Friday, December 18, 1981 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Wallenberg in Maccabee Tradition By ROBERT E. SEGAL ci; candlelight observance across the street from the Soviet Embassy. The can- dles were carried by mem- bers of the Lutheran Place Memorial Church and the Washingotn Jewish Corn- munity Council. Those candles burn on symbolically in the cause of a man of superb courage; their glow is one in a uni- versal spirit with the lights marking Hanuka. (A Seven Arts Feature) "There is one who deliv- ereth and saveth Israel," it is written in the first book of the Maccabees. Well may we think of that stirring line when we celebrate Hanuka, commemorating the heroism of Judah Mac- cabee and his small, valiant band of fighters for religious freedom. This year, as we mark the holiday with justifiable pride, we have good reason to honor one who delivered nd saved somewhere be- ween 20,000 and 100,000 Jews when the pincers of the Nazis of Germany and their depraved comrades, members of the Arrow Cross Party of Hungary, closed in on them. The modern hero, this mighty man of valor, whose herculean efforts to rescue Jews from death have too long gone insufficiently rec- ognized, is, of course, Raoul Wallenberg, scion of a weal- thy Swedish family. After the United States Senate and House of Representatives voted to grant Wallenberg honor- ary citizenship, President Reagan in signing the measure, spoke of his accom- plishments as a deed of biblical proportions. "Wherever he is," the President said, his hu- manity burns like a torch," an observation that can well be repeated in the season of Hanuka. It is the prayerful hope of thousands that the recogni- tion now accorded Raoul Wallenberg is not post- humous; but it would be a miracle if the next chapter in his illustrious career finds him still alive. Born Aug.. 4, 1912, in Sweden, Wallenberg had one Jewish ancestor who converted to Christianity in the 18th Century. As a child, he enjoyed vacations in France, Germany and Holland. He traveled widely; and he was graduated in 1935 from the University of Michigan where he studied architec- ture. In that same era, when he worked in a Dutch hank in Haifa, he met German refugees. Fate placed him in Budapest as a special at- tache to the Swedish lega- tion in 1944. In those hours, as Hitler faced defeat, the Nazi tyrant called upon Adolf Eichmann to mount final murderous acts against the 900,000 Jews in Hungary. In that period also, under the urging of Henry Morgenthau, Secre- tary of the Treasury, the Roosevelt Administration created the War Refugee Board. Armed with Swedish credentials and a passion for cheating death, Raoul Wallenberg distributed 20,000 passports to Jews in Budapest in one re- sponse to the behests of the War Refugee Board. He did much more: he snatched Jews from er RAOUL WALLENBERG Eichmann-inspired death marches, pulled Jews off deportation trains, placed hunted Jews in Budapest houses flying the Swedish flag; he personally brought medical supplies for Jews who were ill and bread for hungry Jews. He even faced Eichmann across the table. Eichmann failed in his attempt to have the brave Swede murdered; but where the Nazi flunked out, the Russians succeeded in ending Wallenberg's mercy mission. Coming as victors into Budapest, they thought he might be an American spy. Since he had funds for his rescue efforts, did not this money come from contemptible capitalist sources? Trapped by Kremlin paranoia, Wal- lenberg spent more than 30 years in Russian prisons. Some who have shared in- carceration with him be- lieve he may still be alive. Now Washington has a fulcrum — Wallenberg's honorary American citizen- ship — for digging into the mystery. Is he alive in Cell 77 of the Soviet Union's Spats Korpus Prison? The Free Wallenberg Commit- tee of the U.S. has offered $1 million for information leading to his freedom. Along this thorny road, Congressman Tom Lan- tos of California, and his wife, Annette Tillemen — two of the thousands of Jews saved by Wallen- berg — have led a splen- did band of adherents to the cause. The ceremony in Wash- ington honoring Wallen- berg ended with a Poland Beckons Haig From Israel BRUSSELS (JTA) — Sec- retary of State Alexander Haig postponed his scheduled visit to Israel Sunday because of the tense situation in Poland where the government imposed martial law in a new con- frontation with the Solidar- ity trade union movement. New Assignment NEW YORK — Gershon Avner, who has served Is- rael in ambassadorial posts, as the state's official om- budsman and as secretary to the Cabinet, has just been named director of political affairs in the American Jewish Committee's Israel office. ■ =3•1 ■ 11 MIMS ■ •••••!• ■ •I=111. 1=1=1. =Men •=1= .••••• /NMI Audrey Lorber 585-7223 or 559-6022 •■ ••• ■ •••• ■ ■■■ ••=11• •IMINA .01•1•15 Imam MORIN. 0011MIMIMIN• .■■••■• ••••••• ••• ■ ••• ■mom. .0=MNP A memory you will have forever .. • VIDEO TAPING SERVICES Legal Taping Business Meetings Weddings Advertising Social Events Bar'Mitzvahs Empire makes Every a a Holiday ....but especially Holidays! You can't do better than Empire, you know. It's the best...first in quality and best in taste. Thiiyear try Empire. You will taste our marvelous difference with the first bite - and once you do, you'll never settle for less. FOR THE BEST HOLIDAY DINING, BUY REAL QUALITY KOSHER... BY NO OTHER NAME THAN EMPIRE! 19