JCCouncil Starts Campaign for Two Tbilisi Brothers Trying to Emigrate The Jewish Community Cuoncil has called upon its member organizations to sup port a campaign on behalf of the Goldshtein brothers of Tbilisi, Soviet Jews who are seeking permission to emi- grate to Israel. Grigory and Isal Goldshtein have been outspoken in demanding the right to leave the Soviet Union and recently partici- pated in a hunger strike pro- testing the harsh treatment of Soviet Jewish activists. The brothers have been threatened with prosecution for their activities, and it is feared that a trial is im- minent. In a special notice to the Community Council's 300 af- filiated organizations, Coun- cil President Hubert J. Sid- low urged immediate action to call greater attention to the current situation of the brothers. Sidlow noted that last month a trial wihch had been in preparation in Minsk was canceled by Soviet au- thorities. It is believed that the steady glare of publicity and public attention from the West was helpful in averting this trial. In this context, Sidlow urged similar efforts on be- half of the Goldshteins. He recommended that wires, cards and letters be sent to 4- * President Nixon, Soviet Party leader Leonid Brezhnev and Soviet Ambassador Anatoly Dobrynin. Sidlow also sug- gested that cards be sent di- rectly to the Goldshtein brothers for moral support. A profile sheet giving biographical data on the brothers, plus their addres- ses, was sent out as part of the Council notice. Copies of the profile and a listing of addresses were protest let- ters should be sent are avail- able in quantity, free from the Council office, 962-1880. commissioner of investiga- outside the Soviet Union. The woman, who had not tion, who recently returned In Israel this was seen as requested to go to Israel, from a trip to the Soviet an effort by the Russians to left a letter saying she could Union, said he found that substantiate their claims that not bear the shame of being despite Soviet assertions to hundreds of Jews have chang- dismissed. She was dismissed the contrary, certain Jewish ed their minds and no longer together with three other scientists and others who want to emigrate to Israel. Jewish physicians, Dr. Gab- wish to emigrate have been Jewish Doctor Commits riel Belitzeh, chief surgeon subjected to loss of jobs, po- Suicide After Dismissal of the hospital, Dr. Cogan lice surveillance and har- and Dr. Lieberman, none of LONDON (JTA) — A 39- assment, and even imprison- whom has asked for exit year-old Jewish woman phy- ment for minor infractions. sician from Kazakhstan in visas. At a City Hall news confer- the Soviet Union commited The dismissals were seen'3.4 ence, Scoppetta cited the suicide after she was dis- as a symptom of the anti- cases of Dr. David Asbell of missed from her job at a lo- Semitism that has been Moscow, a chemical engi- cal hospital, according to re- sweeping the Kazakhstan neering professor, and Dr. ports reaching Tel Aviv. region. Fate of Soviet Jews Boris Rubinstein of Lenin- Remains Status Quo grad, a physicist, who were 14—Friday, August 3, 1973 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS NEW YORK (JTA)—Nich- among the Jewish intellec- olas Scoppetta, the city's tuals with whom he met while in the Soviet Union. He said that both academi- cians lost their university positions immediately after filing applications to emi- ciation should be entrusted to grate to Israel, apparently in retaliation for doing so. the newcomers. Scoppetta, who has sub- Besides this seemingly legitimate demand, there ex- mitted a report on his trip isted also the undercurrent of to John V. Lindsay, was join- the political parties: the es- ed at the news conference by tablishment is governed by Manhattan attorney David A. veteran Labor leaders, while Goldstein, his former col- the active group of the new- league in the Manhattan dis- comers seems to be influ- trict attorney's office, who accompanied him on the two- enced by Gahal. The uproar continued all week tour, June 22-July 4, through the two days of par- and Stanley H. Lowell, chair- ley when the question of the man, and other officials of qualification of the delegates the Greater New York Con- was raised. It turned out that ference on Soviet Jewry. many of those present were Lowell observed that Scop- WITH simply sent to the parley petta's report on his meet- JULES ABRAMS & MARY MEDWED without being elected or del- ings with Soviet officials re- 1 News, Interviews and Beautiful Music egated by any group of Rus- flects the "total inconsistency Every Thursday, 9:00 to 10:00 a.m. sion Jews. of 'official' explanations for Mrs. Meir reminded such denying Soviet Jews the right Soviet Jewish critics that to live as Jews in the Soviet 4 they were free to raise their Union or to emigrate to ful- voices in Israel as they could fill themselves as Jews else- not in Russia and that while where. shouting may not be needed Meanwhile reports reach- in Israel, "it is permitted." ing Tel Aviv from Soviet Union says a number of Jews in Minsk were summoned to the ovir office several days Jewry told the JTA that of ago and forced to sign state- some 1,000 individuals on the ments in which they declared list of Soviet Jews which they did not want to go to President Nixon's national Israel. They were people whose security adviser Dr. Henry Kissinger took with him to relatives in Israel ' or else- Moscow last May, only 58 where had asked