10—Friday, May 5, 1967 20 000 Swiss Jews Celebrating at Centennial THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS ang s i,ri mes • • Extradition H earwigs ' LUCERNE (JTA)—Swiss Jewry, blaming the Jews of responsibility signs of resurgent neo-Nazism in • / numbering now about 20,000, ob- 1 for both world wars, the Russian Germany. Swiss Jews also continued to served the 100th anniversary of ' revolution and the "moral decay Jewish freedom in this country at of society." There were also in- show concern over a law, enacted I a two-day Assembly of Delegates stances of anti-Semitic and pro- in 1894, forbidding shehita any- th er in g was ar- ' Nazi statements made in some pub- where in Switzerland. The Gemein- d d a. • Th e ga Brazil's supreme court post- W es 10 011: i JTA l — Franz Paul ranged by the Gemeindebund, the lications and by individuals. The debund started fighting against S?angl. the ex-Nazi commandant poned until next week its sched- Swiss Federation of 24 local Jew- Gemeindebund not only, protested that law in 1904. Only a constitu- of the Treblinka and Sobibor death uled hearings on three petitions ish communities, each of which those manifestations in this coun- tional amendment could wipe out camp,. who is under arrest in from foreign governments—Poland but also protested against the that law. Brazil, facing possible extradition West Germany and Austria—for has autonomy. try A report issued by the federa- a, a war criminal, had also com- the extradition of Stangl. The high tribunal postponed its tion noted that the federation is mitted war crimes in Italy, it was hearings on the request of the continuing its activities in defense charged here. According to information by the government's chief prosecutor who of Judaism through its special Jew community of Venice. Stangl had ordered during World War 11 the deportation of patients at a hospital for the aged in Venice. It was also learned here through Giuseppe Fano. a Jew liv- ' ing in Trieste, that Stangl had been ext , had asked for more time to study and analyze the very bulky docu- mentation presented by the gov- ernments of Poland and West Germany. The documents from both those countries, the prosecutor told the active during the Nazi occupation - court. had arrived here only a few of Italy in the country's north-' days before, and much more time eastern section. between Septem- to study and analyze the very bulky documentation presented by ber 1943 and April 1945. Fano declared that a gas cham- the governments of Poland and ber had been built at San Saba, West Germany. In ruling on the postponement, near Trieste, where 2,000 victims w ere murdered. Ile said Stangl had the court also decided that all three "specialized" in uncovering Jews governmental petitions for Stangl's in hiding. The Trieste Jewish com- extradition would be considered at munity is preparing a file on a single proceeding. The Austrian Stangl for possible use in his trial documentation, the prosecutor said, was ready for presentation now. vvtc never it takes place. Stangl had originally been order- "Italian Jewry attributes great ed by the Supreme Court to be de- importance to the extradition tained for the maximum legal proceedings now pending for the former Nazi death camp' com- mandant before the Brazilian Judge Sergio Piperno, president of the Union of Italian Jewish Communities, Supreme Court," told the Brazilian ambassador here during a visit. Stangl has been under arrest in Sao Paulo since March 2. His extradition is being sought by Austria, West Germany and Poland. 31011I11114•111 to Victims f Dachau Ruined stone monu- (.ITA ment honoring Jewish victims of the Dachau concentration camp was smeared with a Nazi swastika and the words "Heil Hitler" painted on it. police reported Tu,es- day. An official investigation was la unched. The monument is located over- lioNN looking the graves of many Jews at Leittenberg Cemetery just out- side the camp. It has a Jewish Star of David chiseled on its face. The president of the Bavarian State Criminal Police. Dr. Hans Schneider. took charge of the probe. A Protestant Atonement church was dedicated at the same site on Sunday. A Jewish memo- rial center was to be dedicated next Sunday as part of the 22nd anniversary of the liberation of Dachau by Allied forces on April 29, 1945. Investitzators said the desecra- tion of the monument was timed to coincide with the anniversary events to show the contempt of some Germans for the memory of the murdered Jews. I' k* DeGaulle to Visit Site of Auschwitz in June PARIS JTA) — President de Gaulle will