Leftists, Neo-Fascists Strange Bedfellows THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 20—Friday, July 10, 1970 in French Anti-Israel, Anti-Semitic Drive Human Aspect Factor in Children's Story By EDWIN EYTAN (Copyright 1970, JTA, Inc.) PARIS—The anti-Zionist propa- ganda conducted in French univer- sities by a strange alliance of left- ist elements, neo-Fascist groups and the large body of Arab stu- dents has now started taking a sharp turn toward open and ag- gressive "anti-Semitism." The posters put up by all these groups, which for the first time seem to be united on at least one point, increasingly use anti-Jewish cartoons, open anti-Semitic expres- sions, and a clear-cut appeal to ficiency" and lack of determina- tion. When these Jewish students, grouped within two main bodies, the UEJF (Union of Jewish Stu- dents of France) and FEJ (Fed- eration of Jewish Students), try to reply and explain their and Israel's stand, they are forcibly prevented from doing so. Thus, several hundred leftist students, wearing steel helmets and wield- ing iron bars and bicycle chains, broke up a meeting two weeks ago organized by the Jewish groups at the Censier campus. fundamental anti-Semitic senti- Jewish and Zionist posters are ments to conduct their anti-Zionist regularly torn down and smeared, and those pasting them up assault- campaign. Members of the Union of French Jewish Students report that the large, leftist-oriented UNEF (Na- tional Union of French Students) has started using anti-Semitic argu- ments for its campaigns. Thus, the UNEF now claims I. J. Singer, the brother of Isaac that "Zionists are agents of the Bashevis Singer, like his brother, Rothsehilds and of big business." gained world fame with his popular These arguments are accompa- novels. His "Yoshe Kalb" created nied by cartoons describing the a sensation in 1932, and in 1933 it "war-mongering Zionists" tinder was staged as a play under the typical anti-Semitic tracts, remi- title "The Sinner." His "Brothers niscent of another era. The arguments of the still more Ashkenazi" became equally power- ful even before he had become an leftist bodies, such as pro-Chinese American citizen in 1939. revolutionary student groups, or of Very recently, his "Family Car- the Arab elements, are still more openly and more violently anti- novsky" was reissued and again Semitic. The neo-Fascists, especial- is a popular novel. His death oc- ly the new groups now being re- curred in 1944. organized by the Sidos brothers Now, posthumously, another of are using all the old anti-Semitic I. J. Singer's great works, "Steel and Iron," a novel about Polish arguments, plus the claim that "Zionists and Jews are the agents Jewry during and after World of world Communism and revolu- War I, and the beginnings of tion." Kerensky's rule in Russia, is Most of these groups, and espe- gaining a wide reading public. Issued in a translation from the cially the leftist ones, have openly and officially denied Israel's right Yiddish by the author's son, Jo- to existence, as the UNEF did in seph Singer, this work is an ef- 1968 during its annual congress at fective human document. Strasbourg. Published by Funk and Wag- The most intensive campaign is nails, in a commendable transla- being conducted in the traditional tion, this is a work that indicated strongholds of the left, the univer- the degradations in wartime, the sity campuses of Nanterre and horrors under revolutionary devel- Censier in Paris. Factions on these opments, the struggles for endur- campuses voted in 1968 for resolu- ance, the tragedies of Jewish re- tions expressing their full support fugees. for the "Palestine Arab Liberation The story revolves around a de- movement" and are currently step- , serter, Benjamin Lerner, who ping up their campaigns. escaped from the Russian army in Several students have also re- 1915, who lived the life of horror portedly left Paris to volunteer for among refugees in that era, whose the FPLP (Popular Front for the uprootedness was part of the Liberation of Palestine camps in struggle for survival and of the Jordan. Others are reportedly plan- despair that engulfed so many in ning to join the still more extrem- that war period. The wind-up is ist FPLP general command. the rise of Alexander Kerensky's The Jewish students attending rule, Lerner's assumption of a French universities, many of dominant role among the ruling whom have in the past been ac- soldiers, and the continuing drama- tive in the ranks of the leftist tic factors in a crucial period. I. J. Singer's book, in his son's organizations suddenly find them- selves squeezed between the ag- English translation, merits the gressive propaganda to which same interest at "Yohe Kalb" and they are exposed and their own "Brothers Ashkenazi" and seems sentiments of "intellectual insuf- destined for that best-seller role. I. J. Singer's Steel and Iron Bonds Assist Commercial Crops ed by the leftist factions and the Arab students. One of the Jewish students is quoted in the current issue of the French Jewish monthly L'Arche as saying that "now we are reduced to working in a semi- underground, •posting up our slo- gans at night and nearly always risking a violent encounter." Only a few small Jewish factions, such as the local Beitar group have decided to reply in kind, rendering blow for blow. Their attempts have, however, been disavowed by the overwhelming mass of Jewish stu- dents as well as by most Jewish groups, who "want to show that we are not violent and, contrary to Arab allegations, have no Fascist tendencies." Asking for the official interven- tion of the faculty is impossible, as the universities themselves find it impossible to cope with the re- newed student violence, which last week devastated the Nanterre cam- pus and brought all university stu- dies to a complete standstill. The main stress is now being laid by the local Jewish organiza- tions on trying to group the Jewish students into efficient and vtell- organized bodies and to instruct them in the right arguments to use in their daily "encounters" with hate-blinded groups. Intrigue, Mystery in 'Rhine Replica' an Albrand Novel Adventure, terror, murder, mys- tery—all are combined in a new novel by Martha Albrand in which the current life in Germany is described and the neo-Nazi dan- gers are alluded to. In "Rhine Replica" published by Random House, the author outlines the activities of a news- paperman who undertook a task of uncovering a plot to overturn the administrative powers of the ex- isting government in Bonn. There is not an allusion to possi- ble emergence of neo-Nazism but the mother of a murdered man refers to the war atrocities during which not only Jews but others were victims of the Nazis. There is a love affair inter- woven in this story and the mys- tery of the eventually unraveled murder is accompanied by action that makes this intriguing novel a tensely proferred experience. The reader will have his attention held to the end—proof of the effect- iveness of good writing by Martha Albrand most of whose life was spent in Europe. A voluntary exile from Hitler Germany, her experi- ences stood her in good stead in writing her novels, including "Rhine Replica." In private life she is Mrs. Sydney Lamon. Vandals Who Painted Swastikas Hunted BONN, (JTA)—West Berlin po- lice are hunting for vandals who smeared swastikas on the Jewish community house and the Nazi vic- tims' memorial in Plottzenses. Children's books often contain the imagery, the drawing power that can guide adults towards the literature preferred and the crea- tive writing that inspires. Some such books deal with prob- lems that can be related to the human elements. That's the case with "Alexander and the Wind-Up' Mouse" by Leo Lionni, published by Pantheon Books. Beneath the story about the friendship between a real mouse and a mechanical mouse and underneath the bold colorful col- lage illustrations, there is a very real moral tale about the problems of personal choice and about whether we are to be real or mechanical minds. Alexander's creator, Leo Lionnl, was born in Holland, educated in Italy, and holds a PhD. in econ- omics from the University of Genoa. He came to the United States in 1939, was art director for N. W. Ayer and Son, later went to Fortune Magazine, was also head of the graphic design department of Parsons School and president of the American Institute of Graphic Arts. WHAT'S BUGGING YOU? Call 862-3200 A -0 K PEST CONTROL SERVICE, Inc. Guaranteed Control of Roaches, Mice, Spiders and Clover Mites, Ants. 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