anti-Semitism against the USSR communities would • be orphaned without the cementing force stems from New York. That's how the Nazis spoke in Hitler's provided by this vital agency. It is most unfortunate that JTA has had to suffer for lack days. That's the argument that was resorted to by Ernest Bevin in the days when he led the battle against Zionists in Great Britain. of funds during the last decade or more. The decline of the Vergelis' article was titled "A New York Lament on the Day of Yiddish press, the inability of the English-Jewish newspapers Atonement." He wrote about "cheap sensationalism" in New to finance the work of JTA which often, especially during crises, York Yiddish newspapers in his reference to the release by the runs into prohibitive obligations, has made it necessary for JTA MGM record division of a recording of Kol Nidre sung in Moscow's to go to Federation for support. The Detroit Jewish Welfare Federation has been among Central Synagogue. It is interesting that Vergelis should have quoted the Yiddish those who have played a leading role in defending JTA's position Day-Journal as having written in this connection: "In the voice and in providing it with the much-needed financial support. of the old cantor, in the moaning of hundreds of worshipers, we Under the present set-up, with the stock of JTA placed in the sense all the suffering, all the grief, all the tragedy of our hands of a group of Jewish spokesmen from many communities, brothers in the Soviet Union." Vergelis didn't like it, but the Kol it is reasonable to expect that JTA's financial problems will be Nidre rendering in Moscow has been interpreted as just that: a solved and that the great news agency now will be in position revelation of the tragedy of the religiously persecuted Russian to render world Jewry much improved services. May this prove to be so—in the best interest of Jews everywhere. Jews. Moroccan Jewry Supports Hassan Against Algeria (Direct JTA Teletype Wire to The Jewish News) PARIS — Morocco's 130,000 Jews support King Hassan II in his conflict with Algeria and in his clashes with opposition leaders inside Morocco, a prom- inent Jewish attorney, who has just arrived here from Casa- blanca, told the Jewish Tele- graphic Agency Monday. The Moroccan Jew, who is in close contact with of f i c i a l circles in his country, said that, in spite of latent, popular anti- Semitism in his country, the Jews support the current re- gime which, they fear, might be replaced by one far more ex- tremist and more anti-Jewish. In recent months, he said, the Moroccan government has adopted a much more liberal attitude toward the Jews in the country. In addition to eas- ing emigration restrictions, he said, the government has ap- pointed a number of Jews to senior positions. Among these is Ben Sabbath, who has been named to a place on Morocco's Supreme Court. Other Jews, he said, have been promoted to senior posts in such ministries d ascommerce, health and in- dustry. The Moroccan Jew said that King Hassan II himself has per- sonal relations with a number of Jews, among these being Dr. Leon Benzaquen, formerly a member of the Moroccan Cab- inet, who is a frequent visitor to the royal palace. M. Guudirra, the King's personal adviser, is in social contact with David Amar, the secretary general of the Jewish community, reported the visitor, while other Jews are in contact with royal circles. Moroccan Jews, the lawyer said, are not subjected to any official persecutions. Their main grievance; he said, is against the continued abduction of young Jewish girls by rich Moslems and the fact that there is no redress against this prac- tice before the country's courts. He said that, of Morocco's 130,000 Jews, 80,000 live in Casablanca, while the remainder are scattered throughout the country, mainly in Rabat, Fez, Tangiers and Marrakesh. USSR Bias Exposed at UN, Condemned by Harriman UNITED NATIONS, N . Y . , raeli representative t o 1 d the ities exist for those of the Jew- who are singled out for this Before coming to the criticism against the Soviet Union, Dr. savage punishment." ish community. committee: Dr. Yapou's mention of the Yapou summarized briefly the "The last Bible in Hebrew "This matter is closely con- social progress achieved in Is- nected with a very painful to be printed in that country death sentence in the 'USSR "modern public , dates back to 1917. In a for persons convicted of eco- rael through problem, one to which I have services in the fields of edu- nomic crimes • referred to a period of more than 40 years, already had opportunity to call there has been but a single previous address, delivered to cation, health, housing