U.S. Rejects-Soviets Retaliation Threats (Continued from Page 1) emphasized that the majority of U. S. citizens "reject the actions of small extremist groups" and said the government was working in cooperation with local police to prevent them. He noted the arrests of 15 persons in New York City in connection with the violent demonstrations near the Soviet UN Mission. He stressed, however, that the majority of demonstrations were peaceful and that the U. S. was in no way opposed to peace- ful demonstrations. McCloskey disclosed that two U. S. Embassy officials In Mos- cow received anonymous threat- ening telephone calls in recent weeks. He said it was not dear whether the threats were against the individuals or against the embassy but the phone calls could not have been made with- out the knowledge of Soviet au- thorities because the embassy numbers are unlisted. He Said the U. S. expects Soviet authori- ties to "take appropriate action to protect U. S. persons and lo- stitutions in the Soviet Union." During a question period, Mc- Closkey said the groups involved in violent actions against Soviet premises ranged in numbers from about a dozen to no more than 100. In reply to questions, he said that members of the militant Jewish Defense League were involved in the violent demonstrations but couldn't say whether any JDL members were among those ar- rested. The JDL's chairman, Rabbi Meir Kahane, implied a physical threat when he declared at an anti- Soviet rally in New York last week, "Two Russians for every Jew." Kahane's group and its actions have been denounced by most major Jewish organizations. The Council of Orthodox Rabbis of Detroit has called it• a mass prayer meeting on F.' behalf of Soviet Jewry sae P.m. Sunday at Cong. Mogen E Abraham (Yeshivath Beth di Yehudah). The meeting has been • planned in conjunction with • Agudath Israel, Akiva He- brew Day School, Beth Yehudah Schools, Metropoli- iii tan Council of Young Israel • ::: and Mizrachl-Hapoel Hamiz- rachl Organisation. * Jewish spokesmen Tuesday ex- pressed surprise over the Soviet note. Rabbi Gilbert Klaperman, chairman of the New York Con- ference on Soviet Jewry, told the Jewish Telegraphic Agency that "There has been no threat against Russians in the U. S. and to say that there will be threats against Americans in Russia is completely unrelated to the facts." He claimed that there was no re- lationship between the Zionist movement and demonstrations against the Leningrad trial which was "a reaction by humane and compassionate people throughout the world against Russian repres- sion." 'Rabbi Arthur Schneier of the Park East Synagogue in New York, who is president of the Ap- peal for Conscience Foundation, told the JTA that the Soviet note "must be construed as a deliberate attempt to reduce the influx of Americans" who have been visit- ing the Soviet Union in rising numbers in the last few years, "among them many Jews." Amer- ican residents in Moscow are esti- mated at several hundred business- men, studenti and cultural ex- change personnel, in addition to the U. S. diplomatic mission. Glen Richter, a spokesman for the. Student Struggle for Soviet Jewry,. told the JTA Tuesday that in his tie* Moscow's note was "a typical Soviet overreaction, using threats instead of dealing with the problem." He claimed it was evi- IS — Friday, Jemmy $, 1971 deuce of "Soviet sensitivity to protest on Soviet Jewry." The Soviet UN mission head- quarters in New York and the official Soviet diplomatic residence at Glen Cove, L. I., have peen the scene of mass demonstrations and picketing by Jewish groups out- raged by the Leningrad trial and sentences. Defendants in the second Len- ingrad trial, which was post- poned from its scheduled Wednesday opening, apparently • had "confessions" wrested from them while in jail, according to reliable sources which stated that the alleged confessions will be presented in court along with other evidence consisting of He- brew books and letters from Is- rael confiscated when their homes were raided and searched by the Soviet secret police. According to the same sources, Wolf Zalmanson, a 31-year-old Jew- ish engineer who had been work- ing on military installations in Riga, will go on trial before a military court martial. Zalmanson was part of the original group ar- rested at Leningrad's Smolny Air- port last June 15 in an alleged plot to hijack a Soviet airliner but was separated from the rest of the de- fendants because of his military status. Among the Jews sentenced in Leningrad were his brother, Isak, 26, who received an eight- year term, and his sister. Silva Zalmanson