Quiet Jewish Dissident Dissects Soviet Society A Review By DR. PETER MARTIN Editor's Note: Dr. Peter Martin, reviewer of "To Defend These Rights" by Valery Chalidze is a leader in the nation's practicing and teaching fields of psychiatry, and is actively interested in securing succor, for oppressed Russian Jewry. He and Mrs. Martin have recently assisted in providing a haven for a Russian Jewish academician's family and they have enabled them to utilize their visas for settlement in this country after a brief stay in Italy. VALERY CHALIDZE "To Defend These Rights," published by Random House, is an important book. It pre- sents a sharply etched pic- ture of current conditions in the USSR. It accomplishes this important task through a focus on how individual rights and freedom are in- fringed upon or destroyed by the government. For those who value the dignity of man, it is a terrify- ing book. It is terrifying be- cause the handwriting is on the wall: Mankind includes within its midst a type • of man who justifies his inhu- manity to those who do not agree with him by the insen- sitive rationalization that the end justifies the means. Always, there are men who seek power over others, who enjoy power over others and who are corrupted by power over others. No set of laws, no matter how democratic they be, are immune from disregard by fanatics in pow- er. The above is the message which the book held for me. It is not the mesage which Valery Chalidze wishes to convey. His book, written in a calm, juridical style, pre- sents some proposals to the Soviet Government whereby they could reinstate democ- racy through changes in So- viet judicial procedures. Chalidze does not want to overthrow Communism. He does not want to overthrow the Communist party. He wants them to become civili- zed, and believes that this is possible. Unfortunately, in his quiet, low key, ironic manner, he paints such a devastating picture of the irrational fa- naticism of those in control of the people, that he defeats this purpose. The reality is devastating; the proposals, wishful think- ing. For example, he shows that any agreement which the Soviets make, is based on what is best for them at the moment. If events make a different course advisable, they break the agreement. To quote the book: "The exaction of huge fees for ed- ucation from those Jews who are emigrating to Israel has been temporarily halted, but an oral promise to suspend a law is no basis for regard- ing that law as abrogated." Among innumerable exam- ples of Soviet manipulation to accomplish its ends, is that although the right of assem- bly is guaranteed by the Con- stitution, in practice an as- sembly or meeting can be held only if it is organized by associations or authorities recognized by the state. Another message which this book transmits to me, though again, not intended by its author is that man- kind includes within its midst masses of people who submit meekly to the depri- vation of their rights. They wish to be led and submit to the power hungry type. It takes both types to per- petuate for 50 years the loss of human rights with which this .bdok deals: loss of free- dom of expression, freedom of movement and emigra- tion, freedom of religious be- lief, the right to preserve ethnic cultures, and decent treatment of prisoners. Chalidze does not see this lumpishness in the Soviet masses. He sees hope in the Soviet citizens' developing awareness and assertion 01 their rights and in the re- gime's grudging but progres- sive liberalization. Soviet masses now have a somewhat better access to ideas and information from abroad. The codification of law and the observance of legal procedure have advanc- ed. But the possibility of a reversal of policy by the re- gime in power is ever pres- ent. Fortunately for mankind, there is a third type of man — the Valery Chalidze type. Chalidze was born in Moscow and has been a passionately concerned participant in the Soviet human rights move- ment. He knows the every- day problems of the Soviet people. A physicist and self taught lawyer, he was a co-founder of the Moscow Human Rights Committee, as well as editor of the samizdot journal, So- cial Problems. In 1972 when he came to the United States to lecture at George- town University, he was de- prived of his citizenship and refused re-entry into Russia. This was his punishment for his active defense of human rights and civil liberties. Although the first part of the book is difficult to read through, it is well worth the effort. Chalidze writes well and with a delightful low key, ironic sense of humor. For example, the author in describing how the Soviet state takes care to make sure that citizens absorb and dis- seminate only "correct" in- formation states: "At pres- ent a person is not usually persecuted for saying some- thing incorrect by mistake— provided, of course, that he does not insist on keeping the same opinion after his mistake has been explained to him. One of the criteria which I use in judging a book is whether I feel that I would like to know the author per- sonally. 