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THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
42 Friday, Avgast 18, 1918
More Soviet Jewish Refusniks Sentenced
RRY FREEDMAN
shy and Enterteionind
47-2367
NEW YORK (JTA) —
The Student Struggle for
Soviet Jewry and Union of
Councils for Soviet Jews re-
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ported that 30-year-old
Kishinev refusenik Mikhail
Roiz, a radio engineer, has
been sentenced to a year's
imprisonment for "draft
evasion," although he has
already served three years
in the Red Army.
At the same time, it was
learned that Ida Nudel, who
was sentenced June 21 to
four years internal exile for
"malicious hooliganism,"
has been sent to a village
near Tomsk in Siberia. The
Greater New York Confer-
ence on Soviet Jewry said
she is working there as an
economist for the State Ag-
ricultural Fund. Miss
Nudel, 'the "guardian
angel" of the Soviet Jewry
movement, was arrested
June 2 as she and 13 other
Jewish activists de-
monstrated in Moscow
against the arrest of Vla-
dimir and Maryia Slepak on
July 1.
Slepak, who was sen-
tenced to five years internal
exile for "malicious
hooliganism," has mean-
while arrived at Chita Ob-
last, in the Far East of the
Soviet Union, the confer-
ence reported. Maryia
Slepak, who was also
charged with "malicious
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hooliganism," was released
in June after becoming ill
but received a three-year
suspended sentence July 26.
The conference also
reported that Ida Mil-
gram has received a let-
ter from her son, Anatoly
Shcharansky, who was
sentenced last month to
13 years in prison and a
labor camp on charges of
treason.
In New York, a resolution
condemning Soviet
harassment of Jews and all
other Soviet citizens who
"attempt to exercise their
basic human rights as
guaranteed by interna-
tional accords and Soviet
law" was adopted unanim-
ously last week by some
1,000 delegates attending
the annual Assembly of the
American Bar Association
(ABA) at the Hilton Hotel.
The resolution also cal-
led upon the ABA to es-
tablish a committee on
human rights,. together
with its legal counter-
parts in the Soviet Union.
At the same time, a group
of prominent lawyers called
upon members of the
American legal community
to recognize and take action
against the gross violations
of human and legal rights
taking place, in tine Soviet
Union.„ • -
In light of the recent
trials of Soviet Jewish dis-
sidents, the group, which
included two past preid;
dents of the Bar Association
of the City of New York and
members of a recent delega-
tion of lawyers to the Soviet
Union, addressed a special
session of the American Bar
Association (ABA) conven-
tion at the Hilton Hotel. The
seminar was sponsored by
the ABA's section on Indi-
vidual Rights and Respon-
sibilities and the New York
Legal Coalition for Soviet
Jewry. The coalition is an
affiliate of the Greater New
York Conference on Soviet
Jewry.
Norman Redlich, dean of
the New York University
School of Law, outlined
courses of action which
American attorneys are
taking and can take in the
future, to improve the situa-
tion of Soviet dissidents,
Jewish and non-Jewish.
Urging American
Lawyers to travel to the
Soviet Union and meet
with Russian dissidents,
Redlich also called upon
them to document Soviet
non-compliance with in-
ternational law and ag-
reements. He disclosed
that a collection of legal
briefs and memoranda
compiled by New York
lawyers, which was dis-
tributed at the session,
had already been submit-
ted to a number of inter-
national organizations
including the Red Corss,
UN Commission on
Human Rights and State
Department.
Redlich also advocated
the introduction of courses
in international human
rights into the curricula of
law schools throughout the
country and announced the
development of the estab-
lishment of law school clini-
cal programs in which stu-
dents would participate in
the drafting of legal briefs
on behalf of individual
Soviet dissidents. Such a
brief is presently being
written by Prof. Alan Der-
showitz of Harvard Law
School, on behalf of
Shcharansky.
In a related development,
more than 100 campers
from Camp Tel Yehuda,
members of Yound Judea
which is sponsored by
Hadassah, participated in a
special demonstration last
week marking the 26th an-
niversary of the "night of
the murdered poets” and
protesting the Soviet gov-
ernment sanctioned publi-
cation of anti-Semitic liter-
ature.