Kuznetsov, who was sentenced to 10 year's imprison- ment. His brother-in-law, Edvard Kuznetsov, was one of the two defendants sentenced to death by the Leningrad court, a sentence later commuted to 15 years' hard labor. The sources also informed the JTA that the two other Jews have been sentenced and imprisoned in Russia in recent weeks. Maj. Grischa Feighi, a World War II hero, was committed to a mental institution after he re- turned his medals, in protest against Soviet anti-Jewish poll- des. They also reported that Boris Borisov, who had been seeking an exit visa to go to Israel, was sentenced to a three- year jail term on charges of "hooliganism" in Leningrad on Dec. 24. There was no direct con- nection between Borisov's trial and that of the 11 charged in the aerial hijack plot. Western sources learned Tues- day that the trial of nine Russian Jews scheduled to start in Len- ingrad Wednesday was postponed. No reason was given for the postponement and no new trial date was set. The nine have been accused of spreading Zionist propaganda and of failing to inform Soviet authorities of the alleged aerial hijack plot. The "bureaucratic boondogling of Soviet officialdom" has caused Rep. Bertram L. Podell, New York Democrat, to postpone plans to lead a 20-congressman "freedom flight" to Moscow to protest the Leningrad sentences. Podell is urging the parliaments of other nations to "follow the laudatory lead of the House and Senate and to adopt similar resolutions con- demning the treatment of Jews in the Soviet Union." Podell had plan- ned to take his plea directly to Premier Alexei N. Kosygin, but "the Soviet Embassy refused to speed up its snail-like application process." (In New York, motion picture producer-director Otto Preminger said be had written on behalf of the city's theatrical unions to their Muscovite counterparts to protest the sentences and the general situa- ion of Soviet Jewry,) The more than 400 Jewish leaders from GS American com- munities who met In Washington, Dee. 30 on behalf of the Lenin- grad prisoners petitioned the Kremlin to "right the wrong emnalUed against the Leningrad defendants before the guns of THE DETROIT JEWISH HEWS the flirng squad commit mur- der." The appeal declared that the "barbaric sentences"--two Jews condemned to death and nine other prisoners given prison terms for "banditry and treason" —were levied "for crimes that were never committed." That, the leaders asserted, was "a travesty of justice." Dr. William A. Wexler, president of Bnai Brith and chairman of the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations, contended that the Soviet "arro- gance" and "brutality" had "over- night put the plight of Soviet Jewry squarely before the moral conscience of the entire world"— a feat that Soviet Jewry itself, he said, had been unable to achieve over many years. Rabbi Herschel Schacter, chair- man of the American Jewish Con- ference on Soviet Jewry, said the "courageous voice of Soviet Jewry" would never be stilled despite "cruel anti-Semitism." Arthur J. Goldberg, the former ambassador and Supreme Court justice, asked: "What kind of jus- tice makes a man a prisoner in the land of his birth?"—especially for religious reasons. Such "jus- tice" he said, was uncivilized. George Meanv, chairman of the AFL-CIO, called on European free- trade centers to protest the Lenin- grad sentences. Dr. Hans J. Morgenthau, the poli- tical scientist, said the Leningrad trial was a "replica" of the "Jew- ish doctors' plot" against Stalin, in that it sought to "stifle expres- sions of Jewish consciousness in the Soviet Union." Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey, for- mer vice president, cabled Soviet Premier Alexsei N. Kosygin to pro- test the "terrible verdicts," to "earnestly request your immediate personal intervention to prevent a cruel miscarriage of justice" and to "review the entire problem of Soviet Jewry." Lawrence Cardinal Sheehan of Baltimore issued a statement con- demning the "harsh and inhuman handling of these unfortunate vic- tims of Soviet intimidation." Three spokesmen who were selected by the conference to present the Jewish protests and to ask for U. S. action in de- fense of Russian Jewry — Dr. Wexler, Rabbi Schachter and Max M. Fisher of Detroit, pres- ident of the Council of Jewish Federations—met first with Sec- retary of State Rogers and then for 40 minutes with President Nixon. The President conceded that peo- ple have a right to leave their na- tive countries for other lands of their choice in their selection of homelands. With the theme "Freedom Now for All Jews" reverberating