m .

Youth Join in Soviet Jewry Wee

(Continued from Page 1)
Treatment" and "The Communist
Party and Soviet Jewry in the
Early Years." His dissertation on
"The Jewish Sections of the Com-
munist Party and the Moderniza-
tion of Soviet Jewry" is to be pub-
lished by Princeton University
Press next year.
Dr. Gitelman holds many prizes
for scholarship, among them the
Farband Prize in Yiddish Studies,
the Columbia University Presi-
dent's Fellowship and the Horace
Rackham Faculty Fellowship from
the University of Michigan.
At the conference, which will fol-
low a continental breakfast, parti-
cipants will receive kits including
background on the situation in the
Soviet Union and ideas for future
organizational programing. Mor-
ris Lieberman is chairman of the
conference, and Bernard Panush
will chair the workshop session.
Reservations for the conference
will be accepted by the Commu-
nity Council, 962-1880, until Tues-
day.

a

Also during Soviet Jewry Week,
synagogues and other institutions
are being asked to utilize stamps
and posters calling attention to So-
viet Jewry.
On the evening of Oct. 25, at
7, a candlelight march spon-
sored by the Project Outcry youth
organizations, will start from the
Dexter-Davison Market and pro-
ceed down 10 Mile Rd. to Temple
Emanu-El, where a program will
take place.
The marchers — from United
Synagogue Youth, Michigan State
Temple Youth, Michigan Confer-
ence of Synagogue Youth, Et-Gar,
Habonim, Hashomer Hatzair, Hash-
ahar, Bnai Brith Youth Organiza-
tion and others—will carry torches
and protest signs, while chanting
songs of freedom.
The 8:30 program, on the grounds
of Emanu-El, will include mes-
sages by Mayor Joseph Forbes of .
Oak Park, Rabbi Gerald Teller of
Cong. Shaarey Zedek and Jay Mas-
serman, a medical student at the
University of Michigan, whose ex-

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Youth Council sponsored the mobil-
ization.
Three student demonstrators
gained entry to the Soviet Em-
bassy by a ruse and had to be
removed by police after they
began a noisy protest against the
mistreatment of Jews in the So-
viet Union.
The three were identified as a
university coed freshman and two
high school boys from New York
City. Their names were not given.
They were believed to have been
part of the mobilization group.
The demonstration went off
peacefully as the placard-carrying
youngsters chanting "Let my peo-
ple go" paraded a a block away
from the Soviet ambassador's resi-
dence. A city regulation prohibits
demonstrations within 500 feet of
foreign legations.
The three youths removed from
the embassy got in by telling a re-
ceptionist that they wanted infor-
mation on tourism in Russia.
The Jewish Telegraphic Agency
learned that once inside they be-
gan to sing and chant and the
young woman blew a shofar. She
handcuffed herself to a desk and
had to be cut free.
Dr. Isaac Franck, executive vice
president of the Jewish Commu-
nity Council, said the demonstra-
tion was "very successful" and
"very effective." He praised the
discipline of the youngsters. Police
said they created some disturb.
ance but nobody was held.
Two neo-Nazis who appeared on
the scene with signs reading "No
More Jewish Wars" were largely
ignored by the crowd and drifted
away without incident.
Jewish families in the area open-
ed their homes to the demonstra-
tors who attended workshops at
Temple Bnai Israel Monday and
visited the State Department to
hear U. S. Information Agency and
State Department experts on the
Soviet Union and the Mid East.
That day, the American Federa-
tion of State, County and Munici-
pal Employees, AFL-CIO, largest
of the nation's public employe
unions, condemned both "the
refusal of the Soviet Union to per-

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' Black Hundred Terror Recalled in Soviet Song