pay a visit to the site of the Auschwitz death camp dur- in.: his official visit to Poland, it was reported here Tuesday. He is scheduled to arrive in Warsaw June 1 and will remain in Poland for about a week. It was reported here that the president had .asked the Polish ambassador in Paris to arrange a special visit for him to the death camp site. General de Gaulle said he wanted to pay his respects to the victims of Nazism murdered in Auschwitz. A memorial to the 4.000,000 vic- tims at Auschwitz was dedicated last month in an official ceremony, period, which expired Sunday. But the tribunal found a legal techni- cality for extending the detention period by two more weeks. It was learned here from ex- cellent sources that Stangl -him- self hopes he will not be freed in Brazil, and would be extradited to Austria. Ile was said to fear "Jewish revenge" and efforts to assassinate him if he were re- leased here. On the other hand, it was said by these sources, he would prefer extradition to Austria—rather than to Poland or West Germany—be- cause the Austrian accusation is limited to a charge that he had participated in a Nazi euthanasia program, making no mention of his command position at Treblinka and Sobibor. He was reported to hold the be- lief that, in Austria, he would get off with a light sentence, if tried and convicted there. Stangl's newly appointed attor- ney, named as defense counsel by the court after his three former defense attorneys had withdrawn from the case, indicated to the court that he would call for the man's aequittal on the grounds that Brazil's legal code sets a statute of limitation of 20 years on prosecution of the crimes of which Stangl is accused. Stangl's new attorney, Xavier de Albuquerque, is a professor at the University of Brazil. The man's three former attorneys were well known and very expensive lawyers, and there had been much specula- tion here about who had retained the prestigious defense battery and who had undertaken the cost of that private defense. Prof. Albuquerque's claim that the statute of limitations bars Stangl's extradition is supported by the supreme court's former chief justice, Nelson Hungria, and by Brazil's representative on the United Nations Human Rights Commission, Carlos Dunshee de Abranches. An article by the lat- ter, published here, invoked the statute of limitations on behalf of Stangl. Hungria made his position on that point clear in a statement three weeks ago. Hungria's state- ment garnered considerable inter- est among attorneys here because he had been the author of Brazil's current penal code. Hungria had been retired from his high judi- cial post by Brazil's new national government and is now on pension. and on the next day, thousands The surroundings of the famous of Jews made a pilgrimage to the site to recite the Kaddish. Tannur (Furnace) waterfall, near Metulla at the northernmost point of Israel, have been recently Fear The thing in the world I am opened to the public as a nature most afraid of is fear, and with reserve. This reserve has been laid good reason, that passion alone is out by Jewish National Fund ex- the trouble of it exceeding other perts on an area of 400 dunams (100 acres). accidents.—Montaigne MAC•0•LAC areath Plage "emancipation fund," established by the organization's delegate as- sembly last year, as well as through religious works, scholar- ships and the provision of emerg- ency aid. Anti-Semitism in this country was one of the federation's prin- cipal preoccupations last year, the report showed. Among the anti- Semitic manifestations was the ap- pearance of a pamphlet containing many calumnies against the Jewish people, similar to the notorious "Protocols of the Elders of Zion," Cabbage Month Cabbage month (kalemonath) was the Anglo-Saxon name for February. The farmer's winter soup had cabbage as its chief in- gredient. Outdoors as the weather became milder, cabbage was the first vegetable to sprout during the month. Two savings plans from Michigan Bank 0 For Regular Savings 0 • With DAILY INTEREST you earn every day on every dollar from date of deposit to date of with- drawal. • Interest is paid and compounded January 'I, April 1, July 1 and October 1. DAILY INTEREST • Usual withdrawal privileges. ANNUAL RATE For Longer Term Investment • Issued with 90 day, 6 month or 1 year maturity, automatically renewed • Issued in multiples of $1,000 • Interest paid monthly or quarterly as desired Your deposits are insured up to $15,000 by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. 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