By ROBERT ST. JOHN (Copyright 1981, JTA, Inc.) One day during a recess in the Jerusalem trial of Adolph Eichmann, the then premier of Israel, David Ben-Gurion, received sev- eral correspondents at his Tel Aviv home and in the course of a long off-the- record interview explained why he had ordered the somewhat illegal kidnap- ping of Eichmann from Argentina. One day," he said, "a young Israeli boy told me he was tired of hearing that the azis had killed six million dews, because he knew the story was just propaganda that our side had put out." That was in the spring of 1960. Since World War II, a new generation had grown up. Everyone under the age of 30 had either not been born or was an uncom- prehending child when Hit- ler was putting his Final Solution into effect. And so Eichmann was captured and put on trial, and for weeks the sworn testimony of Jews who somehow had survived but had seen, heard and smelled The Horror was broadcast by television and radio and was re- corded in the world press, and put a tempor- ary end to disbelief. But now it is 1981 and again we have a new gener- ation. Today anyone under the age of 30 either was not yet born or was too young at the time of Eichmann's trial to have read newspapers or even to have paid much at- tention to the broadcasts. And so, once again, we have the disbelievers. Worse than that even repu- table publishers put out books written by something less than reputable authors who have the unmitigated effrontery to ask us to be- lieve that it was all a hoax; that the figures are grossly exaggerated; that it was no worse for Jews than for gyp- sies, Armenians, Russians and a lot of other people the Nazis found in their way as they set out to conquer the world. And that brings us to "Gizelle, Save the Chil- dren!" (Everest House), a book by Peggy Mann and Gizelle Hersh, who saw her li'--mother and father marched in one direction at Au- schwitz, while she and her three sisters were ordered the other way. . "Gizelle, save the chil- dren!" the mother shouted — the last words dvany of them ever heard aer utter. Gizelle did save the chil- dren. And the story ends happily, as they sail into New York harbor on a refu- gee ship some years later. But before that happens there are 300 pages about Gizelle's desperate ordeal as she tries (in Auschwitz, Birkenau, Geilingen and Dachau) to obey her mother's command; to keep the four of them alive; to ' keep them together; to pre- vent their violation by obscene, sex-hungry Nazis. It's a story of gas cham- bers and crematoria. It's not a pretty story, but it's a story that needs telling, be- cause there is now another generation of disbelievers. And it's a story very well told, because Peggy Mann was the one who pounded it out on a typewriter and Peggy Mann knows how to write — graphically, grimly, even brutally when need be. In a 19-page epilogue Peggy Mann has something very important to say her- self about just who was re- sponsible for allowing it to happen. She gives us in de- tail the story of the Evian Conference; a story that needs retelling and retel- ling, just as much as do the Auschwitz stories. Evian, where represen- tatives of 32 of the most civilized countries of the Western world one after another gave shabby ex- cuses as to why they couldn't possibly take even a token number of the 660,000 Germans and Austrians which the American delegate stated were in urgent need of re- scue before it was too late. Evian, where, among the excuses, were the formal statements of Nicaragua, Costa Rica and Panama that they would accept no "traders" or "intellectuals." And the proviso in the Canadian response: we may consider "agricultural workers" but no others. Evian, that happy water- ing place on the shores of Lake Geneva, where a cra- ven world actually signed the death warrants for six million Jews. Every reader of "Gizelle, Save the Children!" will be happy that Gizelle did save the children — and herself. I am happy that Peggy Mann Court Fines Govt. Owned Refineries HAIFA (JTA) — A magis- trate's court imposed a token fine on the government-owned Haifa Refineries and gave it two years to modify its waste gas burning facilities to re- duce air pollution or shut down. The fine of 200 shekelg ($26) was the maximum allowed under the public nuisance law. The refinery manage- ment said it would take two years to install equipment designed to reduce the black smoke and noxious gas emissions at a cost of more than $1 million. tit -4,- , EinEingET PARTY CONSULTANTS Weddings, Bar/Bat Mitzvas Sweet Sixteens, etc. is so brilliantly helping to keep alive the memory of how ugly man can be, whether he's a German, a Nicaraguan, a Costa Rican, a Panamanian, a Canadian — or an American. invitations & stationery Make selections from your own home. n 2,9.7/0 Discount i 358.0251 661-1518 carol hooberman gallery presents GLORIA F. ROSS TAPESTRIES limited editions and unique commissions in the aubusson and gobelin techniques designed by: - avery - bearden - frankenthaler - Jenkins - trova meet the artist sat, jan. 10. 10:30-2:00 the exhibit will run through Feb. 13, 1981 155 s. bates • birmingham • 647-3666 1 d en b oun , U.S. Issues Invitation to Egypt Military JERUSALEM (JTA) — Gen. David Jones, chair- man of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, has invited Egypt to send units of its air force for joint exercises with the U.S. Air Force in Nevada this year, the Middle East News Agency (MENA) reported in Cairo. Jones was on a four- day visit to Egypt last week to inspect military installa- tions and discuss arms re- quirements. According to the MENA report, he extended the in- vitation to -Egyptian De- fense Minister Ahmed Badawi but no date was mentioned for the joint exercises in the Nevada desert. A squadron of U.S. F-15 fighters visited Egypt three months ago for desert train- ing and 1,500 American troops participated in mili- tary exercises with Egyp- tian armed forces in the western desert in Novem- ber. 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