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Reasonable rates. 368-6448. 50 — PERSONAL Elderly lady, in good health, seeking same to share hotel room in Florida or Cal- ifornia middle of January for 1 month or longer. Call 356-5525 after 6 pm Mea Shearim's Rafael Clinic By MOSHE RON The Jewish News Special Israel Correspondent TEL AVIV—Instead He records the trials and portrays the prejudiced judges and false witnesses. His descriptions of the slave labor camps, where he was enslaved for many years, undoubtedly, will serve as source material for future historians. Kopelev relates numerous anti-Semitic incidents he encountered. The following is a typical one: "'What do we have here? First you presume to attack the decisions of the Soviet government and the high command, and now you have the audacity to demand that we give you back your Party card.' " 'I insisted that I hadn't made 'these attacks, exposed by the sworn testi- mony of Major Goldstein, who was present during the conversation when accord- ing to Zabashtansky's lying report . . . " 'Naturally, Goldstein sticks up for him,' said a blond, square-faced colonel. `So we're to believe a Gold- stein, I suppose, while a front-line Russian officer is to be dismissed as slanderer.' " 'Shame on you!' I cried. `Goldstein is just as good a Soviet officer as Zabash- tansky, just as much a front-line soldier. I never expected to hear that kind of talk here !"' It is worthy of note that Kopelev never menlions his Jewishness, although he professes : "This blend of Christian communism and pragmatic common sense became my faith for many years." Had Kopelev been acquainted with Jewish his- tory and studied com- parative religion, he would have known that the Essenes practiced broth- erhood and authentic com- munism long before there were Jewish Christians. It is significant to point out that Solzhenitsyn has. been criticized for not not- ing in his books the cold- blooded murder of the hun- dreds of Jewish intellectuals committed by the Soviet government. Lev Kopelev deserves the same repr- oach. He, moreover, should be reproached for failing to mention, even in passing, the cultural genocide per- petrated by his government against the Soviet Jews. Kopelev's indifference to Jews and Judaism can only be explained by this confession: "As late as 1953, the year before hundreds Jew- ish intellectual were mur- dered by the Soviet secret police, MGB, now KGB, if another war had broken out, we would probably have marched off as volunteers with the old cry of 'For the Motherland!- For Stalin!' And if as late as then, the planned resettlement of the Jews into a Socialist ghetto in the Far East had actually occurred, even there, on the Armur River, there would have been thousands of young men eager to rush off to Korea, Vietnam, Cuba or Taiwan - any front any- where - to prove that they `belonged' and even more - fundamentally, to carry out what they felt to be their duty to the main, great cause." Lillian Hellman Book Source of New Fred Zinnemann Film TEL AVIV—There is an organization in Israel, called The Association of Religious Jewish Scientists, most of whose members are experts in the fields of mechanics and electronics. This organization has car- . ried through an investigation of the causes of heart attacks. The study lasted more than five years and dealt with more than 10,000 Jews in Israel over 40 years old who had been treated for heart disease. Besides causes such as the high rate of cholesterol in the blood, smoking etc. the investigation found further reasons such as blood cate- gory, country of birth and relations within the family. The study found that the percentage of religious people who suffer from heart diseases is much lower than among the non- reli 'ous. The organization held -its convention in Jerusalem and in the religious Bar-Ilan University in Ramat Gan. At the convention Dr. Dov Erlich from the medical faculty at Tel Aviv Univer- sity declared that on the basis of his medical expe- rience, the religious family is generally in better phys- ical condition and is health- ier, more united, cahrier, and has less worries. Also, By ALLEN A. WARSEN PAINTING—Interiors and exte- riors. Fair, reasonable prices. Good quality work. Ed Gilbert. 967-3590. for ranches —$125 ";•-- Dissident Kopelev Tells 'Gulag' Experiences MOVING LARKINS MOVERS REFERRAL SERVICE 357-2674 EXTERIOR-INTERIOR Friday, October 14, 1977 61 of magazines, one will find copies of the Talmud in the waiting room of the Rafael Clinic in Jerusalem. Located in the ultra-Ortho- dox Mea Shearim quarter, the waiting room also fea- tures a curtain separating male from female patients. According to assistant director Dr. Avraham Cohen; the clinic was opened after a survey showed that inhabitants of the quarter relied more on medications rather than physicians when they fell ill. Another innovation the clinic has introduced is gynecological examiniations for the Orthodox women, who have heretofore refused such treatment. The women are examined by a female gynecologist. Moreover, the clinic provides a baby-sit- ting service for mothers who leave their children at home while they are at the doctor's. Because many of the Mea Shearim residents are in a low-income bracket or do not subscribe to the national health plans, many patients are treated at no charge. Likewise, the clinic has con- tracted some Jerusalem pharmacies to sell patients drugs at reduced prices. However, the clinic plans to have its own pharmacy. The Rafael Clinic accepts patients of all religious per- suasions although it estab- lished for the Jewish Ortho- dox. The clinic receives support throughout Israel, as well as from Orthodox Jews around the world. NJ Federation TEANECK, N.J. (JTA)— A United Jewish Commu- nity of Bergen County has been organized to