Purely Commentary Hunters and Hunted Always in Limelight as Warning Against Re-Emergence of the Nazi Terror .. . Record of Arab Horrors Perpetrated in Many Foreign Lands By Philip Slomovitz The Holocaust, Hunters and Hunted, the Chaim Kaplan Diary a nd Related Documents CurreW, anniversaries—the 30th of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, the resistance to Nazism in many areas that were under Nazi rule now being recorded, the historical data regarding the Holocaust that has become more readily available — combine to add to the attention being given the Shoa, the Khurban — the horror and the calamity that caused the death of a third of the Jewish people. A vast amount of material is being published, and the recollections of those who have suffered during the Hitler years are demanding greater attention. When scholars met in New York four years ago to define the meaning of the catastrophe, the years of death and destruction from 1933 to 1945, they were admonished by Elie Wiesel to view the events as an historic Jewish experience. It was an inspiration for another significant work on the. Holocaust. and a noted historian, Prof. Gerd Korman of the New York State School of Industrial and Labor Relations of Cornell, compiled the many, views of those with roles in the Khurban in a volume published by Viking Press under the title "Hunter and Hunted — Human His- tory of the Holocaust." It is significant that this volume should appear simul- taneously with the reappearance as a paperback of "The Warsaw Diary of Chaim Kaplan," which was translated and edited by Prof. Abraham Katsh, president of Dropsie University. and published by Macmillan. Chaim A. Kaplan, a Warsaw Hebrew teacher and author, who was murdered either in late 1942 or early 1943, began his diary on Sept. 1, 1939, when the Nazis, invaded Poland. Mr. Kaplan had lived in Warsaw for 40 years. He witnessed the brutalities and inhuman- ities and he recorded them up to August 1942. His chronicled story of the Nazi terror in Warsaw was found in a kerosene can. The papers were well pre- served and the Jewish archives are blessed that an eminent scholar—Dr. Abraham I. Katsh, the president of Dropsie University, one of our most noted Hebra- ists — did the translating from the Hebrew. The Kaplan Diary is a first-hand account of what had happened. Objective, factual, day-to-day • reporting, it is one of the most important records of an era of horror. It is no wonder, therefore, that in "Human History of the Holocaust," which has been included in the Bnai Brith Classics Series, the Kaplan Diary is represented by im- pressive selections, which include this deeply moving paragraph as an expression of faith: "I will write a scroll of agony in order to remem- ber the past in the future . . . I feel that continuing this diary to the very end of my physical and spiritual strength is an historical mission which must not be abandoned . . . Even though we are now undergoing terrible tribulations and the sun has grown dark for us at noon, we have not lost our hope that the era of light will surely come. Our existence as a people will not be destroyed. Individuals will be destroyed, but the Jewish community will live on.'! There are 27 essays in Korman's "Hunter and Hunted." "Chimneys" and "Liberation" are as liberally represented as the refugees, the people who were in flight, the resistance, the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising. There is the work of the hunter, Simon Wiesenthal, and the recollections of the horrors in Dachau, Mauthausen, Westerbork and other torture and death camps are chill- creating episodes that are so vital to preserve the memory of a dark era. This stirring account of the "human history of the Holocaust" incorporates the evidence of Quentin Reynolds (before a congressional committee) and Elie Wiesel, the agonizing accounts of sufferers from the brutalities, the views of historians of the Nazi years, such as John Toland, Raul Hilberg and others. It is not happy reading, but it is a must for acquaint- ance with the worst in history. It is important also because it compels retention of interest and the memories of what had happened. On the occasion of the reprinting of "The Warsaw Diary of Self-Criticism Vital .. . But The Record Pleads for Vigilance Are we immune from criticism and is there sufficient self-criticism in Jewish ranks? Do we rebuke Israel when necessary? Are we so calloused that we do not recognize human obligations? We are always certain of attack by the anti-Israeli blocs at the United Nations, and we can always expect our "friends" to go along with the attacks on Israelis. None would call for a Security Council meeting