Sun- day through Roosevelt Field in Garden City, N.Y., and facing a 20-foot float on which 11 young men dressed in black and white prison garb depicted the convicted Leningrad 11, more than 6,000 Jews and Christians participated in a mass interfaith protest rally against the Leningrad trial and the scheduled new trials. Following speeches and prayers, the throng reassembled into a 2,000- vehicle motorcade which proceeded on a 10-mile drive to the Glen Cove estate used by the Soviet mis- sion to the United Nations. Nassau County police officers, accompany- ing the motorcade, said it was the largest and longest in Long Island history. At the same time, the Rockland County Committee for Soviet Jewry sponsored a 250-car motorcade from Spring Valley, N.Y., to New York City past the Soviet Mission to the UN and from there to the Isaiah Wall opposite the UN where a 45-minute rally was held. Seven thousand Jews from Mon- treal, Toronto and Ottawa demon- strated on Parliament Field and before the Soviet Embassy protest- ing the sentences given the "Len- ingrad defendants and the dis- crimination of the Soviet regime against that country's 3,500,000. Jews." Hausner: Nazis Could Learn from Soviet Anti-Semitic Propaganda LONDON (JTA)—Gideon Haus- ner, the Israeli attorney who pros- ecuted Adolf Eichmann, said here that "even the Nazis could learn a thing or two from Soviet propa- gandists" when it comes to anti- Semitian. Hausner spoke at an emergency meeting on Soviet Jew- ry called by the Board of Deputies of British Jews. It was attended by representatives of other Anglo- Jewish organizations and by Israeli Ambassador Michael Ca may. Hausner, a member of the Knesset, said that an article in last Thursday's Izvestia, the Soviet gov- ernment newspaper, was "full of hatred for Jews and proclaimed a confrontation between the Soviet Union and world Jewry." He pre- dicted that eventually the Soviets will back down on this as they have on other issues, but mean- while, he added, Jews have "no doubt what we are facing." Lord Shinwell, who addressed the meeting, said "We are witness- ing now in Russia a resurrection of anti-Semitism and we must fight it by every means in our power." Joseph Yankelevitch, a Russian Jew who went to Israel 18 months ago after spending 10 years in a Siberian labor camp, told the meeting: "I am here to bear wit- ness that Stalin's death changed nothing." • 70-Year-Old Doctor Implores Soviet to Permit Family to Join Her in Israel NEW YORK (JTA)—The Amer- ican Jewish Committee made pub- lic a plea by a 70-year-old woman pediatrician who lives on a kibutz in Israel, in which she asks Soviet authorities for the 28th time to allow her sick daughter, the lat- ter's ill husband and their two children to leave Russia and to join her in Israel. Philip E. Hoff- man, president of the AJCommit- tee, pointed out that the denial of permission for this family to be reunited was in direct contradic- tion of the pledge of Soviet Pre- mier Alexei Kosygin, who in De- cember 1966, in Paris, asserted that "with respect to reunions of families, if some families want to meet, or if they want to leave the Soviet Union, then the road is open and no problems exist in this re- spect." The pediatrician, Dr. Fruma Gurwich, who survived the Nazi occupation of Kaunas, Lithuania, and who now lives In Kibutz Loha- mei Hagetaot ("Fighters of the Ghettos"), said that her daughter and her family-had been refused permission for the last four years by Soviet authorities to leave Kau- nas, where they live, for Israel. Dr. Gurwich, in her public appeal, pointed out that both her daughter, Etta Levitan, 38, and her son-in- law, Imanuil Levitan, 42, are ill. In an emergency call issued to the more than 400 Hebrew day schools in North America, Rabbi Jacob Ruderman, chairman, rab- binical administrative board of Torah Umesorah, the National So- ciety for Hebrew Day Schools, urged all schools to take the initia- tive in sponsoring special prayer convocations on behalf of Russian Jewry, Sunday. Rabbi Meir Kahane again was arrested 'in New York when he led Jewish Defense League dem- onstrators in front of the Aero- flot-Internist official Soviet tour- ist office and demanded the right to buy two plane tickets to bring the two Jews who were sent- enced to death to this country. At the offices of the New York Board of Rabbis, whose doors were securely locked, Rabbi Kahane told newsmen that "We want the rabbis who marched in Selma to march now for the Soviet Jews. Rabbis got arrested for the blacks — let them get arrested for their bro- thers. 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