O IN ■04 impoil., . ∎ 0 1 ••.04MENHIIM 0 0•11,M11.41011•0 4•NHIOIN10411 ■ 04/ ■ 41, 0•04341 B oris Smolar's Boris 'Bet You. . and Me' ( Copyright 1968, JTA Inc.) GENEVA REFLECTIONS: High and dignified flutters the flag of the United Nations, over the old building of the League of Nations here which serves now as the UN European headquarters. The solid building reminds one of the days when Dr. Chaim Weizmann and other top Zionist leaders appeared before the Mandates Commission of the League of Nations, pleading for the establishment of a Jewish National Home in Palestine. It also recalls the times when world Jewish leaders appeared there in defense of Jewish minority rights in Poland, Romania, Hungary and other countries where anti-Semitism was rife. The issue of establishing a Jewish National Home in. Palestine no longer exists. The dream has been fulfilled by the establishment of the State of Israel. However, the issues concerning the existence of anti- Semitism in certain East European countries are still alive today. Poland is the best example. Attention of diplomats in Geneva is now strongly centered on the anti-Semitic policy of the Polish government. Western diplomats often go from Geneva to Warsaw and return with shocking reports on the mistreatment of Jews. The information one gets in Geneva presents a far more morbid picture of events in Poland than one obtains from read- ing press reports in the United States. There are only about 20,000 Jews left in Poland—more than 60 per cent of them over the age of 55—and almost all of them are deeply affected by the brutal anti-Jewish policy now being pursued by the Polish authorities. No element in this small and helpless community is spared. Aged or children, artisans or employees, intellectuals or ordin- ary workers—all are victims of the vicious government campaign to keep the Jews_in a constant state of fear. • Diplomats of neutral countries who visit Poland tell stories of con- tinuing mass arrests of Jews throughout the country. Jewish suicides? Yes, they report that there have been such. They tell stories of des- perate Jewish parents whose children are now under arrest by the hundreds. They bring reports that Jewish camps for 3,000 youngsters, which have been in existence ever since the liberation of Poland from the Nazis, are not being reopened this summer. They estimate that 5,000 Jewish invalids, aged and sick, who for years had been receiving regular monthly relief from the Joint Distribution Committee, are now left helpless to fend for themselves. The Polish government ordered the JDC to liquidate its relief activities in Poland. They recite a long list of other facts, showing that the Polish authorities fnd it no longer neces- sary to even camouflage their anti-Jewish acts as a campaign against Zionists. POLISH "PROMISES": What about the promise made by the Polish government to issue exit visas to Jews wishing to emigrate from the country? The promise still stands but everything is being done to make its implementation difficult, if not impossible, according to foreign diplomats in Geneva who looked into the situation. The Polish authorities impose heavy fees for exit visas which the average Jewish family in the country cannot afford. They are also inventing other difficulties. One of the restrictions now faced by Jews who wish to leave Poland is that they must repay to the government all the past costs of the study of their children in state schools, which is a fantastic sum to pay. Another 'innovation' is a provision that Jews applying to leave Poland must repair their dwellings before they emigrate, or deposit money for such repairs. A third prohibits them from selling books and musical records prior to their departure. Polish officials visit Jewish homes to compile lists of books and records there to make their sale impossible. - More and more restrictions against potential Jewish emigrants are born every day. All have the same aim — to bring the Jews wishing to leave Poland to destitution. Jewish applicants for emigration visas are declared stateless and unprotected from the very moment they submit their applications. Despite these barriers, several thousand Jews are reported to have registered at the Dutch consulate in Warsaw for visas to Israel, which the consulate is issuing on behalf of the State of Israel. Holland has been representing the interests of Israel since Poland broke diplomatic rela- tions with Israel last year. Jews are also going to the American consul- ate in Warsaw