520,000 Pounds of Passover Goods Sent by JDC to Eight Countries Victim's Kin, Urging Action Hangings, Notes 'Trial' Took Just Five Minutes An emotional plea by the brother of an Iraqi hanging victim — de- livered at a memorial and protest meeting in New York recently—is being circulated among the mem- ber organizations of the Detroit Jewish Community Council, along with a letter urging unceasing ef- forts to win the freedom of remain- ing Iraqi Jews. The address, relating the bestial treatment and medieval trial of nine Jews accused of espionage for Israel, was delivered by Reubin Horesh, brother of victim Charles Horesh. Copies of the speech have been distributed nationwide by the National Community Relations Ad- visory Council. Locally, Council - affiliated or- ganizations are being urged to pro- test the continued hangings in Iraq and to press for an exodus of the remaining Jews in Arab lands. • • • -'0-60 Jews in Iraqi Jails; Reign of Terror in Syria LONDON (JTA)—Fifty or sixty Jews arrested in Iraq at the time of the Six-Day War are still held in prison and other Jews are sub- jected to a variety of restrictions and are not permitted to leave the country, the Sunday Times re- ported. According to the paper, Jews possessing passports were forced td turn them over to police. Jewish businessmen were required to sur- render stocks, and to receive a monthly allowance of $264. Accord- ing to the Times, 11 Jews have had telephones disconnected. Political sources said that re- ports have reached Jerusalem that 11 Jews scheduled to have been in- cluded in the latest Iraqi spy trials were spared apparently as a result of worldwide protests against the hanging of nine Iraqi Jews on Jan. 27. Seven Iraqis were executed last week on charges of spying for Israel, none of them Jews. Reports in Israel of a reign of terror over Syria's remaining 4,000 Jews were attributed Sunday to a Greek tourist who visited Syria re- cently. According to the tourist, Syrian authbrities_ appointed spe- cial controllers over the Jewish communities, each responsible for several families, following the Six- Day War. Officially they were supposed to safeguard the Jews but they have become the "chief oppres- sors," the tourist said. Jews must stay near their homes and head- counts are regularly taken, he said. Organizations were asked to write President Nixon and UN Secretary- General U Thant, asking that they use every pressure to bear on the Iraqi authorities to stop the hang- ings. "The tragedy of the thing," said Horesh in his address, "is that my brother Charles Horesh considered himself to be an Iraqi first and a Jew second. He always liked his country. He was a family man allotting all his time to his family and work. Never at any time in his life did he have anything to do with poli- tics in any way, same as with the other victims of last Mon- day. He always trusted his Arab friends and for that he paid with his life." Describing the anti-Jewish legis- lation in Iraq and his own escape from the country, Reubin Horesh said that "Zilkha, the man sup- posed to be the head of the so- called plot, who was 'waging germ warfare in Basra, who was dyna- . miting bridges, who was planning the overthrow of the government in Baghdad, and who was appoint- ing a new regime in Baghdad in order to make peace with Israel,' this Zilkha is an illiterate man. who cannot read or write, nor can he drive a car. This is the Zilkha who is supposed to wage germ warfare in Basra, by himself, with- out laboratories and without help." Horesh related what occurred at the trial of his brother, as report- ed in the London Times: "Charles' trial took just five minutes, of which the prosecutor took four minutes. The case against Charles was that he had been in communication with a Pakistani in Basra, that he had received a letter from this fellow for which he gave the messenger Stg. 200. Charles' reply to this was that he had not known or had any deal- ings whatsoever witVjae) man, had never seen the me senger or re- ceived a letter or given anyone Stg. 200. Charles was then told that he had a brother in Israel; to which he replied he had no brother there—he had one in America, but had never corresponded with him. The judge then ordered him to leave the court." Horesh said his brother left a pregnant widow, 2-year-old son and 78-year-old mother. If they are not allowed to leave Iraq, said Horesh, "I appeal to the Baath of Iraq to kill my mother as a mercy killing . . . What she must have seen . . . is more than enough." He said the re- Thousands Petition for Exodus of Jews Preparing petitions to be sent to the United Nations, calling for immediate action to ensure a safe exit for all Jews who remain in Arab countries, are /from left) Mrs. Samuel Linden, vice president of the Jewish Community Council; Gary Alter, director of the Bnai Brith Metropolitan Detroit Council; and Isadore Shrodeck, chairman of the Zionist Council of Detroit. The petition drive was initiated at the protest-memorial meeting Feb. 2 at the Jewish Center, following the public executions in Iraq. More than 14,000 signatures were col- lected. What effect such protests have had—particularly in the area of U.S. foreign policy—will be discussed by I. L. Kenen at the Jewish Community Council Delegate Assembly 8:30 p.m. March 12 at the Jewish Center. , _____ • • ■ •: 11 • • • • • ! 