Agemmipow THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Boris Smolar's 'Between You ... and Me' Editor-in-Chief Emeritus, JTA (Copyright 1976, JTA, Inc.) INSIDE RUSSIA: Hedrick Smith, who spent three years in Moscow as correspondent of the New York Times, deals very extensively with the treatment of Jews in the USSR — and with their moods — in his excellent book "The Russians," just published. The author devotes many pages to the "Pariahs" — as the mistreated Jews are called by some in the Soviet Union. He brings out the anti-Jewish discriminations practiced in the government system. He analyzes the feelings of anti- Semitism prevailing within the population, especially in the \— --Ukraine, and tells of the growing interest among com- pletely assimilated Soviet-born Jews to know more about Jewishness. He deals, of course, with the movement among the Jews to emigrate and the reasons given by Jews who are not inclined to leave. He estimates that a million or more Jews have already opted for assimilation in Soviet life and left themselves no way out. The general picture of the situation of the Jews in the USSR emerging from his well-written book is that they are the most mistreated national minority in the USSR. They are derisively called "The pyaty punkty" — "The fifth poin- ters" — a reference to the point No. 5 in their identity docu- ments which stamps them specifically as Jews, thus pre- venting them from hOlding certain positions, restricting their opportunities to higher education, and making their lives difficult in many other ways. THE MOSCOW JOKE: The remarkable phenomenon in Soviet life today is the fact that although Jews are treated worse than any other nationality in the USSR, many Soviet non-Jews seek intermarriage with Jews, ac- cording to Smith. They believe that intermarriage will help them to emigrate. The author illustrates this point by telling one of the many jokes going around in Moscow: A man tells officials that he does not want to leave, but his family wants to emi- grate."Well, if you don't want to go, why did you apply?" the colonel asks . . . "Don't you see?" Abramovich explains. "I am the only Jew in the family . . ." Smith says the Kremlin was startled by the brazenness with which the Soviet Jews started their movement for emi- gration. The Kremlin could have finished the movement in a trice, he asserts, but the powerful, organized support which this movement received abroad made Brezhnev think twice. The Kremlin was caught in a dilemma because it did not want to appear as a strong-arm police state while it pursued detente. Its tactics were rough, but there were limits. Now, Smith believes, the Kremlin has—by costly trial and error — arrived at a "liveable combination" policy of elective intimidation and limited emigration. It aims to ap- pease the West, and at the same time put a damper on the trend toward emigration while discreetly ridding the coun- try of disaffected Jewish intellectuals and dissidents. Other ethnic groups are made to feel, through crackdown in the Ukraine, Lithuania, Armenia and elsewhere, that Jews are a special case not be emulated. PRIDE AND FRUSTRATION: Smith found that the most powerful motive behind Jewish emigration was not militant Zionism but a newly vibrant sense of Jewish na- tionalism — a drive for self-affirmation as Jews in Soviet life. In the Soviet system, being a Jew and asserting Jewish- ness implicitly conflicts with being a loyal Soviet citizen, he points out. Soviet Jews, Smith asserts, had accommodated them- selves to anti-Semitic slurs and job discrimination, but the most glaring grievance to the Jewish activists is that they are being denied positive outlets for their own ethnic ident- ity. He quotes some of them as saying that they consider themselves men without a nationality in a very nationalistic country. In his private contacts, he found successful, assim- ilated Jews who shared the feeling of resurgent Jewish pride and cultural frustration. Other ethnic groups complain privately that creeping Russification is depriving them of their cultural identity and heritage, but they have their geographic regions, their "government" schools, ethnic theaters, and literary and cul- t ural traditions. Jews have almost none of this. There was time in the '30s when there were more than 1,200 Yiddish lischools maintained by the government system. They were liquidated when Stalin erased all traces of Jewish culture. Smith believes it is the denial of this ethnic outlet that Jewish activists in Russia have been protesting with their emigration movement. Jews 'Invisible' in Top Bank Jobs Sol Kolack, director of the BOSTON (JTA) — Jews are practically invisible at ADL New England office, senior executive levels in said the ADL had conducted Boston's major banks, the a two-month investigation, Massachusetts State Bank- examining 312 banks in 103 ing Commission was told at communities in the state a hearing by two officials of and finding that only 1.1 the Anti-Defamation percent of bank executive League of Bnai Brith. positions were held by Jews. `Jehudah Halevi' Filmstrip Released NEW YORK — The filmstrip, "An Interview With Jehudah Halevi," has been released by the Tar- bah Foundation for the Ad- vancement of Hebrew Cul- ture. Placing emphasis on au- dio-visual aspects of Jewish education, the Tarbuth Foundation produced the filmstrip upon the 900th anniversary of the birthday of the poet-philosopher of Spanish Jewry's Golden Age. "An Interview with Jehu- dah Ha _vi" based on au- thentic -. ictorial material of the per d and underscored by Lad.no folk music, as well as by other appropriate themes, was written by Dr. Emil Lehman, executive vice president of the founda- tion, and performed by Pen, innah Schram and Eli Gam- liel. Recitals of Halevi's poetry in Hebrew and En- glish are interwoven in the narrative. Copies of the filmstrip may be ordered from Tar- buth Foundation, 2 Penn Plaza, Suite 1980, New York, N. Y. 10001. Israel Is Lacking Nuclear Weapons, Dinitz Affirms MONTREAL (JTA) — Sirncha Dinitz, the Israel Ambassador to the United States, reiterated in Mon- treal Israel's denial that it is a nuclear power. "Israel is not a nuclear country and we shall never be the first country to intro- duce nuclear weapons in the Middle East," he told a press conference. "Re- garding our capacity to build such bombs, it is sim- ply theoretical." Dinitz, in Montreal to address a dinner of the Friends of the Ben-Gurion University, also affirmed that Israel will never pay "political blackmail" to Syria for the renewal of the United Nations Disengage- ment Observer Force (UNDOF) in the Golan Heights when the mandate expires at the end of May. He said the stationing of UNDOF was part of the dis- engagement agreement be- tween Israel and Syria. April 30, 1976 17 To our contributors .. . Congratulations on your accomplishments! Because of your contributions to the 1976 Allied Jewish Campaign-Israel Emergency Fund, people will • be welcomed to Israel with the necessary housing, language classes and absorption programs for newcomers • receive personal and family counseling • continue their employment in a sheltered workshop • live with dignity in sheltered housing • be given medical and health care • benefit from job placement services • continue their Jewish and Hebrew educations and benefit from many other programs which maintain and improve the quality of Jewish life NYANA Creates New Department NEW YORK — The crea- tion of a new department at New York Association for New Americans (NYANA) responsible for community relations, Jewish education and volunteer services was announced by Dr. Herbert Bernstein, the agency's ex- ecutive director. The Community Services Department, said Dr. Bern- stein, was established mainly as a bridge with the New York Jewish commu- nity in facilitating the set- tlement of Russian immi- grants. Two of its other major functions will be to intro- duce Russian immigrants to the basics of Judaism and Jewish life in New York and to generate volunteer pro- grams and personnel at the agency. We have a special thanks for those Campaign leaders and workers who have worked with us these past months soliciting contributions to the Campaign which benefits 60 humanitarian agencies all over the world. If you've not yet made your gift to the AJC-IEF, please make your best possible pledge and send in a payment today! Thank you. Dr. Leon Fill Merle Harris 1976 Allied Jewish Campaign-Israel Emergency Fund 163 Madison Avenue, Detroit 48226 965-3939