Ww• Courage of Georgian Jews Related by New Immigrants TEL AVIV (JTA) — Another planeload of Russian Jews landed at Lydda Airport late Monday night, bringing immigrants from Odessa, Riga and for the first time in years, from the remote Geor- gian Republic. The two families from Georgia who debarked from the chartered El Al jet were signatories of the now-famous letter to Premier Golda Meir. signed by 18 Jewish family heads, begging for help to emigrate to Israel. They told newsmen that after the letter was made public, Soviet authorities demanded that the sign- ers send another letter to Mrs. Meir repudiating their first. But none of the families complied, though they were questioned by the secret police and many were fired from their jobs and had to live on the charity of neighbors, the newcomers said. They claimed that there are 70,- 000 Jews in Georgia, and all want to go to Israel. Whenever a repre- sentative of the interior ministry visits a Georgian town, he is be- sieged by Jews who want to know the fate of their visa applications, the arrivals said. They reported that when they left for Israel, about 1,000 Jews came to see them off "and pleaded with us that we continue their struggle from Is- rael. - The Georgians said their children were permitted to pray three times a day but not to study Hebrew. (In Miami Beach, Dr. Israel Miller, president of the American Zionist Federation, said an in- crease in immigration would be "welcomed by humanitarians throughout the world." He added, hoWever, "If it is only a gesture to insure a peaceful Soviet Com- munist Party Congress, the So- viet authorities are deluding themselves. Jews in all of the free nations of the world will r_tontinue to voice their just de- mand for the basic rights of their brethren in the Soviet Union." Rabbi Miller delivered the major address at the Florida Friends of Yeshiva University Heritage Dinner.) A planeload of Russian Jews— the fourth in a week—landed at Lydda Airport last Thursday after- noon. The chartered El Al jet brought immigrants from Moscow, Riga, Tzernovitz and Leningrad who were picked up at Vienna. Officials of the absorption ministry were at the airport to greet the newcomers and dispatch them to absorption centers all over the country. Aleksandr Zhenin, the Moldavian Jewish engineer arrested a few days ago after Hebrew books and recordings in his home were con- fiscated, has been sent to a mental asylum in Kishinev, the Jewish Telegraphic Agency learned : He was sent there when he start- ed a hunger strike in jail. A Jewish source said that when the Soviet authorities commit a person to an asylum when he does not belong there, it is to drug him so as to "break him mentally." A Soviet Jewess, who had ap- plied for emigration to Israel and was arrested in Odessa Dec..7 for "Zionist activities," is still being interrogated and is continuing to refuse to talk until her questioners cease what she calls their "bru- tality," according to Jewish sources. The woman, Reiza Palatnek, 35, is demanding that they abide by the Soviet law prohibiting brutal interrogation. She was sent to a mental home, but the doctors said she did not belong there. An informed. Israeli source said that 90 per cent of the visa appli- cations submitted by Russian Jews are turned down by Soviet authori- tie::. The source said that Jews seek- ing exit. papers must undergo a long and arduous process which subjects them to public scorn, and sometimes divides their families. The source agreed that Soviet Jewish emigration during the month of March was "very good" considering the circum- stances and said April also was likely to be a "good" month. But thereafter, it is not clear how matters will develop and there is fear here that Soviet authori- ties will again clamp severe re- strictions on the departure of Jews. Many Israelis believe the rela- tively liberal policy of the past month was intended to create the impression of ongoing Jewish emi- gration and to prevent the sight of Jewish demonstrators on Moscow's streets during the Soviet Commu- nist Party Congress. According to Israeli sources. the recent French press agency report that the Soviets intend to permit 300,000 Jews to leave during the next few years was a deliberate "plant." The sources observed that most of the Jews now getting visas come from the big cities of the Baltic states and the Russian Republic where there are many Western newsmen and tourists. In contrast, hardly any visas are issued to Jews in the remote Geor- gian Republic who, from an econo- mic standpoint. are more "ex- pendable" to the Soviet Union. Conclave Urges USSR to Abandon Impending Trial; 70 Jews Make Protest to Kremlin LONDON (JTA) — A resolution urging the Soviet Union to abandon the impending trials of Jews was adopted by a substantial majority at the annual conference of the United Nations Association at Loughsborough. (The conference, after heated de- bate, also adopted a resolution on the Middle East which, among other things, called for the estab- lishment of a "secular state of Palestine.") The resolution on Soviet Jewry was submitted by the British sec- tion of the World Jewish Congress. In addition to abandonment of the trials, it called for the release of Jews under arrest and permission for them to emigrate. A petition urging the USSR to end discrimination against Jews and to grant them emigration rights was delivered to the Soviet Embassy by a delegation repre- senting the British Zionist Federa- tion. The delegation, headed by Lord Janner, was received by the em- bassy's political secretary, Leonid Leontiev. Meanwhile, reports reaching here from Moscow said that 70 Soviet Jews have sent letters to Kremlin leaders protesting the arrest of a large group of Jew- ish petitioners March 26 at the offices of the Soviet chief prose- cutor Roman A. Rudenko. The petitioners were seeking infor- mation on the fate of Jewish prisoners awaiting trial on al- leged hijack