for visas to the U.S. and find much sympathy there. It is only after the Jews secure visas to Israel or to any other country that the Polish authorities are wining to consider their applications to leave the country. And so far, they have been in no great hurry to act. Jordan, Israel Charge Violations UNITED NATIONS (JTA) — Israel and Jordan exchanged alle- gations of cease-fire violations. Israel's charges were contained in a letter to Ambassador Arthur Goldberg, this month's Security Council president. The Jordanian accusations appeared in a letter sent June 21 to Secretary General U Thant. The letter sent by Israeli Am- bassador Yosef Tekoah said that between May 26 and June 23 there have been 68 Jordanian cease-fire violations of which 49 have been attacks from military positions em- ploying artillery, mortars, bazooka and machine guns. He said there had been 11 mining raids and eight attacks by armed com- mandos who entered Israel. Tekoah said three civilians and one soldier were killed and 15 civilians and 22 soldiers wounded in the period cited. "The casualties would have been much higher if not for the shelter used in Israeli border villages that are the primary targets of Jor- danian attacks," he said, charging that "in these attacks heavy mor- tars are employed frequently by El Fatha units receiving aid from Jordan." He said, "the continua- tion of such acts of aggression would aggravate the situation" and that Israeli forces are under strict instruction to open fire only in self defense when protecting citizens and military forces from armed attack." Jordan's ambassador Muham- mad H. El-Farra said in his mes- sage that Israeli forces had en- gaged in a concerted wide range of attacks on the Jordan river east bank during April, May and the first week in June. He alleged that the attacks are aimed mainly at Jordanian farmers and civilians living and working in the Jordan Valley, and said that Israeli troops attempted to cross the river sev- eral times, succeeding in planting mines in fields and roads, causing death and injury to civilians. 8—Friday, June 28, 1968 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Egyptian Commander Blamed for False Claim of U. S. Role in Six-Day War LONDON (JTA) — The editor of the semi-official Cairo news- paper, Al Ahram, has blamed the former commanders of Egypt's Air Force for making a claim "without evidence" that the United States Air Force had helped Is- rael during last June's Six-Day War. According to a London Times dispatch from Cairo, Mo- hammed Heykal charged, in his weekly article, that the claim was made by the Air Force command- ers in order to cover up their own miscalculations and mistal=es. He said they had estimated Egyptian air superiority over Israel at three-to-one while in reality the exact opposite was the case. (The charge that American and British aircraft, operating from carriers in the eastern Mediter- ranean, had aided Israel was broadcast by President Nasser of Egypt to account for the shatter- ing defeat suffered by Egypt's armed forces in the Sinai. The charge, which was never fully re- tracted by Nasser, preceded his severance of diplomatic relations with the United States and Britain. Relations have since been restored with Britain but not with the U.S.) According to the Times dispatch, Heykal also accused the former commanders of Egypt's ground forces of ordering a premature withdrawal from the Sinai in the face of advancing Israeli forces last June. He said that Egyptian losses during the first three days of war were no more than 250 killed and that all the remaining losses were suffered after the withdrawal order "in that horrify- ing nightmare atmosphere." Hey- kal maintained that while an Egyptian withdrawal had been necessary in 1956 (during Israel's Sinai campaign) "it was the last strategy called for in 1967." -41011■-■110b---41111--41111110 "--400"--411 10--1 ■ 14500 W. 7 MILE AT LODGE X-WAY "----01 "GEE ! WHAT WILL I READ AT CAMP?" Bring the Children to Book-O-Rama FREE PENCILS 13645 W. NINE MILE OWED BROADS • .DETROIT, U S. A • 42 PROOF 1■--- 398-4164 Oak Park Open Sunday 10:30 a.m. - 8:00 p.m. Mon. thru Sat., 9:30 a.m. - 9:00 p.m. Save a cool 25% with electric central air conditioning. If you're like most people, you'd like to have central air conditioning but you think it costs too much. Right? Wrong. Not if you get electric central air conditioning. It costs a cool 25% less than gas. And that's only a beginning. 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