The campers, who arrived
in two buses from the camp
in Berryville, N.Y., some
two hours driving time
away, picketed in front of
the Four Continents Book
Store.
Ian Stern, representing
the campers, said that the
book shop site was chosen
not only because it is the
`Jews for Jews'
Study to Gather
Facts on Cults
NEW YORK — A "Jews
for Jews" national poll will
be undertaken by the
Jewish Community Infor-
mation Council to deter-
mine the various factors in-
volved in the current spate
of missionary drives that
are aimed at the Jewish
community.
In making the an-
nouncement, Rabbi Rubin
R. Dobin, national chair-
man of the council, said that
scores of missionary groups
are seeking to attract
Jewish young people as well
as adults to their own
ideologies. The question-
naire will seek to establish
the pattern used by the mis-
sionaries so that a planned
program of education can be
set up counteract the
methods used by them.
Rabbi Dobin explained
that questionnaire project
was undertaken in response
to hundreds of requests for
help from distraught pa-
rents and families all over
the United States. The
Jewish Community Infor-
mation Council has distri-
buted thousands of "Jews
for Jews" information kits
which offer advice on how to
overcome the temptations
offered by non-Jewish cults.
The second edition of the
"Jews for Jews" information
kit is now available for free
distribution. For a copy of
the kit, send a stamped,
self-addressed envelope to
Rabbi Rubin R. Dobin, In-
formation Kits, POB 11,
Lawrence, N.Y. 11559.
It isn't the incompetent
who destroy an organiza-
tion. The incompetent never
get in a position to destroy
it. It is those who have
achieved something and
want to rest upon their
achievements who are
forever clogging things up.
—F.M. Young
major New York distributor
for Soviet literature "but
because it allows sales of of-
ficial Soviet anti-Semitic
material.
A spokesperson for the
Greater New York Con-
ference on Soviet Jewry,
sponsors of the demonst-
ration, said that a confer-
ence staff member had
recently purchased an
anti-Semitic book in the
book store, "The Star of
David," by Leo Korn,
published by Novosti in
Moscow.,
The "night of the mur-
dered poets" occurred Aug.
12, 1952, in Moscow's
Lubianka Prison where 24
leading Jewish writers and
poets were systematically
killed on orders from Stalin.
To date, Soviet authorities
have not acknowledged the
brutal act which was part of
a carefully calculated cam-
paign to eradicate Jewish
culture from the Soviet Un-
ion.
In Washington, Tisha
b'Av was commemorated
with a worship service op-
posite the Soviet Embassy
Sunday afternoon. The
traditional Jewish day of
fasting and mourning on
the anniversary of the de-
struction of the ancient
temple in 586 BCE coin-
cides this year with the
"night of the murdered
poets"
In Geneva, according to a
report by the Inter-
governmental Committee
for European Migration
offcie here, the number of
Jews emigrating from the
Soviet Union has signific-
antly increased during the
first six months of 1978.
Some 11,500 Jews have ar-
rived in Vienna this year,
an increase of 60 percent
compared with the same
period in 1977.
• • •
Freedom Rally
for Soviet Jewry
Slated Sunday
The Detroit Committee
for Soviet Jewry, Metropoli-
tan Detroit Chapter of
Hadassah, the Detroit
Jewish Workshop and the
Zionist Organization of De-
troit will sponsor a freedom
rally to focus on the plight of
Soviet Jewry noon Sunday
at Oak Park Major Park.
There will be speakers,
literature will be available
and a petition will be circu-
lated urging the move of the
1980 Olympic Games away
from Moscow. The public is
invited.
Meanwhile, the Jewish
Community Council of
Metropolitan Detroit,
urged local rabbis to in-
clude commemorations
of the "night of the mur-
dered poets" in their
Shabat and Tisha b'Av
services.
Council President John
H. Shepherd said that "the
occasion of this yahrzeit of-
fers another opportunity to
remember and consider the
continuing campaign to ob-
tain freedom to emigrate
and human rights for our
brethren in the Soviet Un-
ion. ... .
. .....