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August 01, 1975 - Image 32

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1975-08-01

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

32 Friday, August 1, 1975

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Ford Visits Death Camp

PARIS (JTA) —
dent Ford laid a wreath
Tuesday at the interna-
tional monument at Ausch-
witz marking the site of the
notorious death camp where
four million Jews were slain
by the Nazis . during World
War II.
The stone monolith,
erected by the Polish gov-
ernment, contains no men-
tion of the fact that most of
the victims were Jews. The
inscription, in 20 languages,
states only that "four mil-
lion people suffered and
died here at the hands of the
Nazi murderers between the
years 1940 and 1946."
The President, who

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prayerbook Insert Commemorates 1973 War

toured the Auschwitz site
near Cracow in southern Po-
land, made no formal state-
ment, but he remarked, "it's
horrible . . . unbelievable,"
when he viewed the gas
chambers and crematorium
ovens. He was accompanied
by the Secretary-General of
the Polish Communist
Party, Edward Gierek, and
by Secretary of State Henry
A. Kissinger, many of
whose relatives died in
death camps similar to
Auschwitz.

According to eyewit-
nesses, the President ap-
peared deeply moved as he
walked through the rem-
nants of the Nazi charnal
house for some 12 minutes.
Later he wrote in the
camp's book of remembr-
ance: "This monument
and the memory of those it
honors is for us a new
source of inspiration in the
quest for peace and for
cooperation and security
for all nations."

Ford visited Auschwitz on
the second and last day of
his visit to Poland. He left
Warsaw Tuesday for Hel-
sinki where he will attend
the 35-nation European
Conference on security and
cooperation and confer
with Soviet Communist
Party Secretary General
Leonid Brezhnev.
Meanwhile, Israel's Am-
bassador to Helsinki, A•ieh
Eilan, is attending the Eu-
ropean security summit,
which opened in Helsinki
Wednesday. Eilan and
Egypt's Ambassador to Hel-
sinki, Ahmed Tawfik
Khalil, have distinguished
visitor status at the summit,
attended by 33 European
states, the United States
and Canada.

The special Yom Kippur prayerbook insert, prepared by the United Jewish Appeal and distributed to syn-
agogues throughout the country, is a four-page English reading which commemorates the anniversary of the Yom
Kippur War and conveys the importance of remembrance and unity.

Yom Kippur prayerbook
inserts produced by the
rabbinical council of the
United Jewish Appeal are
available to local syn-
agogues and Jewish agen-
cies at no charge from the
Jewish Welfare Federation.
The leaflet, "Sound the
Great Shofar for Our Free-
dom" is a four-page com-

In 1655 Oliver Cronwell
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and her possessions; the
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Spain.

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from Federation.
The reading received
widespread use nationwide
and in Detroit when it was
first available last year.
Several local synagogues are
expected to use the insert in
this year's services.
To order quantities of the
leaflet and posters, call Mrs.

memorative reading de-
signed for High Holy Day
services. The booklet calls to
remembrance the anniver-
sary of the 1973 Yom Kip-
pur.
IVar.
A full-color poster of the
booklet's cover art, a photo-
graph of hands holding - the
shofar, is also available

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Other treasures in the
society's library include:
r7 The first complete Bible
in Hebrew to be published
in America. It came from
the presses of William Fry
of Philadelphia in 1814.
A facsimile of the Dead
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at least 100 BC. It is the
best-preserved and among
the oldest of the ancient
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covered in 1947 in a cave
near the Dead Sea.
1
The society's library is

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Who feels no sense of
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—The Talmud

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— Louis D. Brandeis

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