The slogan of the"Black Hun- Jews stole all last year's wheat
periences on a trip to the Sovie
Union have been described befor e dred" society that fomented po- harvest from the people," he says.
groms some 70 years ago--"I'm Time notes the increase in tradi-
many organizations.
anti-Semitismb, now
Habonim Youth will perform tin , beating the Jews and saving Rus- tional Russian
whipped up by a press carn-
poem "Sabi Yar" set to dance sia"—is back to haunt the Jews being
paign
against
Israel
and by Soviet
and the singing of Russian Jewis l al the Soviet Union.
songs will follow. The entire corn
This time the slogan is being sir- propaganda for the Arab cause.
munity is invited to participate.
culated on tape, according to Time
This Sunday evening, Bnai Bri ti magazine. It is echoed in the last
Girls and AZA Young Men wIT line of a satiric song sung by a
perform Israeli dances at the Tel boy:
12 Mall, by way of illustration tha t
"Should I become a thief, a
such an open demonstration is al
• Selected fine jewelry
or maybe better, an anti-
lowable in the United States, bu t bandit,
and Diamonds
Semite?
... I know for a fact the
repressed in the Soviet Union.
Large Selection of
Oct. 23-24 has been designate
Fine Opal Jewelry
Soviet Jewry Sabbath, and a num
Watch anci,Jewelry Repair
FRANK PAUL
ber of rabbis will use the occasio r
IRV ASHIN
to preach on the subject. Severa
and his ORCHESTRA
organizations have programed th e
LI 7-5068
"Music at its Best
issue of Soviet Jewry for th
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13720 W. 9 Mlle
meetings this month.•
Neer Post Office
The University of Michigan Com
mittee for Soviet Jewry will hofc
a program 8 p.m. Thursday. Start
..•;.-.
ing at Hillel House, the observanc e
-
1 `'
.-
will consist of a socio-drama an d
-•.,-..
a candlelight ceremony and fo il
dancing on the "Diag."
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mit Jewish emigration to the Re-
public of lirael and the simultane-
ous resurgence of official and un-
o f f i c i a l anti-Semitism in the
USSR."
The 500,000-member union urged
the State Department to make ap-
propriate representations to the
Soviet Union with a view toward
permitting Jews in the USSR and
its satellites free emigration to Is-
rael with their families and be-
longings.
The union also urged the AFL-
CIO and the International Confed-
eration of Free Trade Unions "to
continue and intensify their hu-
manitarian efforts within the court
of public oninion and through any
other feasible channels to effect
the free emigration of Jews from
the Soviet Union and satellite coun-
tries to the Republic of Israel."
Herman L. Weisman, president
of the Zionist Organization of
America, called on American
Jews to show their concern for
the plight of Soviet Jews by par-
ticipating in demonstrations in
scores of communities through-
out the nation demanding that
"Soviet Jews be freed from the
yoke of anti-Semitism and that
they be granted the freedom to
stay or emigrate to other lands
of their choice."
Weisman noted that traditionally
on Simhat Torah there is an out-
pouring of Jews in front of syna-
gogues in the Soviet Union to dem-
onstrate their abiding Jewishness
in the face of oppressive anti-
Semitism. "We who are blessed
to live in a democracy must dem-
onstrate our support of their strug-
gle," he said. -
Rabbi Joseph C. Teichman,
chairman of the Soviet Jewry
committee of the Board of Rab-
bis of Greater Philadelphia, said
rabbis throughout the city agreed
to offer a special prayer for So-
viet Jews during Yom Kippur
services last weekend and to
urge their congregants to attend
a rally in Philadelphia on Oct.
17.
This demonstration, marking the
Simhat Torah holiday and a follow-
up of last weekend's Washington
mobilization, will be conducted at
the Memorial to the Six Million
Jewish Martyrs.
Albert D. Chernin, Jewish Com-
munity Relations Council of Great-
er Philadelphia executive director,
said that while visiting Russia last
year during Simhat Torah he was
told by young Jews that they were
aware and encouraged by the soli-
darity celebrations conducted in
the United States. "I know from
first-hand experience," Chernin
said, "that Soviet Jews take heart
from these demonstrations and be-
come more determined to act on
their. own behalf."

I

f

• • •

3,000 Youths Hold Protest Rally
in Washington for Soviet Jews

WASHINGTON (JTA) — More
than 3,000 Jewish youths from
major cities across the country as-
sembled here for a two-day dem-
onstration to protest Soviet sup-
pression of Jewish rights.
The youths, from some 30 com-
munities, including Detroit, began
arriving early in the day and by
mid-afternoon assembled at Farra-
gut Square in the heart of the city
midway between the Soviet Em-
bassy and the White House.
Many of the young men wore
yarmulkas and the girls wore pins
bearing such inscriptions as "Free
Soviet Jews"; "Soviet Jewry Will
Be Redeemed"; and "Israel Will
Live."
The North American Jewish

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

October 11I, 1970

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