when Israel is endangered, but there is no hesitancy in calling the UN body into action whenever there is retaliation. Another question must be posed: Is retaliation justified, at any time, at any cost? Indeed self-criticism is vital. Even Golda Meir can be challenged if and when she glories in successful retaliatory actions against Israel's enemies, the terrorist gangs who are quartered in Lebanon. We rather share with her the feeling — when she expresses it — that we can never forget the enemy for making it necessary for Israelis — for Jews — to retaliate in self-defense. In order to understand the conditions that make it necessary to retaliate, it is urgent that the record should be made known and understood. In the words of Alfred Smith, "let's look at the record." Here is the shocking record of Arab attacks on Israel and Israelis, from July 23, 1968, to Jan. 31, 1973: persons were killed and others DOCUMENT wounded. ARAB TERRORISM ABROAD 21.2.70 47 passengers and crew of Swiss- 23.7.68 El Al airline hijacked en route air airliner died when the plane from Rome. Landed in Algiers. blew up in mid-air, en route 26.12.68 El Al airliner attacked at Athens from Zurich to Lod. There were Airport. One Israeli citizen killed. 13 Israeli citizens among the 18.2.69 El Al airliner attacked in Zurich. dead. One pilot killed and another 21.2.70 An Austrian airliner was miracu- wounded. lously saved from a similar fate, 22.5.69 An attempt on David Ben-Gur- when an explosive charge went ion's life thwarted while he was off while it was in flight. The in Copenhagen. plane landed safely in Vienna. 17.8.69 An incendiary bomb thrown into 22.2.70 Lufthansa jumbo airliner hijacked Marks and Spencer in London. and landed in Aden. 18.8.69 An act of sabotage perpetrated 4.5.70 Terrorists opened fire in Israel in the Israeli Tourist Office in Embassy in the capital of Para- Copenhagen. guay, killing the wife of the Em- 23.8.69 Sabotage act carried out in Jew- bassy secretary and wounding a ish children's school in Teheran. female employe. 25.8.69 Bomb thrown into Zim office in 6.9.70 Three passenger airliners of Pan London. A female employe was American, TWA and BOAC hi- wounded. jacked with 400 passengers. The 29.8.69 TWA airliner hijacked to Da- first was blown up in Cairo and mascus. Two Israeli passengers the other two landed at Zarka. were held prisoners in Syria for 6.9.70 Abortive attempt to hijack an El many months. Al airliner en route from Amster- 8.9.69 Hand grenades thrown into Is- dam to New York. A steward was raeli embassies in the Hague and wounded. in Berne, and into El Al office in 9.9.70 Another BOAC plane — en route 'Brussels. from Bahrein to London — was 9.11.69 Time-bomb discovered at Jewish landed at Zarka, Jordan. community center in Berlin. 6.2.72 Gas tanks sabotaged in Holland. 27.11.69 Hand grenade thrown into El Al 8.2.72 Engine plant blown up in Ham- office in Athens. A Greek child burg. was killed and two Greek civilians 22.2.72 Oil pipeline sabotaged near Ham- wounded. burg. 12.12.69 Bomb discovered in El Al office 29.4.72 Letter-bomb sent to Israel Pa- in Berlin. vilion at German exhibition. 21.12.69 Attempt to hijack airline in 5.8.72 Oil storage tanks blown up in Athens. Trieste. 10.2.70 El Al airliner attacked in Munich. 16.8.72 Explosion in the luggage com- An Israeli citizen was killed and partment of El Al airliner after eight were wounded. takeoff from Rome. 13.2.70 Jewish home for the aged set 5.9.72 The murder of 11 Israeli partici- on fire in Germany. Seven aged , 2—Friday, April 27, 1973 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Kaplan," Prof. Katsh has called upon Jewry to Chaim perpetuate the memory of the Warsaw Ghetto and the other tragedies of the Shoa into daily prayers "to cause us to remember with humility the millions of our martyrs who perished in the greatest catastrophe of our time." Dr. Katsh believes: "The Holocaust must be a part of our daily awareness and that of our children who, fortunately, knew it not. This will enable our young to identify with the martyrs who, in the very moment of death, affirmed their belief in the eternity of the Jewish people or any other 'group. "Just as the memory of the Exodus from Egypt is repeated three times every day in our daily prayers, and referred to in the Kiddush prayer sanctifying the Sabbath, Prof. Katsh as well as in numerous other prayer contexts, the Holocaust should also be corded unflagging repetition in our worship. "Just as the mezuza is affixed to every Jewish door- post, books on the Holocaust should be placed on the book- shelves of every Jewish home. Since Jewish youths, as all young 'people, thrill to the triumphs of