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Friday, May 11, 1984

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THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

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Continued from Page 1

As the current rate of
Jewish emigration from the
Soviet Union continues to
drop — 74 were permitted to
emigrate in April — 1984
will be the worst year on re-
cord for Jews seeking to
emigrate, according to the
Greater New York Confer-
ence on Soviet Jewry
(GNYCSJ), sponsors of the
13th annual Solidarity
Sunday for Soviet Jewry:
Before gathering in the
plaza thousands marched
for one mile along Fifth
Avenue, led by Mayor Ed-
ward Koch who lit a "Torch
of Freedom." He along with
other officials were greeted
for the first time in the his-
tory of the Solidarity Sun-
day rally by the New York
Catholic Archbishop as the
entourage passed St. Pat-
rick's Cathedral.
Newly-installed Ar-
chbishop John O'Connor
greeted the marchers and
expressed his support with
the aims of the rally. He told
Koch and other elected offi-
cials, "You are doing good
work" for Soviet Jews.

President Reagan sent a
telegram expressing the
Administration's support
and concern for the human
rights of Soviet Jews. "Both
privately and publicly
American representatives
have repeatedly expressed
our concerns to the Soviet
leadership," Reagan said.
"It is our intention to
focus public attention on
this issue," the telegram
continued. "I assure you of
my commitment to do all
that I can to ease the suffer-
ing of Soviet Jews and se-
cure their human rights."
But a rally leader, after
reading Reagan's telegram
to the mass of a people,
criticized the President for
failing to send a "high-
ranking" official to the
rally.
Other speakers at the
massive rally included New
York Governor Mario
Cuomo, Senators Daniel
Moynihan and Alfonse
D'Amato, and Avital
Shcharansky, wife of Soviet
Jewish Prisonert of Con-
science Anatoly
Shcharansky.
The rabbi of Moscow's
Choral Synagogue, visiting
the United States for the
last two weeks, told report-
ers that the rally "was an
anti-Soviet demonstration
and its focus was not the
concern of Soviet Jewry."
Speaking in Hebrew
briefly at a luncheon for 20
visiting clergymen from the
Soviet Union given by the
Appeal for Conscience
Foundation, Rabbi Adolph
Shaveyich denied that Jews
were being prevented from
leaving the USSR and said
the mass rally would have
no effect on Soviet policy.
The rabbi said the major
problem for Jews in the

Soviet Union is that they do
not attend services 'or learn
about their Jewish heri-
tage. He said this was not
the government's fault.
When asked about prig-
oners of Conscience'
seemed flustered and an-
swered, "No."
Meanwhile, the Student
Struggle for Soviet Jewry
reported that the Soviet
agency which ships pack-
ages with the high Russian
duty fees pre-paid will be
permanently closed on Aug.
1.
Many Russians receiving
packages from overseas do
not have the funds to pay
the duty themselves.

Senior Brodsky
dies in USSR

New York — Alexander
Brodsky, 80, father of exiled
Soviet poet Joseph Brodsky,
died last week in Lenin-
grad. Joseph Brodsky had
tried for 12 years to get Rus-
sian officials to allow his
father to join him in the
United States.
Joseph was poet-in-
residence at the University
of Michigan for two years
after the Soviet Union
exiled him in 1972. Joseph's
mother died last year of
cancer and had not seen her
son in 11 years.
A cousin warned Joseph
by telephone last week to
remain in the United
States. Brodsky is a
member of the faculty of Mt.
Holyoke College in Massa-
chusetts.

Lab workers
seek more pay

Tel Aviv (JTA) — More
than 1,500 government-
employed laboratory work-
ers went on strike Tuesday
for wage increases.
The walk-out, described
as an open-ended work
stoppage, affects
laboratories at government
hospitals nad clinics.
Only seven of the 160 lab
workers were on duty in Tel
Aviv and only five out of 100
in Haifa, doing blood-typing
and other tests only r -
emergency cases. Hosi
administrators said tne
hospitals could be forced to
shut down if the strike con-
tinues.

Egyptian attends
rally for Israel

Washington (JTA) — The
Egyptian ambassador to the
United States, Ashraf
Ghorbal, was among some
1,000 persons who attended
an Israel Independence Day
reception at the Israel em-
bassy here Monday, mark-
ing the 36th anniversary of
the Jewish state.

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