THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 8—Friday, March 1, 1968 WJCongress Denies Call for Boycott of Ghetto Uprising Commemoration ADL Denounces Anti-Semitic Memorial LONDON (JTA) — The British which were widely published here for Late Malcolm X at Harlem School and abroad, stemmed, according to Section of the World Jewish Con- gress categorically denied Tuesday that it had ever called for a boycott by Jews of the forthcoming com- memoration of the 25th anni- versary of the Warsaw Ghetto re- volt which the Polish government will sponsor in Warsaw this spring. Alex L. Easterman, director of the Congress' international affairs department, told the Jewish Tele- graphic Agency that reports of a boycott call issued by the WJC were "ill founded" and "er- roneous." He said that "on no occasion has the Congress taken any such decision or made any such pronouncements." The reports of a boycott call, Easterman, from words incorpor- ated in a general resolution adopt- ed at the recent national confer- ence of the WJC's British section here. The resolution expressed the WJC's "disquiet and regrets" over Poland's attitude toward Israel since last June's Arab-Israel war but stated its hopes for the res- toration of good will and confidence between the Jewish world and the Polish Republic. Easterman noted that constituent members of the WJC are free to express independent opinions but, unless , adopted by the parent body, these are not binding. tn, Little Fellow Silverman —Bit.- Let him believe your cause is By DAVID SCHWARTZ right and he would speak. The (Copyright Ism JTA Inc.) Sometimes the only way to whop members of Parliament might a big fellow is by a little fellow. groan and hiss. It didn't matter. It's the old David and Goliath story. It was said of Wendell Phillips, Suppose David had been a giant the American abolitionist, that he like Goliath. The two would have was at his best when the audience had the same approach. No- giant stormed. That might have been said would have thought of picking up of Silverman. some pebbles and shooting them at He began the fight against his opponent. but David as a little capital punishment 20 years ago. fellow saw its possibilities. He had Maybe he knew that in the Tal- his eperience in dealing with peo- mud, Rabbi Akiva said that if ple who were bigger. he were a judge, he would always Sydney Silverman, the Labor find a way not to impose a death member of the British House of sentence. Commons, was such a little fellow. Silverman was also against war, He stood no more than five feet which is also a form of capital in height, but there was no mem- punishment for being young. He ber of the Commons he was afraid voted against German rearmament. to take on. Jews perhaps remem- He attacked Prince Phillip, when ber most the way he dealt with the some years back, the Prince, he bellowing heavyweight, Ernest thought, was saying too syrupy Bevin. the Labor party leader and things about the Germans, who, he anti-Zionist at the end of World felt, had a great deal to answer for. War H. Time after time, he refused to go More recently Silverman's along with his party. As before name was in the press when said, the most conspicuous instance England passed the bill abolish. was when Bevin, the British Labor ing capital punishment. The 300 party leader and foreign minister, members of the House of Com- mons crowded around him to sealed tight the gates of Palestine to the inmates of the concentration congratulate him. They knew he camps. Just when every human in- was responsible for the outlawing stinct dictated some compassion for of hanging in England. Sydney those unfortunates, the leader sup- Silverman was popular for a posedly representing idealistic change. labor revealed a Nazi visage. Most of the time Silverman was Bevin once facetiously told a not popular. Thomas Paine once said "the minority is always right." new member of Parliament who asked how he should vote, "Just It takes time for the majority to watch Silverman and vote con- catch up with the thinking minor- trary to his way." Bevin knew ity. It didn't matter to Silverman how independent Silverman was. what others might think. If the Silverman was thrown out of the minority of one—himself—thought party several times but was al- a thing right, then he would stand ways taken back again. up for it. A member of Parliament is So he always championed causes for which few would speak. Some quoted in the press as saying of Englishman said, "If your party his death, "A little man and a big has turned you down, if your man — joined together — have friends won't have anything to do left us." with you, and even your wife de- Silverman was getting too popu- serts you, don't give up hope, see lar. This was something very new Sydney Silverman." in his experience. slstant chief inspector of the City Police Department for allowing himself "to be barred" from the memorial meeting. The ADL official added he was i confident that the "kill whitey" 11„, theme and the "anti-Semitism of the program reflect the views of a minuscule segment of the Negro * * community." NEW YORK (JTA) — An Anti- Defamation League official has accused New York City school and police officials, and the Ford Foun- dation, of "abdicating their re- sponsibilities" in allowing an "in- decent 'kill whitey' and anti-Semi- tic performance" at a memorial meeting for slain militant Malcolm! X at a public school in Harlem last Wednesday. The charge was made by David A. Schulte , chairman of the New. York board of the ADL. He re- ferred to a performance at Inter- , mediate School 201 where the City Board of Education is conducting an experiment, with Ford Founda- tion help, in decentralizing public school administration. The ADL official said that "what may be a valuable educational ex- periment" was being subverted by "those with authority giving tacit consent" to anarchy. He declared it was "shocking" that the Superintendent of Schools, with his "previous knowledge of the racist and anti-Semitic fulmina- tions of Leroi Jones, the African- American Teachers Association and Herman B. Ferguson, who is under indictment on a charge of conspiring to murder moderate Negro leaders, permitted use of the school building during school hours for spewing forth such venom." He also denounced an as fi . 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