plot charges. In Washington, a New Jersey congressman introduced a resolu- tion urging President Nixon to "exert diplomatic pressure" on the Soviet government to permit Rus- sian Jews to emigrate to Israel or any other country willing to receive them. Rep. Peter W. Rodino, a Democrat from Newark, said on the House floor, "It is the moral responsibility of this nation" to persuade the Soviet government "to cease their educational, reli- gious, employment and cultural persecution of Soviet Jewry." Ro- dino is chairman of the House Judiciary Committee's subcommit- tee on immigration. An American scientist was ex- pelled from the Soviet Union on March 24 for having "collected slanderous information from per- sons described as 'Zionists and other elements,' " the State De- partment disclosed. Department spokesman Charles Bray identified the scientist as Dr. David Viglirchio, 45, a nema- tologist (specialist in parasitic worms) at the University of Cali- fornia at Davis, who had arrived in the Soviet Union last Nov. 24 for a six-month stay under the Soviet-American scientific ex• change agreement. Bray could not confirm if Dr. Viglirchio is Jewish. He said the scientist and his wife were on their way back home to Madeira, Calif., by way of Teheran and Tokyo. Bray reported that Dr. Viglir- chio claimed no knowledge of hav- ing made contact with Zionists while in Moscow working at the Academy of Sciences. He said that Valentin Kamenev, cultural counselor at the Soviet Embassy, was told by the State Department that the "absurd charges" against Dr. Viglirchio were "a crude attempt to discour- age scientific contact between So- viet and Western scientists," and that "expulsion of exchanges on insubstantial grounds is detrimen- tal to the program." There are nine American scien- tists remaining in the USSR, ac- cording to the State Department. Bray said Dr. Viglirchio was sub- jected to "a minute personal search" before leaving Moscow. but that it was not yet known if any materials were confiscated. Dr. Haim Renert, a Jewish gynecologist reported to have been arrested in Tzernowitz, the Ukraine, two weeks ago, has been sentenced to five years in prison for allegedly attempting to bribe his way to an emigration visa, the Jewish Telegraphic agency learned. It was not known if Dr. Renert, 48, admitted the charges. He was known to have applied unsuccessfully for an exit visa. rium on arms supplies to Egypt cards and forced Jews off, it was or the dismantling of Soviet milk- said. Those resisting were report- tary installations and the removal edly sentenced to 14 days' im- of its personnel from Egyptian ter- prisonment. (Related story Page ritory. What Brezhnev actually 11). had in mind, they said, was to THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS spotlight American and Israeli "aggressions." His specific refer _ 10—friday, April 9, 1971 ences to the Middle East followed a familiar line. He attributed the crisis in that region to "Israel's attack on the UAR, Syria and Jor- dan." He said the Soviet Union and other "fraternal socialist coun- tries" had helped restore the de- fense potential of the Arab states and pledged that "the Soviet Union will continue its firm sup- port of its Arab friends." Brezhnev made no reference to rising Jewish demands for human and emigration rights in the Soviet Union or to dissent generally with- in the borders of the USSR. it was learned that the Soviet authorities have taken every pos- FULL FACTORY EQUIPMENT sible action to prevent a Jewish demonstration during the Commu- "MAKE AN OFFER SALE!" nist Party Congress. JOIN THE SWINGERS AT Special security police units have been patroling the trains to that city and forcibly removing all Jews suspected of planning demonstra- tions, it was reported. The special police first advised the Jewish passengers over loud- 10500 W. 8 MILE ROAD JUST EAST OF MEYERS speakers to get off the trains, and when they did not, the police board- Call 399-6700 ed the trains, asked or identity '71 DODGES DART! %MK CHARGER! POLARA! NORTHWESTERN DODGE It also has been learned that two noted Soviet Jewish film direc- tors, Mikhail Kalik and Yesin Sevela, have been expelled from the Soviet Union's cinema workers' association. Such action is barred by the association's rules unless the persons involved are consulted on charges against them, which was not done in the case of Kalik and Sevela, who have applied for emigration permission. The two originally joined the association at its invitation. The murder of a Russian Jewish scholar last November has been confirmed here by Russian sources. The scholar, identified only as Dr. Michelson, was said last week to have been shot and killed in Minsk, Belorussia, by a mentally ill, rabid anti-Semite. It was re- ported that he was killed at his clinic. Brezhnev: Middle East on His Mind at Party Congress LONDON (JTA)—Soviet Commu- nist Party Secretary Leonid I. Brezhnev called for the elimina- tion of "the hotbeds of war in Southeast Asia and in the Middle East" and the promotion of "a political settlement in these areas on the basis of respect for the legitimate rights of states and peo- ples subject to aggression." In his report to the 24th Soviet Commu- nist Party Congress, in Moscow, Brezhnev reiterated the Soviet gov- ernment's readiness "to join other powers who are permanent mem- bers of the Security Council in pro- viding international guarantees for a political settlement in the Mid- dle East." Observers said there was no in- dication that Brezhnev was actual- ly considering a Soviet morato- Kashrut Goes Organic AUSTIN (JTA) — Jewish stu- dents who combine observance of the Jewish dietary laws with the movement toward consumption of "organic" foods can meet both needs at a Hillel house facility at the University of Texas. The facil- ity is called "Sattva" and special- izes in vegetarian food, served cafeteria style. 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