courage, they should be encouraged to read and study such books as they tell of the highest courage in the face of the most extreme adversity. We must teach our people to remem- ber not to forget." These are admonitions to remember, facts not to be forgotten, obligations to be adhered to. The Kaplan Diary and the "Hunter and Hunted" are vital documents emphasizing the obligations. May' they inspire the determined will of free peoples everywhere never again to permit holocausts to defile humanity. Jewish addresses in Britain. pants in the Munich Olympic 21.11.72 Four letter-bombs discovered in Games. Toronto, two of them addressed 19.9.72 Economic adviser to Israel Em- to Jews. bassy in London killed in the ex- Dec. Terrorist group uncovered in plosion of letter-bomb. 1972 Greece. Planned to arrive by ship 20.9.72 Letter-bomb sent to Israel Em- in Haifa on a suicide mission. The bassy in Brussels. Bomb explo- terrorists came from Lebanon. sion at Buenos Aires synagogue. 21.9.72 Letter-bomb sent to Israel em- 28.12.72 Six members of the Israel diplo- matic mission to Bangkok kid- bassies in Kinshassa, Buenos naped and held as hostages. Aires and Phnom Penh. They were released after 19 4.10.72 Letter-bomb received at offices hours, and the kidnapers flew to of the Hias Jewish welfare or- Cairo. ganization. End A booby-trapped motor-car left 10.10.72 Letter-bomb to two Jews in 1972 the Lebanese Fatah base Nahar Rhodesia, and to a woman head- Al-Bared and arrived in Europe ing the Hadassah organization in in order to sabotage an Israel New York. Embassy. 13.10.72 Bomb discovered at El Al offices 9.1.73 Bomb explosion in front of Jew- in Paris. ish Agency building in Paris. 14.10.72 Letter-bomb addressed from Ma- Terrorist group disembarked from laysia exploded in New York, S.S. "Messapia" in Cyprus, plan- wounding a local post of f i c e ning to carry out sabotage acts worker. in Haifa. 17.10.72 Bomb discovered at the entrance 24.1.73 Letter-bomb mailed to Israel con- to a Rotterdam office building, sul in Santiago, Chile, wounding housing the agency of Zim Israel a police sapper handling it. Shipping Lines. 25.1.73 Letter-bomb sent to rabbi in 29.10.72 Lufthansa plane hijacked en route Montreal discovered at Montreal from Lebanon to Turkey and Airport. flown to Yugoslavia. 31.1.73 Three terrorists detained in Vi- 31.10.72 Letter-bomb received at Israel enna on 20 January, and three Embassy in Nigeria. others arrested at the Austro- 4.11.72 Letter-bomb to Zionist youth club Italian border. All six had trav- in Frankfurt. elled from Beirut planning to at- 11.11.72 Five letter-bombs to Israeli dele- tack Jewish immigrants from the gation and to Jewish organiza- USSR. tions in Geneva; 14 letter-bombs (We are indebted for this record to Israelis in the period of 1-11 November to Reply, Tel Aviv). Why the most recent attacks by Israelis on terrorist hideouts in Beirut? Add to the above record the following incidents of attacks that were admittedly engineered in Beirut: March 1—Murder of U.S. and Belgian diplomats in Khartoum. March 3—Attack in Beriut harbor on Cypriot vessel carrying pilgrims to the Holy Lar March 6—Attempts to blow up an El Al terminal and Israeli banks in New York. March 12—Murder of Israeli businessman in Cyprus. March 15—Attempt to blow up the Israeli Embassy, Paris. March 20—Attempt at terror operation (probably hijacking at Rome Airport). March 21—Letter-bomb in Singapore. April 4—Attempt at terror operation (probably hijacking) at Rome Airport. April 9—Attacks on Israel ambassador's home and an Israeli civilian aircraft in Cyprus. It's unfortunate that there must be a ferreting out of the guerrillas in order to end the terror and to prevent its continuation. Is there guilt for such actions? It is the commission of acts necessitated by a kind of war that the Arab antagonists, who are out to destroy Israel, have invited for themselves. They can be forgiven for waging a war, but not for intolerable movement to attack Jews and Arabs not in Israel alone— they have found that task futile!—but wherever there are Jews and Israelis. That's what calls for counter-action. This is what has instigated retaliation. It is for such spread of animosities that the Arab murder gangs can not be excused. Israel is not an unrecognized nation. She sits side by side with the enemies in the United Nations. She functions among the nations of the world. Differences, terri- torial adjustments, approaches to peace, can only be attained through proper diplomatic negotiations and by sitting side-by-side to come to terms. Until and unless that happens, we may not see a end to the horrible effects of an unnecessary animosity for a long time to come.