28 Friday, January 25, 1980 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Women's Issues AJC Topic NEW YORK — In an ac- tion designed to increase the participation of women on decision-making levels as well as to heighten the come to the source Take the guess out of your gift giving — Tapper's Gift Regis- try. Tapper's 26400 W. 12 Mile Rd. 12 Mile & Northwestern Hwy. 357-5578 sensitivity of the organiza- tion to women's issues, the American Jewish Commit- tee has asked each of its four national program commis- sions to create a subcommit- tee on women's concerns, it was announced by Char- lotte Holstein, chairman of AJCommittee's national committee on the role of women. The commissions, each of which is related to one of AJCommittee's four areas of major interest, deal with domestic affairs, foreign af- fairs, interreligious affairs and Jewish communal af- fairs. FORES rS that bear your name Long after you have gone, forests in Israel renewing themselves in the cycle of sea- sons, will keep your memory ever green. When making your Will, provide that a forest in Israel be planted in your name or in that of someone dear to you, .handing down your last wish from generation to generation. A bequest to the J.N.F. is a bequest to the entire Jewish people, linking the name of the Testator with Israel in perpetuity. For information and advice in strict confidence apply to JEWISH NATIONAL FUND 27308 Southfield Southfield, Mi. 48076 557-6644 Readers Forum 441 ) Materials submitted to the Readers Forum must be brief. The writer's name will be withheld from publication upon request. No unsigned letters will be published. Materials will not be returned unless a stamped, self-addressed envelop is enclosed. Man's polish Visit Was Quite Misleading Editor, The Jewish News: I wish to draw your atten- tion to the JTA corre- spondence from Jerusalem entitled "Hebrew Lectures Given in Poland," which was reprinted in the latest edition of The Jewish News (Jan. 18). If the correspondence is a correct description of Mr. Harpaz's experiences and assessment of Jewish life in Poland then we should only pity the people who have to rely on his advice and lead- ership. To paraphrase an old say- ing, if the Jews have it so good in Poland why do they have it so bad? The truth of the matter is that never since World War II have the ruling and intellectual elites in Poland been so ob- sessed with the theory of Jewish conspiracy and Polish national purity. Publications with strong anti-Semitic con- tent are an everyday occurrence and anti- Jewish propaganda is being used as a weapon against the leading polit- ical dissenters in Poland. None of Poland's univer- sities offer extensive He- brew studies, and there- fore very few people know the difference be- tween Yiddish and He- brew let alone speak any of these languages (and the couple of thousand Jews still in Poland are no exception). The audiences Mr. Har- paz lectured to must have been composed mostly of secret police agents and in- telligence officers specializ- ing in Jewish affairs and Established 1919 NV , NACO 09e we teri NORMAN ALLAN a, GEMOLOGIST • DIAMONTOLOGIST LAWRENCE M. ALLAN, PRESIDENT SIP llo kT 11/,' N e/ ANVVP• \./ DIAMONDS OUR SPECIALTY BEAUTIFUL JEWELRY TO REMEMBER... • ANNIVERSARIES • BIRTHDAYS • SPECIAL OCCASIONS • OR JUST A SPECIAL PERSON... WE'LL PAY IMMEDIATE CASH FOR YOUR UNWANTED PRECIOUS GEMS AND JEWELRY Hours: Daily til 5:30 Sat. By Appointment 642-5575 30400 TELEGRAPH • BIRMINGHAM LOCATED AT 121/2 Mile SUITES 104/134 Awarded Certificate By GIA in Grading & Evaluation SM/i/P \e/ N. , \v/ Middle East politics. Lec- tures by specialists, particu- larly in the fields as esoteric as Mr. Harpaz's, are not widely publicized even at the universities and thus ef- fectively prevent potential curious outsiders from attending. As to the government as- sistance to the Polish Jewish community, it is an- other figment of Mr. Har- paz's imagination. Apart from the fact that the Jewish institutions he men- tions are no longer repre- senting the Polish Jewish community and for the most part are subsidized puppets of the government for prop- aganda purposes and foreign consumption only, their activities are highly restricted. The Jewish weekly "Folks-Shtime" must pro- vide the Censorship Office with advanced Polish trans- lations of every issue before permission for publication can be granted. And this is plain harrassment, because the office employs people who know Yiddish well enough to check the copy. The Yiddish Theater is a popular joke, with most actors unable to speak, read, and understand Yiddish, and today it provides an excitement for foreign visitors only, and even they are not particularly impressed. HIAS to Present Petluck Awards NEW YORK —HIAS will present the fourth annual Ann S. Petluck Memorial Awards at its 100th annual meeting March 18 at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in New York City. Three $400 awards will be made to refugees who have made .outstanding progress in their resettle- ment in the U.S. The late Ann S. Petluck was a social work adminis- trator specializing in immi- gration and refugee work. Her professional expertise profoundly influenced the practice of migration casework and helped re- shape U.S. immigration law. She served as associate executive director of the United Service for New Americans until its merger with HIAS in 1954 and then as director of U.S. opera- tions of the merged organ- ization until 1964, when she left to become deputy repre- sentative of the United Na- tions High Commissioner for Refugees at the UN in New York. Applications for the Ann S. Petluck Memorial Awards may be obtained by writing to HIAS, 200 Park Ave. S., New York, N.Y., 10003. Deadline is March 3. The Jewish Historical In- stittute is no longer a center of important Jewish studies, and it is enough to read a couple of issues of its publication, "Biuletyn Zydowskiego Instytutu His- torycznego," to see the ex- tent of the government's stifling intervention. To top it all, a Jewish senior citizen has been beg- ging the government to allow him to join his wife and son in Scandinavia for the last 10 years. Despite numerous interventions by top Swedish government of- ficials his repeated requests are denied by the Polish government. And approx- imately at the time of Mr. Harpaz's visit at the Uni- versity of Warsaw, its His- tory Department suddenly terminated Prof. Szymon Rudnicki, a Jew and Po- land's leading authority on the pre-World War II Polish right and fascist move- ments. Prof. Rudnicki found out that he was without a job as soon as he returned from an officially-approved trip to England. So much for the good life in Poland. With friends like Mr. Harpaz, Polish Jews do not need enemies. Wlodzimierz Rozenbaum FRANK PAUL and His ORCHESTRA DUO's — TRIO's SOLOISTS 557-7986 Looking for the right style of music to make your special event an affair to remember? NATE RONDELL, Organist, plays music from the big band era to the music of today. 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