.• .vlilt

„

/ litly Lulls Off Discussion

'him

for
the

'n

ll ill,

F ,I

three
were members
i. w;sh Defense League
tHd they. score not

■ .•

J►

f

th
was

In his room he as'.- ed their Tian,-

h , fore
ended the
on learnimt
, .rie of
tors was an I ■ re'a
The three members of th VV , r1 , .
lewisn stud •mr,, Y i.r,
nion
seer. ,tary general. an
losA Z
North
raid'
NI a rt nr.
American representative and Mai o
Mo-ha.in ellair , ean of th • As, e13
tion
Shep.Irdi , .Jews — read
Wi•le
:writ
‘ilah
ci
•al
Fait.,' .
the
tHed :anis
ti,e Syrian \t:-loom
I' a., not ini••1:ately clear if
he had voted in ads ante his refusal
to inert with an Israeli, as the
dismission was arranged through
an American Mission intermediary
who se as not available for corn,
ment
A spokeswoman for Fattal told
th- JTA that the counselor was
willing to meet with "any Jew-
ish person" other than an Is-
raeli.
Salon itz >a of that before in

Egypt Chief Rabbi
Tells How He Had
to Lie to the Press

(•nt;ncied from Page II

/f'S /;(.1'1///Se (hiP ViSii(//'

IS

Israeli

in

use

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
6—Friday, April 7, 1972

Salowitz indicated that WUJS
learning
yaha5 5 s nationality. he asked the would ask for another meeting
Ire° to leave, c-. en though Yahav and not include an Israeli in that
is not representing I.rael and delegation.
LL
London-liased.
Describing the aborted session

Revolutionary Right
Whenever they (the people)
grow weary of the existing goYern-
men!, they can exercise their con-
stitutional right of amending it,
or their re olutionary right to dis-
member o overthrow it.—Abra-

as "friendly," Salowitz said of

Russian Official llinimizes Reports
of isa Requests, Admits to Refusals

W'.AS tt I
To N
JTA--Deputy
Minister Boris T Shut-lin of the
Union's
.':rice-
.S. ■ 5let
here
said in en inters iew react`
"ere only an
th:it thi re
for
number
of
ap;.'•catcons
nific..11, -
emigration on flit at this time, and
called foreign cs•iiivates of the
.
truly fantas-
number "absurd
tic

It was ascertained here that the
interview, cirevlated by Novosti
feature service via Tass, the gov-
ernment press agency, was not
published in the USSR.

Shumlin said L'1,000 Soviet Jews
have gone to Israel since World
War 11-10,600 of them last year
alone—and said there were only
208 applications on file in Mos-
cow, 19 in Kiev and 50 in Len.
ingrad.

Ile downplayed Arab apprehen-
sions over any Jewish, emigration
to Israel at all. pointing out that
of Israel's population of 3,000 • (.00.
800.000 were refugees from Arab
lands. Shumlin also became appar-
ently the first ton Kremlin official
to acknowledge that Soviet citizens
With knowledge of secret defense
information were barred from leas-
ing the couhtry.

An Inspector of the interior min
istry had been present at his meet
ing with the journalists, Rabbi
Douek told JTA. He had coached
him before the meeting and during
More than 100 adults
and
the intersiew sat behind the jour-
youngsters
carrying
placards
nalists and directed the chief
rabbi's answers "with discreet
hand sicnals. ' the rabbi said
Rabbi Douek who arrived in
Paris with his daughters and eld•
est son. carrying only one small
suitcase of clothes. said he had
had p-otraCted difficulties in ob-
tartly, t an exit visa He left behind
NEW YORK (JTA) — The Syna-
in Caro his apartment, with all
its furnishings. the rabbi said. He gogue Council of America an-
nounced
the establishment of an
now living in a small hotel room
Institute for Jewish Policy Plan-
Montmarte.
Rabbi Dour': had little time to ing and Research that will tap the
resources of 'he Jewish academic
take leave of the remnant of the
core numerous and flourishing community in America to conduct
long-range analysis and research
Egyptian -Jewish community In
fact. Cairo's Jews learned about on problems affecting Jewish sur-
their rabbi's departure only a few vival in America and overseas.
hours before his Air France flight
The announcement of the new
left Cairo Airport.
institute was made by Rabbi Ir-
Asked what he intended to do.
ving Lehrman. of Miami Beach. •
the rabbi told JTA that at 68
president of the Synagogue Cou-1
he was not making any plans for
ell which is the national coordinat-
the future. He would stay in
ing body of Conservative, Orthodox
France. at least several months,
and Refelean_Judaism in the U.S.
he said.
Philip M. Klutznick of Chicago,
Concerning the future of Egypt's
a former U S ambassador to the
Jews, Rabbi Douek sail. "Nobody
United Nations, was named chair-
will replace me in Egypt," and that
man of the institute's board of
the Alexandria Jewish community
trustees Dr. Marver Bernstein.
would "probably disappear** with-
president-elect of Brandeis Univer-
out a spiritual leader. He said
several Jews would probably leave sity and former dean of the
Egypt during the next few years Woodrow Wilson School for Public
and added that he believed there Administration and International
were still between 450 and 500 Affairs of Princeton University,
will head an academic panel which
Jews in Egypt.
will recommend major study and
There were 80.000 Jews in Cairo
before Israel's War of Independ- research projects.
ence in 1948, and 2.500 left when
The institute has already com-
the Six-Cay War broke out in 1967. '
missioned a major study of de-
Since then sortie 1.500 Jews have
velopments that might be ex-
been expelled or left voluntarily.
pected in American-Israel rela-
There are still two synagogues
tions in the next five years. and
sporadically open in Cairo and
their _impact on the American
one in Alexandria. Rabbi Douek's ! Jewish community,
synagogue has been closed. Since
It has also commissioned a series
May 1971, a - slight liberalization"
of projectional studies on various
could he felt in Cairo, Rabbi Douek
developments that might take place
concluded He added that Jews in
other Arab countries were in a jn the Soviet Union in the next five
bad way -The Jews of Syria are years and their possible impact on
more unhappy than we' are, they ' the status of Soviet Jews. That pro-
ject is being conducted by Prof.
have less. liberty, and pressures
Zvi Gitelman of the University of
on them are certainly much
Michigan.
stronger

Fattal: ''He was not rude. Ile

simply suggested that we leave " ham Lincoln.

NEW CADILLAC?

marched in single file about 10
feet apart past the Soviet Em.
has,. on March 28 to protest
the reported beating of the wife
of a Jewish inmate in a Soviet

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ANDY BLAU

in BIRMINGHAM at

prison camp.

WILSON CRISSMAN CADILLAC

Mrs Eva Butman, wife of !idle!
Burman, 55 as taken into custody
a week ago last Monday at the
railway station in Potma. after
visiting her husband who was serv-
ing a 10-year prison term. and was
searched, interrogated and beaten
by KGB officials

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Leaders of the Canadian Jewish-
Congress met in Ottawa with a
delegation of visiting membps of
the Soviet Parliament to discuss
the problems of Soviet Jewish
emigration and Jewish political
prisoners in the USSR. The meet-
ing focused on the CJC's request
that the Soviet authorities facili-
tate increased emigration for those
Jews who wish to leave the Soviet
Union.

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