Friday, Nov, 15, 1963 — THE DETROIT JEWISH NEW S i— 40 UJA. Study Mission in Israel Found 25th Anniversary of Day of Infamy — Enriching by Leaders from Detroit Nazi 'Crystal Night' — Is Observed Detroit members of the United Jewish Appeal ninth study mission to Israel have returned home to relate their first-hand experience and observation of the needs which are served by UJA. The above photos are representative of the kind of en- riching occasions experienced by local leaders. Shown (top) as she greeted a newly-arrived immigrant and her son at Lydda Airport is Mrs. Henry Wineman, prominent in the activities of the National Women's Division of the UJA. Pictured at bottom are Mr. and Mrs. Max Fisher as they were greeted by Israel Foreign Minister Mrs. Golda Meir at a reception she tendered for members of the mission. Seen with them is Mrs. Sidney J. Allen. Israel Lifts Restrictions on Movement of Arabs (Direct JTA Teletype Wire to The Jewish News) TEL AVIV—Restrictions on the movements of nearly 250,000 Israeli Arabs living along the border will be lifted today, ac- cording to a special order of the Chief of Staff. Chief of Staff Tzvi Tsur acted on the decision of Premier Levi Eshkol, announced two weeks ago in parliament. Under the order issued to military governors, all limita- tions on movements in hundreds of Arab village's will be lifted. Restrictions will remain in force only in the case of five villages which are actually on the bor- derline where security needs re- quire continued control over movement of villagers. Arab notables and chieftains met on invitation with the mili- tary governors where they re- ceived details of the new ar- rangements. The liberalization will not apply also to some 700 Israeli Arabs who ha"e been suspected on grounds of security. They have been placed on special lists and will not receive the benefits of the cancelation of restrictions even where they live in those areas where restrictions will be ended. The 700 Arabs will remain under control of the regional military governors. The Chief of Staff order was welcomed by the Arabs throughout Israel. Soviet to Allow Reburial in Israel of Remains of Jewish Personalities (Direct JTA Teletype Wire to The Jewish News) JERUSALEM—Soviet Ambas- sador Mikhail Bodrov said here Wednesday that Soviet authori- ties would not object in princi- ple to the transfer to Israel for burial of the remains of out- standing Jewish personalities buried in the Soviet Union. The envoy made that state- ment to a representative of the committee of former Kiev fami- lies in reply to a specific re- quest for the transfer of the re- mains of the Goan of Vilna. The envoy said such requests for individual transfers could be expected to receive favor- able consideration but that the Soviet authorities would defi- nitely object to any mass re- burial. The meeting with the ambas- sador confirmed an earlier agreement with Soviet authori- ties for the transfer and rebur- ial of the remains of relatives of Israeli families in Lukya- novka, an abandoned Jewish cemetery in Kiev, to Kiev's new cemetery. The remains of President Shazar's brother-in-law and rela- tives of Foreign Minister Golda Meir will be transferred to the new cemetery under this ar- rangement. Under Soviet law, any cemetery closed for 24 years is declared abandoned and may be destroyed. BONN (JTA)—The 25th an- niversary of Crystal Night, the night of terror in 1938 when Nazis roamed cities in Germany and Austria burning synagogues and beating and killing Jews, was observed throughout West Germany last weekend by memo- rial services for the Jewish victims of the Nazi holocaust. The German Evangelical Church held special services at Dachau, site of the infamous concentration camp, wher e church leaders announced plans to build a church on the site dedicated to German repentance for the crimes committed there. Similar services were held at the site of the Flossenburg concen- tration camp. In a message addressed to the country's Jewish community, West German Chancellor Lud- wig Erhard said that, while no- body could make reparations for the crimes of Crystal Night; the anniversary observance should "strengthen our will to make certain that freedom and the worth of the individual are de- fended as the supreme value." Newspapers throughout West Germany carried lengthy ar- ticles in connection with the anniversary of Crystal Night. Die Welt, leading German weekly, noted that the anni- versary coincided with the publication of the document submitted to the Ecumenical Council refuting Jewish guilt for Christ's death. Addressing t h e dedication ceremonies of the new Hannover Synagogue, Dr. Hendrik George VanDam, secretary - general of the Central Council of the Jews in Germany, said that Jew i sh hopes for the future in Ger- many have grown. He stressed that there were greater pros- pects for harmonious living to- gether- with the Germans, and for more German understanding for' Jewish fellow citizens. * * HAIFA (JTA) — The Haifa Symphony Orchestra changed