that they be have received exit visas and allowed to join their families only two-thirds of those have left the Soviet Union. WOODROW W. WOODY PROUDLY ANNOUNCES Fabian Kolker, a member THE OPENING OF THE BEAUTIFUL NEW of the plenum of the National Conference on Soviet Jewry, told the JTA that one-third of the Soviet Jews on Kissin- ger's list who were given exit visas did not leave the Soviet Union because not all the members of their families — in most cases children — were permitted to leave. New Association of Russian Immigrants Formed Despite Golda's Appeal for Unity TEL AVIV (JTA) — Pre- Gold Meir appealed Tuesday to recent Jewish immigrants from the Soviet Georgian Republic who have been the most vocifeous cri- tics of conditions in Israel among immigrant groups, to join in action "for the uni- fication of the nation". Mrs. Meir's, plea for unity apparently was unheeded. The parley she was address- ing at Beersheba broke up Tuesday night in an uproar and with announcement of plans for a new association of Russian Jews—limited to those who arrived after the Six-Day War. "For your name of honor," the premier said in an ad- dress to 400 delegates at- tending the Second National Conference of Russian Jews in Beersheba, "Do not fol- low the easy road. It is your mier Israel, your Ashdod, your Jerusalem. There is no we and you. We are all one na- tion." Referring to demands of Georgian Jews for more rights and more preferences in various fields, she said there were problems as well as rights and that Israel "Will be less good without you. Give your hand to the development of one state." The friction between the new immigrants and the old immigrants—some of whom came to Palestine before the Soviet Union was established —was felt from the start. The veteran immigrants from Russia, forming the es- tablishment and handling the association's affairs, were blamed by the new immi- grants with being strangers to the problems of the new immigrants, a n d therefore the management of the asso- "THE YlaNHTOPROGRAM" ON RADIO 1090 AM DiTRPITi No.11 AM BRIM LIINGuAgE RADIO STATION Times Report on Kissinger Visit Is Criticized NEW YORK (JTA) — Two Jewish leaders who met with presidential adviser Henry Kissinger on July 19 on the problems of Soviet Jewry have criticized a report in the New York Times on that meeting as "misleading" and raising "false hopes." The critics were Richard Maass, chairman of the Na- tional Conference on Soviet Jewry, and Jacob Stein, chairman of the Conference of Presidents of Major Amer- ican Jewish Organizations. Max Fisher of Detroit also participated in the July 19 meeting in the White House. The criticisms were con- tained in a memorandum by Maass to the NCSJ member- ship, dated July za. The July 19 meeting was a followup to earlier conversa- tions held with Dr. Kissinger on the issue, including a meeting on May 2 at which the Jewish leaders handed Dr. Kissinger a list of 1,000 names of "hardship" cases of Soviet Jews who have ap- plied for exit visas and lost their jobs for so doing, among other harassments. Dr. Kissinger promised to present the list to Leonid I. Brezhnev, the Soviet Commu- nist Party secretary, during his visit to Moscow in May to make arrangements for Brezhnev's visit in June to the United States. "Reflecting my own view of the meeting," Maass said in the memorandum, "Jacob Stein has advised member organizations in the Presi- dents Conference that in his view 'the Times story •raises false hopes whereas the meeting with Kissinger was discouraging in the lack of real progress reported.' " The Times story on July 21 reported that Dr. Kissinger told the three Jewish lead- ers that Brezhnev had a- ssured President Nixon that a large number of Jews who had repeatedly been denied permission to leave the Sov- iet Union would soon be al- lowed to emigrate to Israel. "In actuality," Maass said in the memorandum, "Dr. Kissinger reported on devel- opments since the summit meeting between President Nixon and Leonid Brezhnev. He indicated that he expect- ed the probable release of larger numbers of Soviet Jews from a list of names of hard core cases we provided him and which were submit. ted to Brezhnev in Moscow in May." CLUB HOUSE JERUSALEM (JTA) —Ab- sorption Minister Natan Peled told the Knesset that 14,370 Soviet immigrants came to Israel between Jan- uary and June. Peled said on other occasions that the fig- ure was 1,000 fewer than the same period last year. He gave the following breakdown: from Georgia, 3973; from Bokhara, 1330; and from the rest of the USSR, 9067. Significantly, the June fig- ure was the lowest of the six months and the only time it dropped below 2,000 to 1923. A story from Vienna a week ago stated that 200 Soviet Jews who emigrated to Israel are now in Vienna seeking permission to return to the USSR. The correct figure should have been 100. Maass reported that Dr. Kissinger "indicated a lack of progress in regard to prisoners of conscience. He also reported that' at the Kissinger meeting, "there was no sign of any change in basic procedures which would end the harassment of Jews." Maass added that the three Jewish leaders "expressed disappointment in the lack of visible results to date, espe- cially in regard to our de- mands on emigration and emigration procedures." He added that Dr. Kissinger "did pledge that administration efforts would continue" for Soviet Jews. 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