36 Friday, April 18, 1975 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS The Holocaust: Could It Ever Happen Again? By JACK SIEGEL NEW YORK (JTA) — The recent statement by Ashraf Ghorbal, the Egyptian Am- bassador to the United States, in a right-wing weekly in Argentina that the Arabs have decided "to put an end to Judaism . . . which must disappear. To- day, tomorrow, it will disap- pear," placed alongside the memorializatiOn of the 30th year of the liberation of Nazi extermination camps puts into bas relief the whole question again of an- ti-Semitism. Ghorbal's call for the de- struction of a religion is SINGLES DANCE SHERATON -SOUTHFLELD SUNDAY C4* APRIL 27 8 P. M. Beauty Shop of Birmingham 730 N. Woodward Specialists in Hair Cutting • Styling Permanents • Coloring Manicuring . 642-2250 $2 discount with this ad the style of the time. The rest of him was camp cloth- ing and woodep shoes. He thanked me for the chance to talk and announced he was of Jewish origin. When I told him that he held a top job in the Nazi system and that, therefore, it was not possible, he said, yes, that is so but he was not known as a Jew and even in his own mind, he had forgotten it. - "What reminded you," I asked, "the fact that you are now in a prison?" "No," he said. "As you can see, I left the post in 1935." new; it is not Zionism, it is not .Israel he wants de- stroyed,. but in effect the whole Jewish people. Hitler had the same idea in his final solution and while he did not succeed, he did dis- pose of six million Jews, among other nationals. Thirty years ago, this writer was a private in the Military Intelligence Serv- ice (MIS) of the Army of the United States. And until the time I was shipped home in December 1945, I was assigned to two American internment camps for Nazi political prisoners. In the light of this anni- versary, it is perhaps well to recall that moment of his- tory when Hitler's empire came crumbling down un- der the onslaught of allied forces and the rottenness of his society was exposed in its corrupted human beings. They were many and varied; government officials, busi- nessmeu, professors. and workers, both men and `women. At this writing, one in particular comes to mind because of the oddity of his situation and its contradic- tion. He was a "Gaur.edner" (State Speaker) and his job was to tour his area, make Nazi speeches and exhort the people to support Hitler. He had this title and func- tion from 1933 to 1935 and he was arrested by U.S. forces for that reason. The man was small, mid- dle-aged and mustached in "And the Nazis permit- ted you to do it without reason?" I said. "I was sick," he said. "But the real reason was that I re- membered my grand- father. I remembered that he would take me to the park. He was an old man and he wore a beard. And I remembered that the children in the neighbor- hood used to make fun of him and call him Saujude (Jew Pig). As a child, it made an impression on me but with time and events, it faded." "Until now?" I asked. "Yes," he said. And waited for me to exercise compassion. I thought then of all the speeches the man must have made, not only extolling Hitler, but attacking the Jews as well. "Where Fashion Is Created Not Followed" 14 8 18 kt. Gold Jewelry • Sterling Silver. Jewelry • Diamonds & other Precious gems • Watches & Giftware "The ultimate in custom designed jewelry" THE JEWELRY CELLAR, INC. 29229 NORTHWESTERN HWY. SOUTHFIELD, MICHIGAN 48076 • (313) 356-2727 "I find it strange," I said, "that until you recalled that your old grandfather was- a Jew, you accepted the Hitler philosophy, that you rose to a high position in the Nazi. hierarchy and that you made speeches for Hitler and his program. "That means to me that you were for everything Hit- ler meant, including the destruction of the Jews. And only to save your skin, you decided to separate yourself from Hitler. And now you come to me..w - ith this story and you expect me to believe it!" "It's true," he said. "And you'd like me to recommend your release from camp?" I asked. "Yes," he said. "I am a Jew." Another inmate is re- membered. The inmate's name was Herman Gering, Look for the little gold house on N.W. between Franklin & Inkster Margolis Household Furniture 29 YEARS OLD at the Same . STAND 6 Mile, 1 Blk. W. of Schaefer SHARPENING the PENCIL ARNOLD MARGOLIS On All Name Brands Furniture and Bedding To Name a Few: • SIMMONS • SEALY • SERTA • SPRING AIR • LA-Z-BOY • STIFFEL LAMPS • KROEHLER • AMERICAN • BURLINGTON • BASSETT • BARCALOUNGER • LANE • UNIQUE 342-5351 13703 W. McNichols, 1 Blk. W. of Schaefer Mon., Thurs., Fri. til 8:30 Tues., Wed., Sat. til 5:30 not the famous Marshal, but a little man who was arrested because he had been a Gestapo "spitzel," or stool pigeon. He was what the Ger- mans•called a lumpen, a declassed worker, part of the mass of unemployed of all classes who formed the core of the S.A.