Friday; May 29, ; 1981 THE DETROIT JEWISH, NEWS College Cites French Village for Saving Jews During War HAVERFORD, Pa. — In an unusual ceremony, Haverford College recently conferred an honorary de- gree on an individual repre- senting an entire town in France whose villagers helped save 2,500 Jews from Nazism between 1940 and 1944. The college, which has a Quaker heritage, presented an honorary doctor of laws degree to Magda Trocme who accepted it on behalf of 3,000 residents of Le C aThon, in the remote mountainous region of southern France. The role of the Chambon- nais in this dramatic his- toric episode escaped the notice of historians for nearly four decades and only came to light recently, said Bernard Lowenstein, a member of the honorary de- gree selection committee of the college. It remained for Philip Hallie, Griffin Professor of Philosophy and Humanities at Wesleyan University, to relate the story in "Lest Innocent Blood Be Shed," pub- lished in 1979. Hallie's research reveals that in the winter of 1940- 1941, Burns Chalmers, an American Quaker aiding war victims in France, and Andre Trocme, the late husband of Magda Trocme and pastor of the Protestant village of Le Chambon, agreed on a plan to save Jewish children whose par- ents had been deported to concentration camps. The inaccessibility of Le Chambon rendered it a de- sirable sanctuary for such an operation; its terrain was rough and only one train a day passed through the town. The Chambonnais ac- cepted the charge as a prac- tical solution to a desperate situation. After the French armistice with Germany in 1940, France was divided into the Occupied Zone in the north, administered by Germans, and the Unoccu- pied, or Free Zone, to the south. Centered in Vichy, the Unoccupied Zone was governed by French Marshal Phillippe Pe- tain whose forces gener- ally embraced the anti- Semitism of the German Nazis and, in some in- stances, exceeded them in cruelty to the Jewish citizens of France. Fol- lowing the Nazi pattern, the Vichy government at- tempted to incarcerate all the Jews in France. Despite the surveillance of Vichy police and the ges- tapo, and with little regard for their own safety, the vil- lagers of Le Chambon from 1940 to 1944 concealed, cared for, and eventually led to safety some 2,500 Jewish men, women, and children who sought refuge. Moreover, they absorbed refugee children into their homes and schools and edu- cated them for the duration of the war. Because of its close prox- imity to the railroad station where refugees arrived daily, the presbytery that housed Andre and Magda Trocme served as a clearing-house for the oper- ation. As the wife of one of the chief organizers of the mission, Magda Trocme contributed to the effort in every way. She greeted refugees at the door, fed and clothed them, and through clandes- tine meetings with the townspeople, helped deter- mine with whom they should stay. A teacher of Italian at the local Cevenol School, mother, and helpmate, "she was an effec- tive gatekeeper for a city of refuge," Hallie observed. JEWISH NATIONAL. FUND Cordially Invites You to Attend The TESTIMONIAL DINNER Honoring DAVID and MARION HANDLEMAN For the purpose of establishing the DAVID and MARION HANDLEMAN FOREST on the occasion of THE 80th ANNIVERSARY OF THE JEWISH NATIONAL FUND KEREN KAYEMETH LEISRAEL. Wednesday evening, June 24, 1981 at Shaarey Zedek Synagogue 27375 Bell Road, Southfield Cocktails, 6:00 p.m./Dinner, 7:00 p.m. Contribution (including dinner): per couple (Minimum) $150.00 HUC Honors Wallenberg NEW YORK — Raoul Wallenberg, the missing hero of the Holocaust who saved 20,000-50,000 Jewish lives in Hungary during World War II, will be hon- ored with the 1981 Roger Joseph Prize of the Hebrew Union College-Jewish In- stitute of Religion. The prize, which carries a $10,000 award, will be pre- sented to Wallenberg in ab- - -tia at the college's an- 1 ordination ceremonies on Sunday in New York. Wallenberg's sister, Mrs. Nina Lagergren of Stoc- kholm, will accept the prize on his behalf. The award will be used to carry on the work of a commission formed to investigate the circumstances of Wallen- berg's disappearance and his subsequent fate at the hands of the Soviet Union. In addition to the awarding of the prize, honorary Doctor of Humane Letters degrees will be conferred on civil rights leader Bayard Rustin and Alfred Kazin, author and critic. A total of 22 rabbis — 12 men and 10 women — will be ordained by the college. Six cantors — five men and one woman — will be in- vested. Guest Speaker Paul Zuckerman Philanthropist of international stature: World Chairman, United Jewish Appeal: Member of the board of the Jewish Agency. Recipient of many awards including the Fred M. Butzel Memorial Award for distin- guished communal service, and two honorary Doctorates. Yiddish Works at TAU Library TEL AVIV — The dedica- tion of a new collection of Yiddish literature and cul- ture, the Ben Zion and Pearl Margulies collection of Yid- dish literature, was held re- cently at Tel Aviv Univer- sity's Elias Sourasky Cen- tral Library. The Yiddish library, do- nated by William Mar- gulies, of London, and Dr. Alice Shalvi, who lives in Jerusalem, in memory of their parents, was dedicated with an initial collection of 3,500 Yiddish publications from all over the world, in- cluding many autographed editions, among them works autographed by Shalom Asch. Dinner Chairman Alan E. Schwartz Co-Chairman Leonard N. Simons Honorary Chairmen Mrs. Morris Adler Mr. & Mrs. Louis Berry Mr. & Mrs. Morris J. Brandwine Mr. & Mrs. Irwin I. Cohn Dr. & Mrs. I. Jerome Hauser Mr. & Mrs. Joseph H. Jackier Mr. & Mrs. Charles Milan Dr. & Mrs. Harold T. Shapiro Mr. & Mrs. Max M. Shoye Mr. & Mrs. Philip Slomovitz Mr. & Mrs. Max Stollman Mr. Phillip Stollman Mr. & Mrs. David P. Zack Mr. & Mrs. Paul Zuckerman President, Jewish National Fund Chairman Special Projects Committee of Greater Detroit David B. Holtzman Ruben H. Isaacs Executive Director Percy Kaplan For Information and Reservations call: 27308 Southfield Rood Southfield, Mich. 48076 Phone 557-6644 Director of Publicity Ceil Niger Rudo 11