'When I finished re- reading this book, I felt that I would like to know Chalidze personally not only because he would be interesting to know but also because he is a nice person. He is not the flaming rev- olutionary with the dedica- tion to the cause that excuses murdering other people. His is a calm, stubborn insis- tence on democratic process that follows law and order. He does not advocate right- ing a wrong with a wrong of one's own. I admire his restraint. I hope he is right in believing that dissent expressed in re- strained, precise language can have power in the long run to overcome the cruelty within man. May the Jewish people live as long as it takes. In psychiatry there is a clinical entity called Folie 'a deux. In this entity, one mate of a couple is grossly psychotic, with wild halluci- nations and delusions. In or- der to get along with the stronger, fanatical partner, tne other mate must adopt all of the delusions as her own or else antagonize the sick one. This is the impres- sion one gets of the current situation in the, Soviet Union. The psychotic, powerful party demands complete ac- ceptance of its dictates. The weaker party (the masses) must mouth the same ideas or suffer the consequences. This is what was so fright- ening to me in this book. Can the voice of reason pene- trate the blackness of the de- lusional system? Even with help, it is a difficult task. Will the help tome in the USSR from the voice of Chalidze and others like him in the Russian democratic movement? This brings us to the sec- tion in this book on the rights of persons declared mentally ill. The Soviet government has developed a technique of ridding themselves of those who express dissent by de- claring them mentally ill and committing them to a mental institution. It certainly makes a farce of human rights, when a gov- ernment uses hospitalization in a mental institution as an instrument to limit the right to new ideas by denigrating, original or unorthodox scien- tific, social, political, and philosophical ideas through juridical determination of their authors as mentally ill or incapable of mental crea- tion. I am in agreement with Chalidze that the belief of people, especially psychia- trists, that there exists some- thing resembling a proper "norm" for man, is alto- gether unjustified and fraught with the danger of its being used for discrimina- tion. The danger is especially great in a country like the Soviet Union where the au- thorities try to educate the inhabitants according to a single standard. B'ut do not think this can- not happen in America. Dur- ing World War II, the poet Ezra Pound was hospitalized as mentally ill, a case which had many aspects of a poli- tical imprisonment. Chalidze uses the history of the Jews leaving Russia for Israel as evidence of the pos- sibility for change in Soviet policy. He felt gratified that the persistence of the Jews who want to emigrate and the support of foreign public opinion have prompted the Soviet authorities to take a comparatively realistic posi- tion, and to permit Jewish emigration on a scale one could scarcely have hoped for at the outset. The Jewish emigrants were the first large group in the history of USSR to break the 50-year-old barrier. However, the problem cer- tainly cannot be regarded as solved. Jewish scientists and technical specialists among others with no accountable reason still encounter serious difficulties. The late December issue of Soviet Jewry Action News- letter reports that internal anti-Jewish harassment and reports of difficulties in ab- sorbtion in Israel and else- where have taken a toll. As of late December, 16,537 So- viet Jews • reached Israel during 1974 compared to 32,- 500 for 1973. In conclusion, I would stress that this outstanding painting of daily living in the USSR that is so frighten. ing to one who craves free- dom and individual rights, looks attractive to newly de- veloping countries w h o s e _people would be so easy to subjugate. Also, even with our Ameri- can Constitution, written to protect individual rights, fa- natical leaders can ignore these rights if we are lump- ish and do not fight to defend these rights. 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Technion Honors U.S. Professor- send THE JEWISH NEWS as a gift MIMI' 11E1E1 1MM 111=111 'SWIM To: The Jewish News I HAIFA—Prof. Jacob Wolfo- ! witz of the University of Illi- nois has been 'awarded an honorary degree of Doctor. of Science by the Technion-Is- rael Institute of Technology. He was honored for con- tributions to the fields of probability theory, informa- tion theory, and mathemati- cal statistics and for his long- standing relationship with the institute. 17515 W. 9 Mile Rd., Suite 865 Southfield, Mich. 48075 _____ Please-send a year's gift subscription to:' NAME 1 ADDRESS CITY STATE FOR• state occasion FROM ❑ $10 enclosed ZIP