its program at the last minute Sun- day night and canceled plans for performing a work by the Ger- man composer Richard Wagner, after pressure was exerted on orchestra officials by leading Is- raeli personalities, including a number of sponsors of the or- chestra, who objected to the inclusion of the German work in the program on the night commemorating the 25th anni- versary of Crystal Night. Along with the Israeli Phil- harmonic Orchestra and the Kol Yisrael broadcasting service, the Haifa orchestra had been unof- ficially boycotting the works of Wagner until the Haifa group decided to include the corn- poser's work. They were forced to change the program, however, due to public pressure. Two organizations of Aus- trian Jews held mass meetings in Tel Aviv, commemorating the 25th anniversary of Crys- tal Night in 1938, when the Nazis began their campaign of terror against Jews by burn- ing synagogues and beating and killing Jews throughout Germany and Austria. One of the meetings was held by the Central European Settlers Association, and the other by the World Association of Aus- trian Jews. The participants de- cided to send a delegation to Bonn to try to secure reparations granted to German Jews. * * VIENNA (JTA)—Senior gov- e r n m e n t officials, prominent personalities in civic and cul- tural life and leaders of the Aus- trian Jewish community were among those taking part here in observances commemorating the 25th anniversary of Crystal Night, when the Nazis set fire to 191 synagogues throughout Germany and Austria, destroying marked the official beginning of 76 of them. the Nazi war against Jewry, Speakers at the commemora- which was to result in the death tion ceremonies included former of six million Jews before Hitler Chancellor Leopold Figl, a for- was defeated. To prevent such mer concentration camp inmate, things from happening again, he who represented the Austrian said, we must not allow the Peoples Party; Vienna Mayor world or the Jews to forget this Franz Jonas, representing the horrible massacre. Socialist Party; and Dr. Ernst Feldsberg, president of the Aus- Hebrew Corner trian, Jewish community. The speakers emphasized that the memory of the victims of Nazi 29th November 1947, the United persecution still burned in Nations convened to accept a resolu- the hearts of all democratic tion on the fate of Palestine. The government in the country was in Austrians. the hands of the English. After the Also commemorating the an- First World War they received a mandate on the country. The English niversary were Austrian Catholic entered the country with the as- youth organizations, including sistance of the Jews, but all their activities was to the 'good of the groups of Catholic high school Arabs. The Jews in the country de- and university students. Speak- manded to set up a Jewish State in Palestine. From the days of Herzl ers at the youth meeting in- and the First Zionist Congress (1897), cluded Dr. Kurt Schuber, well- the Jews demanded a Jewish State the country. Fifty years passed by, known author of books about in the U.N. convened on the Palestine Israel, who told the gathering problem. The Arabs were against a State. They gave notice that that Catholics must realize that Jewish blood would be spilt . . . many countries supported the Arabs, for they failed and are laden with the Arabs have petroleum deposits guilt. and it pays to be on good terms with * * * them . . . and the Jews—who will Nov. 29 1947 , Mark 'Night of Terror' Anniversary in N.Y. The Night of Terror — Nov. 9-10—the night 36 German Jews were murdered, 191 synagogues burned, 7,500 Jewish stores plundered and 171 apartment houses destroyed — in revenge for the murder in Paris of the German diplomat, Ernst von Rath, by Herschel Greenspan, was commemorated Sunday at the Herzl Institute, New York, with a meeting addressed by Kurt Grossman, director of Ger- man affairs of the Jewish Agency, on the occasion of the 25th anniversary of the Nazi organized orgy of terror. Grossmann, said that this demonstration of Nazi sadism come to their help? In this impor- tant moment will the feeling of justice arise and over weigh all the other calculations? The president of Czechoslovakia said in the U.N. "You are speaking about our oil pipeline— I know of another pipeline—that is the pipeline of blood of the Jewish nation, that was spilt in all genera- tions". . . The U.N. proposed to partition the Country and set up two states: A Jewish state and a State for the Arabs of Palestine. The Jews agreed to partition, while the Arabs were against it. On the 29th of November the U.N. was to convene to make a decision on this problem. Jews in a distance of thousands of miles sat next to their radio sets and listened anxiously to every word. Will a Jewish State be set up in Palestine? Thirty-three countries in the U.N. voted for a Jewish State in Palestine; 13 voted against. For two thousand years the Jews prayed to return to Zion—and here . . . 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