(Sturm Ab- teilung), Hitler's brown shirted street gangs. His job was to inform on people and when they were "convicted" to take them into a closed room and shoot them with a pistol in the head. He was brought in. Little and formerly fat. Prison fare had reduced the blub- ber and his skin hung. He was frightened to death. The men of the team who came from Europe decided to have some fun with him. They insisted he was "the" Hermann Goering. He insisted he was not, pleaded he was not, cried he was not, because he feared if we really believed it, he would receive the same fate as his victims had. He confessed to his role with the Gestapo but refused to admit he was the Hermann Goering. Then one of the men said to him: "Why did you do it? Why did you inform on peo- ple, then take them into a room and shoot them in the head with the pistol?" We were curious what could so debase and corrupt what once might have been a hu- man being. And he said, "So ist das leben." (Such is life.) And seemed satisfied with the answer. One day, Louis S, a Jew- ish sergeant from Newark who was assigned to the Military Governinent unit came to the camp and told me there was a German professor of political science in town who wanted to help the Ameri- cans. The man was young, Louis said, about 39, was married to an English woman and had five chil- dren. The next day the man and his wife came. He was tall, thin and ascetic looking. What blond hair he had was receding and he spoke an Jewish Chaplains Name President NEW YORK — Rabbi Seymour H. Brickman, a consultant for the Board of Jewish Education in New York, has been elected pres- ident of the Association of Jewish Chaplains in the Armed Forces. Rabbi Brickman served as U.S. Air Force Chaplain at Lackland Air Force Base in Texas and Chanute Air Force Base in Illinois from 1956 to 1958. He was the Jewish chaplain at the United States Military Aca- demy at West Point, N.Y. from 196Q to 1962. Active in community anti professional organizations, Rabbi Brickman was chair- man of the Board of Educa- tion of Yeshiva of Flatbush in Brooklyn, New York from 1970 to 1974. impeccable English, ha-.Ting studied at Oxford. We talked a little bit and I discovered he had been appointed to his job as chairman of the Depart- ment of Political Science of Berlin UniverAity after 1939. In our books then, he was a "mandatory arrest." I also learned the profes- sor was a Scharfuehrer (corporal) in the S.A., the gangs who roamed the streets beating up and kill- ing people until displaced by the SS, after the 1934 break with Roehm, head of the S.A., who was threat- ening Hitler's leadership. I then told the professor he would have to remain in camp. I told his wife- she was a traitor and a renegade and the only reason she was being released was because she had five children. For two days, off and on, I talked with the professor, and I learned his basic job was to lecture troops on the necessity of destroying the British Empire. I thought that was an odd function for a teacher and he said he believed it. "How come," I asked, "that you, a professor, an intellectual, a thinking man joined the S.A. who were nothing but street gangs?" He said it was for comradely pur- poses. They would drink a beer, that was all. With bums, with bullies, with killers of defenseless peo- ple? I then asked him whether he supported Hit- ler's treatment of the Jews (at that point the full story was not yet out). The pro- fessor said he was against the policy of destroying Jews. He believed they should have been sent to Palestine or in some far eastern country. I asked him whether he was a Zionist, in that sense, and he said his belief for the dispersion of the 'Jews to Palestine was simply a re- jection of the need to de- stroy them. I said, "Your idea of the final solution is to displace and dispossess the Jews. What did you do actively against the policy of killing the Jews?" He didn't an- swer. On the final day, when I had determined he should not be left free to roam Ger- man cities or streets, to talk to people about his ideas of Nazism, I asked him: "And what do you think of Hitler now?" He said, "Hitler is like your flag. He is above criticism." I moved to the typewriter to do a report on these cases for Seventh Army Head- quarters in Heidelberg and I remember thinking 14 -w glad I was that this was over, that it could never happen again. Never? International Music with HENRI WAKNINE AND HIS ORCHESTRA 543-1430 357-0139 % off ON ALL SOCIAL ANNOUNCEMENTS and WEDDING INVITATIONS with this ad thru 5/3 THE COUNTRY PEDDLER Tel-Ex Plaza, Telegraph at 10 357-2122 Your Corner Store in a Plaza Daily 10 to 9:30, Sunday 12 to 9:30 BankAmericard, Master Charge FREE GIFT WRAPPING 1 Week Only 40% to 50% SALE On select SPRING Merchandise • Dresses • Pant Suits • Sweaters • Blouses • Pants • Belts 15075 Lincoln Lincoln Tower Apts. 968-0444 Oak Park Mon.-Sat. 10-4 Sun. 12-4