45` . V, -IP maining 3,000 Jews "are doomed to be slaughtered." Detroit's Council has sent 14,000 names on protest petitions to the United Nations since the Iraqi hangings were first announced. Local ad hoc group, the Com- mittee for Humanity in Iraq, also sent out a protest letter this week, denouncing the newest hangings of seven Iraqi citizens, and urging un- ceasing efforts to call a stop to the barbarities. The Joint Distribution Commit- tee has shipped close to 520,000 pounds of matzo and other Pass- over supplies, almost all of it to Europe, for distribution to Jewish communities before the holidays, it was announced by Sa-muel L. Haber, JDC executive vice-chair- man. The first Passover seder will take place this year on Wednesday evening, April 2. Funds for Pass- over relief and other JDC health and welfare programs are pro- vided mainly by the campaigns of Jewish Organizations Denounce Murders of Moslem Iraqis NEW YORK—The Conference of Presidents of Major American Jew- ish Organizations organized dem- onstrations and special prayer services for the 14 Iraqi Jews, Moslems and Christians, hanged Jan. 27 for allegedly spying for Israel. The events Wednesday marked the end of the traditional 30-day mourning period. Demonstrations were held in front of the Iraqi, Syrian and Egyptian missions to the United Nations. Arthur J. Gold- berg, president of the American Jewish Committee, called the ex- ecution of three Iraqi soldiers by firing squad and four civilians by hanging "an act contrary to all civilized behavior and a direct vio- lation of human rights." Dr. William A. Wexler, presi- dent of Bnai Brith, said the "con- tinued barbarity" of the Iraqi government "emphasizes the sorry state of political freedom and hu- man rights" in that country and "also points up that there is no future for the defenseless remnant of a Jewish community trapped there." Rabbi Arthur J. Lelyveld, Am- erican Jewish Congress president, declared, "It does not lessen our outrage at these brutalities that no Jews were included among the latest victims. Whether the vic- tims are Jews, Moslems or Chris- tians, our concern is with the ab- sence of even minimal justice in the secret military trials that con- demned them and the degenerate manner in which their bodies were shown to the public." Baghdad radio, which an- nounced the executions and re- ported that the bodies were dis- played in the capital's Liberation Square, said that nine defend- ants had been condemned for espionage on Feb. 11 by a three- man military tribunal. The death sentence of one was commuted to life imprisonment because he cooperated with author- ities and the other was reported to be at large, the radio said. Last Jan. 27, 14 Iraqis—nine of them Jews—were hanged in Baghdad and Basra on the same charges, and their bodies were publicly displayed. Meanwhile, in Jerusalem, a foreign ministry official said that five Jews have died in Iraqi jails recently. But Shlomo Hillel, assist- ant director general of the ministry, did not specify the cause of death. Hillel spoke at a press conference called to introduce the English edition of a book that describes the treatment of Israeli prisoners in Syrian jails prior to the Six-Day War. Authoritative sources in Canada denied a report published Monday that the Canadian government has decided to accept Iraqi Jews if they are permitted by the Baghdad gov- ernment to emigrate. The original report had said that admission of a "generous" number would depend on clearance of exit visas by Iraq. The sources said that the govern- ment has the issue under consider- ation but that no decision has been made. It was reported that officials were "favorably inclined" to ac- cept Iraqi Jewish refugees. In Hartford, Conn., a resolu- tion expressing "vital concern" Over the public hangings in Iraq was unanimously adopted by the Connecticut House of Represent- atives and forwarded to the United Nations and to President Nixon. The resolution was offered by Rep. Morris N. Cohen of Bloom- field, Conn. Dr. Cohen contrasted the secret trials and mass execu- tions in Iraq with the open trial now under way in Los Angeles of Sirhan B. Sirhan, the young Jor- danian immigrant accused of as- sassinating Sen. Robert F. Kenne- dy. Meanwhile, the independent trade union movement in Argentina has denounced the hangings in Iraq a statement issued Tuesday. The group declared that world opinion regarded the executions as "brutal reprisals" carried out against Iraqi Jews merely because they were Jews. the United Jewish Appeal. As in the last two years the largest amount, 386,000 pounds, will go to Romania, Haber said. This includes 326,000 pounds of matzot, 59,600 pounds of matzo) meal, and 440 pounds of shmura matzo. JDC has also provided funds for a shipment of Passover wine to Romania. With the exception of the ship- ment to Romania and 12,000 pounds of matzot which went, to Melilla in Spanish Morocco, the Passover supplies have been ship- ped to seven Jewish communities in Western Europe — Belgium, France, Greece, Italy, Portugal, Spain and Yugoslavia. In addition, Haber said, special grants will be issued to needy Jews in Morocco, Tunisia and Iran to enable them to purchase locally produced Passover supplies. Because of technical difficulties in Tunisia, Haber said, it may become necessary to purchase so me 85,000 pounds of matzot abroad for distribution there. Israel Helps Malta JERUSALEM — Three thousand saplings of pine, cypress and aca- cia were recently air freighted from Israel to Malta by the Jew- ish National Fund, in the frame- work of technical aid extended to afforestation projects in Mediter- ranean countries. Some 50,000 sap. lings will have been sent by the end of the present season. In contrast with the opinion of British and Italian foresters, who regarded afforestation in Malta un- feasible, Israel's foresters found certain areas suitable for planting. The saplings are succeeding. It is well for the heart to be naive and for the mind not to be. —Anatole France. 14—Friday, February 28, 1969 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS • Our car tour now comes with a very old new country. Israel.$535. 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