18 May 28, 1976 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 77 Activists From Soviet Union Call for Culture Revival in the USSR as Antidote to Severe Anti-Jewish Pressures NEW YORK (JTA) — In what the Student Struggle for Soviet Jewry termed "a major new policy statement by leaders of the emigration movement," 77 Jewish activ- NEW CADILLAC? BUY OR LEASE FROM ANDY BLAU in BIRMINGHAM at WILSON-CRISSMAN CADILLAC CALL BUS. MI 4-1930 RES. 642-6836 1350 N. WOODWARD, BIRMINGHAM ists from 13 Soviet cities have called for "the revival of Jewish culture in the USSR" as an antidote to anti-Jewish pressure so sev- ere that in one generation "one million Jews will dis- appear." The activists contend that they are not replacing emi- gration to Israel, but are seeking "a cultural auton- omy of Soviet Jews inside the USSR" at a time when The look of assurance. Its the look of a Gentlemen's Quarter man. - And no wonder. 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The program of the activ- ists for both Soviet Jews who choose to stay or wish to leave include a system of Jewish and Hebrew educa- tion; access to or publication of Jewish books in Russian, including religious works; publication of Jewish jour- nals in Russian; and the es- tablishment of Jewish cul- tural performing groups. At the same time, Har- old Ostroff, in his farewell assessment as outgoing president of the Work- men's Circle, told 1,000 delegates to the organiza- tion's national convention here last weekend that UNESCO, which grants funds for intercultural ac- tivities, "should make funds available to the Jew- ish communities within the Soviet Union to re-es- tablish their theaters, cul- tural institutions and lit- erary societies." Ostroff said that those Jews who choose to remain in the USSR are entitled to continue their secular cul- tural activities, "and UNESCO is the proper me- dium of assistance, _one which the Soviet cannot claim is tainted by Western influence." In Washington, eight Sen- ators agreed to seek estab- lishment of a permanent Congressional advisory group that would closely and continuously monitor treatment of Jews in the So- viet Union. The bi-partisan group also launched a direct effort to determine the current personal circumstances of 30 Soviet Jews who had met with 16 Senators in a Mos- cow hotel during an official U.S. visit last summer. Their action came at a breakfast meeting at the Capitol, hosted by Sen. Jacob K. Javits (R-N.Y.) who proposed the steps after hearing Alexander Luntz, the Moscow scien- tist who was allowed to emigrate to Israel last January, describe grow- ing harassment and perse- cution of Soviet Jews and plead with the Senators to "try more" to help them. Javits suggested that the Senators provide Soviet Ambassador Anatoly Dob- rynin with the names of the 30 Jews and follow through to obtain details on their cir- cumstances. He urged both Houses of Congress estab- lish "an institutional mech- anism for continued over- sight on this question" of depriving Soviet Jews of their right to emigrate if they wished. Meanwhile, Israel learned of stepped-up attempts by Soviet authorities to harass would-be Jewish emigrants. Foreign Minister Yigal Allon told the Knesset that 20 Jewish scientists and professionals were sum- moned to the police station nearest their homes and warned that if they did not find employment within a fortnight they would be punished. These persons had in fact been fired from their jobs for submitting exit visa applications, Allon said. In a related development, the International League for the Repatriation of Rus- sian Jews called attention to a new violation of the Hel- sinki agreement and urged U.S. intervention. Rabbi Benjamin Blech, league president who made the announcement, said his group has been informed of a new strategy that has been introduced by the So- viets to prevent reunifica- tion of families in direct violation of the Helsinki ac- cord and Soviet law which specifically permits emigra- tion for the purpose of reu- nification with family and one's ethnic group. According to Rabbi Blech, within the past —/ three weeks Soviet Jews applying for visas have been called to the "ovir" and interrogated for hours about their relatives who have invited them to come to Israel. "Emigration papers, painstakingly as- sembled after months of hard work, are torn up in front of the applicants and they are forced to sign statements denouncing relations in Israel," Blech reported. "Many such in- cidents have already been reported in Moscow, Len- ingrad and Odessa." In letters to Ford and Kis- singer, Blech urged that the U.S. government take this matter under advisement and call these violations to the attention of the Soviet government. Meanwhile, Emanuel Shimoni, the Israel Consul General in Philadelphia, declared that Soviet Jews who emigrate to the United States are jeopardizing the chances of thousands of other Jews in the USSR of going to Israel. Shimoni told an interna- tional forum at the annual meeting of Bnai Brith's Middle Atlantic Region at the Concord Hotel that fail- ure of Soviet Jews to go to Israel provides the Soviets with an excuse to close the gates to Jewish Emigration still further. He urged Americans not to offer So- viet Jewish emigrants more aid and assistance than they would receive in Israel. In another development, strong community support for a memorial to Col. Efim Davidovich, a Soviet Jewish war hero who died in Minsk on April 24 after suffering his eighth heart attack, was urged by the Greater New York Confer- ence on Soviet Jewry. Malcolm Hoenlein, con- ference executive director, said that to commemorate ilk his deep love for Israel, a 111, memorial grove has been set aside in Davidovich's name in the Soviet Jewry Freedom Forest. Ex-Nazi Jailed BONN — Johannes No- wotsch, 75, a former Nazi officer, was sentenced by a west German court to five years imprisonment on con- viction of taking part in the killing of .500 Jews in Poland in World War II. r- / ,/