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August 29, 1975 - Image 5

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1975-08-29

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

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Friday, August 29, 1975 5

Rocket Strike Near Golan Heights Settlements Shatters Calm

TEL AVIV (JTA) — Is-
raeli officials said several
Katyusha rockets were fired
last weekend at targets in
the southern Golan Heights.
sending settlers in several
settlements to shelters.
However, no damage or cas-

GEORGE
OHRENSTEIN

JEWELERS Ltd.

ualties were reported.
The officials said it was
uncertain whether the rock-
ets had been fired from Jor-
danian or Syrian territory
because the frontier be-
tween Jordan and Syria
runs along the southern bor-
der of the Heights.
The shellings ended a long
period of relative calm in
the area.
Meanwhile, Heinz Gal-
inski, chairman of the
West Berlin Jewish corn-

munity, narrowly escaped
death from a parcel bomb
mailed to his office in the

West Berlin JeNeish Corn-
munity Center.
On Opening the parcel, he

Expose of Interpol

A series of articles on the international police
agency by S. A. Barram, a noted English writer
and researcher, starts in the Rosh Hashana issue
of The Jewish News next week.

A special Bicentennial article on the "Bard of
Liberty" and a score of other important features
will also appear in next week's New Year issue.

• Certified Horologist
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(Copyright 1975, JTA, Inc.)

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LONDON — One of the
most significant collections
of photographs and docu-
ments on the Holocaust is in
search of a permanent home
in Israel.
Dr.
Alexander
C.K.
Bernfes, the compiler of this
collection which is known as
the Bernfes Archives, is pro-
foundly anxious about the
fate of his life's work. This
material has been put on
display in various parts of
the world, and films have
been made about it.
At present, these many
thousands of unique photo-
graphs and documents on
the Warsaw Ghetto are
housed in Bernfes' modest
one-room flat in London's
Paddington section.
Bernfes' health is failing
following a serious opera-
tion. He is in his late 60's.
His family perished in the
Holocaust. The recent sent-
ence of life imprisonment
handed down by a West
German court on Ludwig
Hahan, the SS officer in
charge of security in War-
saw, is the culumination of
Bernfes' fight. It was only
by the relentless pressure of
Bernfes, who had acquired
photographic and documen-
tary proof 'of Hahan's Nazi
past, that the court was able
to hand down its sentence.
Bernfes also provided
material for the prosecu-
tion. at the Nuremberg
War Crimes Trials. He
started his collection, after
extricating material on the
Warsaw Ghetto from the
Chancellory of Hitler in
Berlin in 1945, just after
the fall of the Third Reich.
Bernfes feels it is vitally
urgent to find a permanent
home for the Bernfes Ar-
chives in Israel. He said he
regretted that major Jewish
organizations had denied
him assistance for what was
not a personal project, but
something that belonged to
the Jewish people.

There are four types who
sit at the feet of sages: a
sponge, funnel, a strainer,
and a sieve. The sponge ab-
sorbs everything, indiscrimi-
nately. The funnel takes in
at one end, and lets out at
the other. The strainer lets
through the wine and re-
tains the less. The sieve lets
off' the bran and retains the
flour.
—The Talmud

found a cigar box. Galinski,
a non-smoker, immediately
called the police who re-

Daily—Hospital—Sympathy

moved the object in a bomb
disposal van where it ex-
ploded but caused no harm.

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