400,000 Needy Aided by JDC in '73; Total Spent in 60 Years: $1 Billion NEW YORK (JTA) — The Joint Distribution Committee helped during 1973—its 60th year — about 396,000 needy Jews "from a handful in China to 114,000 in Israel and 260,000 in Western and Eastern Europe and the Arab and Moslem coun- tries." Samuel Haber, JDC execu- tive vice chairman, also said JDC expenditures for 1973 CARS TO BE DRIVEN To any state. Also drivers furnished to drive your car anywhere. Legally insured and I.C.C. licensed DRIVEAWAY SERVICE 9970 Grand River Detroit, Mich. 48204 WE 1-0620-21-22 total $29,624,000. The largest single item was $8,600,000 for Israel, an increase of $1,000,000 over outlays in Is- rael during 1972. Expendi- tures for North Africa were $4,117,000, and for Europe, $5,422,300. Ed w a rd Ginsberg, JDC chairman, reported, in a his- torical perspective, that dur- ing its 60 years, the JDC had distributed more than $1,000,- 000,000 in aid. The historical review is contained in a booklet, "Sixty Years of Service." From 1951 to the present, Ginsberg said, the JDC spent $572,000,000 rebuilding the Jewish communities of Eu- rope, organizing vast health and welfare programs in 7 teci BARRY M. GRANT PROBATE JUDGE Oakland County • Probate Court Referee • FormerAssistant Prosecutor • Member Board of Directors Men's Club Cong. Shaarey Zedek • Member Bnai Brith • Former Treasurer Southfield School Board • Chairman Oakland County Coordinating Committee VOTE AUGUST 6th FOR GRANT Pd. Pol. Adv. `Israelis Must Learik to Identify With Holocaust' GENEVA (JTA) — A Hebrew University historian said here that Israelis must be taught to identify them- selves with the victims of the Holocaust, not just the resistance fighters. Prof. Simon Herman, pro- fessor of modern Jewish his- tory at Hebrew University, said that Israeli educators have been stressing the as- pects of resistance during World War II. He said this was a partial approach and Israeli chil- dren should be brought up to identify themselves totally with the Jewish past in the Diaspora. Speaking at a symposium on the Holocaust during the annual meeting of the board of trustees of the Memorial Foundation for Jewish Cul- ture, Herman declared: "It is immoral, and will be even more immoral as time goes on, to ask the question, whether the martyrs of the Holocaust could have done more in active resistance. This attitude could well make children hate the victim rather than the persecutor." However, he noted that since 1967 this attitude has changed and the Holocaust is much more pronounced in the consciousness and be- havior of Israelis. Brig. Gen. Yitzhak Arad, director of Yad Vashem in Jerusalem and a former partisan fighter against the Nazis, stressed that it was not always appreciated that it sometimes took more cour- age to stay with one's fam- ily and try to protect and feed them than to leave the town and join the partisans. He said many Jews who tried to join partisan units were not permitted to join. Dr. Yehuda Bauer, head of the Institute of Contempor- ary Jewry at Hebrew Uni- versity, said the only way to prevent another holo- caust is for Jews and non- Jews to be aware of what happened. Bauer said, "Because Is- rael is there, another holo- caust becomes very remote, in fact unlikely." Prof. Irving Greenberg of the City College of New York, in dealing with the re- ligious aspect of the Holo- caust, said that as far as he was concerned, the reality of God was greater than ever, the rebirth of Israel was the redemption of his faith and the line between secular and religious Jews was no longer credible. "After all, the rehabilita- tion of Jews is a much more important religious precept than prayer," he said. Moslem countries and crea- ting a comprehensive social service system for newcom- ers to Israel. Over 45,000 people were assisted in 1973 by both Rated No. I in the I_ .S.A. Come in and see why direct and indirect programs before you buy ! of JDC/Malben in Israel, From $49.50 Haber reported. JDC pro- vided financial subsidies to TYPEWRITER over 150 yeshivot, aiding CO. INC. about 35,500 students and 1717 STEPHENSON HWY. (North of Maple) their dependents. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS TROY • 689-8000 14—Friday, July 19, 1974 Over 44,000 Israelis were enrolled in ORT vocational training programs during the year, subsidized by the JDC. The total unduplicated num- ber aided by JDC in Israel in 1973 was about 114,000, Haber said. The growing strength and stability of Jewish communi- Values to 99 ties in Western Europe made possible a gradually dimin- ishing role by JDC, Haber reported. France alone of the Western European countries requires continued aid, main- ly because of the large num- Your Jewish Book Store bers of newcomers who have not yet been fully integrated. OAK PARK In Italy and Austria, JDC 25242 GREENFIELD expenditures were confined Ample Free Parking 398-9095 almost exclusively to care North of 10 Mile, in Greenfield Center and maintenance of trans- migrants, about 1,500 in the course of the year. Most of Ifir;41 5;21:11 V a t a p V a t;,1 nta:41 bLIV ne a o;41W WWI Ka t;411r4:41WIKNIII ■ 4;• lb;t;,41,4111,1: the transmigrants were Rus- 41 pl II PM 11,7 1* grA MI 1111M1 PM11 . M sian Jews en route to coun- IM TA mAR0F F tries other than Israel. Haber noted that JDC's financial burden was eased by the U. S. government, which, has provided funds for the care and maintenance of the Russian transmigrants. In Romania, JDC subsi- dizes a network of services aiding about 16,000 of the country's 90,000 Jews. Ex- penditures totaled $2,200,000 10. ;Ott in 1973. In Yugoslavia, the it 4 JDC funded programs aiding So.of 12 Mile Ift,128585 about 10 per cent of the Across from The TEL-12 MALL country's 7,000 Jews. The biggest program for Eastern Europe, Haber said, Polti a t;4 bia ' t: V aa t a;41r4;41.1tV1 II;a t a;4 ► Ltp na t;411• 42;111raIlKt;11ntopr at a ;411P a gt;411r.t? ► e;,1 ti1;4 was a special program called .•I iZ . , 'fp" . t;: .. I .7: ., legs Me it" . 17:10.Z 7. In: . II I'S: .• I 1 ■ .. . 1 4•.1 PM, PT: . PIZ . 7.4 PrZ1111,": Relief-in-Transit, which pro- vided material assistance to approximately 138,000 needy Jews who had no access to regular JDC country pro- grams. The Relief-in-Transit program amounted to almost 15 per cent of JDC's global budget, $4,350,000 in 1973. "This sum is in addition to expenditures of $5,422,300 in Europe in 1973," Haber noted. 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