bring into a single umbrella agency a variety of organizations presently collecting funds separately for the United _Jewish Appeal and local, national and overseas causes. The latest addition to the "gulag" (Russian acronym for Central Administration_ of Corrective Labor Camps" ) literature is Lev Kopelev's 961-page auto- biography "To Be Pre- served Forever" (J. B. Lip- pincott ). The Russian edition of the original 729- page text was published by Ardis at Ann Arbor, Mich. The autobiography includes a foreword by Lil- lian Hellman and an after- word by Robert G. Keiser. The translator, Anthony Austin, is a journalist and a former Moscow correspondent. Lev Kopelev commences his life story by relating his experiences at the front dur- ing the Second World War and by describing his counter-espionage activities in Prussia and East Prussia. He portrays vividly and eloquently the military per- sonnel he served with, and details the trumped-up charges leveled against him. Among others, he was accused of "undermining the morale and political consciousness of the Soviet troops, discrediting the Soviet command, disrupting military operations; propa- ganda in favor of the enemy, pity for the Ger- mans, and slandering the allies." The author, moreover, records his arrests ; deli- neates the prisons he was confined in, including Butyrki prison; depicts their inmates, the inhuman conditions within the prison walls, and the brutal meth- ods of interrogating accused and witnesses. By HERBERT G. LUFT (Copyright 1977, JTA, Inc.) HOLLYWOOD—Fred Zin- nemann, Academy Award winner for "From Here to Eternity" and "A Man for All Seasons," most recently completed- on locations in England and on the conti- nent filming of Lillian Hel- lman's "Julia," an episode from the famed novelist's autobiographical book "Pentimento," detailing a lifelong friendship between Ms. Hellman and a mys- terious woman who per- ished in Nazi Germany on the eve of World War II. ("Julia" is produced by Richard Roth for 20th Cen- tury-Fox.) Fred Zinnemann, today 70, is a native of Vienna, who studied camera tech- niques in Paris and came to the United States at age 22. A master of the visual expression, Zinnemann's cinematic work remains compassionate throughout; the dilemma of the hero in "High Noon," the crisis of conscience in "A Man for All Seasons"; the conflict of a loving woman reflected in "The Nun's Story"; and the tension of an assassination plot in "The Day of the were There" Jackal." "Teresa," "The Men," "Member of the Wedding," "Sundowners," "Hatful of Rain" and "Behold a Pale Horse." Just as Robert Fla- herty whom Zinnemann assisted in the early 1930s, Zinnemann has never com- promised, rather made fewer pictures. James Caan appears as a horse doctor of the Old West in "Another Man, Another Chance," French • director Claude . Lelouch's first Hol- Iywood picture in which evieve Bujold portrays a Parisian emigree. Lelonh rose to fame with "A Man and A Woman" which won the 1966 Cannes Film Festi- val award. I was deeply impressed with "Vivre pour Vivre," an indictment of war; and "Toute une Vie," which dealt with a Jewish family throughout 50 years, and won Lelouch an Acad- emy Award for his own screenplay. The picture is produced for United Artists release by French-Russian movie vet- eran Alexandre Mnouchkine who has been associated `-"with the films of Lelouch for more than 10 years. Whether Kopelev has ever recanted his unconcern for the Jewish people and their culture, cannot be ascer- tained from his life story. He did, however, reject the Bolshevik immoral practices : "But I came, at length, to understand. I came to understand that my fate, which had seemed so sense- lessly, so undeservedly cruel, was actually fortu- nate and just. It was just because I did deserve to be punished — for the many years I had zealously partic- ipated in plundering the peasants, worshipping Sta- lin, lying and deceiving myself in the name of 'his- torical necessity,' and teaching others to believe in lies and - to bow before scoundrels." Lev Kopelev, according to the afterword by Robert G. Keiser, was instrumental in having Solzhenitsyn's novel "One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich" published. Thus Kopelev helped launch "one of the most dramatic literary careers in the 20th Century." Lev Kopelev was the character after whom Sol- zhenitsyn modeled Lev Rubin in "The First arde." Solzhenitsyn and Kopelev shared the same "com- forts" in the same slave labor camps. Anthony Austin's trans- lation of Lev Kopelev's "To Be Preserved Forever" is excellent. Israeli Doctors Determine Religious Jews Are Healthier By MOSHE RON The Jewish News Special Israel Correspondent the religious, woman is closer and more dedicated to her husband and chil- dren. The religious family keeps together on the Sab- bath, which - fosters unity, mutual family interests and causes satisfaction and health, according to the doctor. Prof. H. Blandheim from Hadassah Hospital in Jerusalem said, that reli- gious Jews, who rest on the Sabbath suffer less from heart diseases. Research carried out among the scholars of Netiv Meir Yeshiva in Jerusalem showed that their blood pressure was generally bet- ter than average. The con- centration of free oxygen which often also causes heart•diseases was less. Rabbi Yizhak Halperin and Uri Desberg, who head. the religious department in the Technion described the invention of a special kqttle which can heat water With- out breaking the laws of the Sabbath. Rabbi Israel Rosen spoke about the invention of an electric wheel chair which can be operated on Shabat without breaking the Shabat laws. Engineer Menahem Hartman, who is working in the Defense Ministry, dem- onstrated inventions which can operate factory machin- ery on the Sabbath without breaking the Sabbath rules.