and the attention of the Committee, social welfare." In the educa:. relating to the position and con- edition, virtually nominal in the committee by Mrs. Mar- tional field, he said, Israel was character, of the Hebrew garet Konantz, Canada's repre- dition of the Jewish community now facing "a great challenge." in one of the great countries Book of Prayer for a Jewish sentative in the group. Replying to Dr2Yapou, So- population numbering several of the world. From the consti- Dr. Yapou assured the com- viet delegate Y. A. Ostrovsky tutional angle, that country millions. Government p u b - mittee that Israel was speak- told the committee that the guarantees the freedom of wor- lishing houses have made no ing on the treatment of So- problem spelled out by the facilities available to the ship. viet Jewry "in sorrow" and Israeli "does not exist." not in malice "In speaking "Within the limits of existing Jewish faith similar to those Statements alluding to the about this situation," he de- policies, the major religions extended to other religions. "so-called Jewish problem," clared, "my delegation does with one exception are per- Unlike other faiths, Jews are he declared, are "becoming not authorized to produce the not seek to criticize the so- mitted to maintain central tiresome" and exist only "in articles of religious signifi- cial system of general policies organs ensuring religious func- the mind of the delegate of of the country concerned; tions and services and • promot- cance to them: Israel, who is becoming the but we felt bound to express "Even the baking of the tra- ing religious belief and practice. defender of Jews in other our deep anxiety for a certain ditional unleavened bread for The exception is the Jewish countries when he should specific problem of human the Passover — matzoh — is faith for which no such rights concern himself with Jews in are accorded. In the absence virtually prohibited. Jewish re- rights. In this spirit my dele- his own country — and not of such legally authorized in- ligious education is practically gation would express the only Jews there.." • earnest hope that the au- strumentalities, members of the non-existent. Finally, no group Harriman Urges Fight on thorities concerned would of Jewish religious scholars Jewish faith are excluded from the possibility of maintaining from that country has ever give fresh thought to the Soviety Policy on Jews NEW YORK, (JTA)—Under- normal mutual contact, of serv- been permitted to visit insti- matter." Dr. Yapoti also called the secretary of State W. Averell ing the religious needs of tutions of fellow co-religionists (JTA)—Israel delivered a full- scale attack here against the USSR's mistreatment of Soviet Jewry. Speaking only of "a cer- tain country," Dr. Eli e z e r Yapou, Israel delegate, sum- marized all of the Soviet anti- Jewish actions of recent years so thoroughly that the blast was unmistakably against the Soviet government — without once mentioning the target country by name. The fact that the Soviet Union was the country meant by Israel was underscored through an immediate reply to the Israel address from a USSR representative who told the United Nations in effect that the treatment of Jews in the Soviet Union is none of Israel's business. The sharp criticism against the Soviet Union was voiced by Dr. Yapou in one of the Gen- eral Assembly's major bodies, the Social, Humanitarian and Cultural Committee. Protesting against a proposal to postpone the previously scheduled 1964 session of the Commission on Human Rights to 1965, and against the delays in debating a United Nations declaration on the elimination of all forms of religious intolerance, the Is- believers, • and of working for spiritual continuity. While the other major religions are au- thorized to convene conferences of their clergy and representa- tives of the faithful, to issue religious publications and print Holy Scriptures, no such facil- or to advance their studies at centers of higher Jewish religi- ous learning abroad. Reference has already been made to the extraordinary harshness in this day and age of inflicting the death penalty for economic crimes. But it is, above all, Jews committee's attention to a study completed by a subcommission here on the right of everyone to leave his own country and return thereto. That report was also aimed, in part, against the Soviet Union for refusing to permit the emigration of Jews. Harriman challenged Soviet Russia's "elaborate denials" of anti-Jewish discrimination in the USSR. He disclosed that during his last visit to Moscow he had raised the question of religion with Nikita Khrush- (Continued on Page 3)