'De-Judification Latest Addition to Polish Govt. Policy (Continued from Page 1) victims on behalf of the United States government, joining 30 groups and individuals in placing wreaths at the memorial. The anti-Jewish campaign in Poland appears to be reaching the level of a state policy which has brought suicides and a general purge, Flora Lewis, Newsday cor- respondent in Paris reported from sources she described as trust- worthy "beyond any question." Asserting that developments have gone far beyond what has been reported in the Western press, she wrote also that the new policy, rivaling communism as the ap- proved ideology, included use of a new term, "de-judification" and included rehabilitation of at least some elements of pre-war Polish fascism. She also reported she had been informed that one party of- ficial had been expelled for "press- ing too hard"—he had urged at a party meeting that the remaining Jews in Poland be herded into ghettoes. Another party member was expelled for quite another rea- son, Miss Lewis reported. She had said that it shamed her, as a Pole, to hear another party member remark that it was too bad Hitler had failed to gas all the Jews. In the latest report from War- saw to the New York Times by Jonathan Randal, the following de- tails are given regarding the con- tinuing anti-Semitic practices of Polish Communist officials: "In a continuation of the party purges, three more Poles were dismissed from the United Workers (Communist) p a r t y in Lodz, a textile city, and a woman director was dismissed at a sugar refinery at Plock, 60 miles north- west of Warsaw. "More than 70 Poles, many of them Jews, have been dismissed from the party or their jobs since the beginning of t h e purge of Zionists, revisionists and Stalinists, who have been held responsible for having instigated the student I unrest. "Informed sources s aid_ that many hundreds of other Poles had been purged without any public mention of it. "A rare example of resistance by a Polish Jew to the party line was disclosed in Sunday's issue of Glos Olsztynski, a newspaper pub- lished in Olsztyn, in the northeast. "Expulsion from the party was recommended in the case of Perla Goldys, who was criticized for having denied the necessity for comrades of Jewish extraction to make clear declarations regard- ing their position toward the Is- raeli aggression a g a ins t Arab countries and the Zionist campaign against Poland. "Although Jewish institutions such as the Yiddish theater and the Cultural Association have been asked to condemn publicly what was termed the Zionist-led slander campaign against Poland, the case of Perla Goldys indicated that in- dividual Jewish party members were now also being pressed to do the same thing." An appeal to "the conscience of the world" not "to be apa- thetic to the conditions of Jews in Poland and the Soviet Union" was voiced in New York by Benjamin A. Gebiner, national executive secretary of the Work- men's Circle, the world's largest Jewish fraternal order. Gebiner spoke at a mass rally marking the 25th anniversary of the War- saw Ghetto uprising sponsored by the Workmen's Circle, the Jewish Labor Committee and various labor unions. He de- nounced the reported impending visit to the U.S. of a Jewish "re- ligious delegation" from the So- viet Union. He said the group is coming to this country "to mouth propaganda that anti-Semitism does not exist" in Russia. The Polish Communist regime was accused in New York by a former Polish diplomat of "malign- ant fulminations against modern- day Jews" and with "a manipula- tion of history which would trans- form the victims of persecution into criminals or cowards arraigned in identify—as seeking "to use our a kangaroo court." The charge correct political ideological fight was made in an address to the against Zionism for various aims Association of Polish - American contrary to the position of the Journalists by Dr. Joseph L. Lich- party." His speech w a s con- ten, who left his post in the Polish sidered a counter-offensive by Embassy in Washington when the Gomulka who has been facing Communists took control in his the gravest challenge to h i s native Poland and who is now power since he became Poland's director of intercultural affairs for key leader in 1956. Kepa said t h e Anti-Defamation League of "we must undertake a sharp Bnai Brith. f i g h t against downright filthy defaming- of people." New Angles in Polish Crisis Kepa's warning was ignored by Seen by Gomulka Aide Rusinek, who also charged that LONDON (JTA)—A new internal "rich Jews in the United States Communist party struggle in Po- and England cared more for their land, pivoting on the month-long millions deposited in banks than campaign to link student unrest about the fate of Jews burned in to an alleged Zionist plot against the crematoria of Auschwitz." He Poland, developed this week. A asserted that "there is no country party official close to party leader in Europe that displayed so much Wladyslaw Gomulka charged in a heroism in saving Jews as did the speech that the anti-Zionist cam- Polish nation and there is no coun- paign had descended to the level try that had so many victims of "downright filthy defaming of for helping the Jews." people." More than a dozen Polish or- That admission was made by ganizations and a visiting dele- Josef Kepa, the Warsaw city secre- gation of Argentine Jews placed tary, who stressed that Gomulka wreaths on a granite monument on had indirectly criticized the cam- the site of the ghetto razed by paign and declared last month that occupying Germans. Zionism was not a threat to Po- The newspaper Kurier Polski at- land's Communist s y s t e m. Go- tacked the Jewish State Theater mulka's injunction for moderation for not denouncing the "world- was ignored in the internal power wide Zionist campaign slandering" battle and, if anything, the cam- Poland. The attack followed an paign rose in intensity. Kepa's speech was reported by the Polish earlier pr es s campaign which News Agency a day after it was forced the Jewish Cultural and Political Association to take an made, and a day later Kamimierz anti-Zionist stand. The attack on Rusinek, secretary general of the the Yiddish theater took place Polish Veterans Organization, com- against a background of continu- pared Israel's "Zionist aggression" against the Arabs with the Nazi slaughter of European Jews. Rusi- nek made the charge at a cere- mony organized by the veterans SILVER group to honor the month-long CERTIFICATES ghetto uprising in 1943. Kepa denounced "the political adversary"—whom he did not ing purges of officials suspected Mieczyslas Moczar, believed to of being "Zionists, revisionists and be the major force behind the Stalinists" h e 1 d responsible for anti - Semitic campaign. Nearly nearly a month of student demon- 60 Jews have been purged in strations. the campaign. A Lublin newspaper reported Jewish organizations in t h e that five Jews had b e e n ex- United S t a t e s, particularly the pelled from the local branch of American Jewish Committee, the veterans organization which came under attack in the state- is headed by Interior Minister (Continued on Page 11) 10 Friday, April 26, 1968 YACHT, BOAT & SAILBOAT INSURANCE Consult our Expanded Marine Department for Legal Liability & Hull Protection HERBERT W. KAUFMAN & CO. Rossen & Kaufman Agency Commercial-Personal — Life & Health Insurance Protection KE 8-5200 19036 W. McNichols Road, Detroit, Mich. 48219 In Celebration OF "ISRAEL INDEPENDENCE DAY" THE DETROITJEWISH COMMUNITY Is Cordially Invited to Attend A FESTIVAL OF JEWISH MUSIC THURSDAY, MAY 2, 1968 8:00 P.M. Cantor David Kusevitsky • • • • • < C. WANTED 547-4750 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS — Shirley Benyas Cantor Nicholas Fenakel Cantor David Kusevitsky—world famous tenor Shirley Benyas—soprano Cantor. 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