20t- Friday, July 13, 1984' I 1 (at THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS'. " BY HENRY SREBRNIK Special to The Jewish News He is a forceful, robust man, an American rabbi, trained at the Jewish Theological Seminary in New York, someone seemingly no differ- ent from his comfortable audience at Cong. Shatirey Zedek recently. But he speaks about incredible atrocities committed thousands of miles away, and the large crowd knows he has seen things they are lucky never to have witnessed. The man is Marshall Meyer, and he has come from Argen- tina, another world. He has lived in Buenos Aires, that highly cosmopolitan city of 12 million with its spacious boulevards and beautiful statues patterned after Paris, with its 60 legitimate theaters and world-famous opera house, since 1959. He has been ministering to the Jews of the city, and of Argentina, indeed of much of Latin America, on behalf of the Conservative move- ment. .Rabbi Meyer, now 54 years old, has much to be proud of: he has just about single-handedly revitalized the spiritual life of Argentine Jevvry. This dynamic rabbi is the founder of a rabbinical seminary training Con- servative rabbis for the entire conti- nent, the Seminario Rabinico Latinoamericano; a Jewish day school and Hebrew high school; and a local Camp Ramah.. In a Jewish community noted for its lack of re- ligiosity, his synagogue, the.. Com- unidad Bet El, has three rabbis and a membership of 1,000 families. Dur- ing the last Yom Kippur services it attracted 3,000 predominantly young people, with hundreds spilling out into the streets. His youth move- ment, he proudly notes, •has sent more than 2,000 people on aliyah. The seminarians and graduates of his rabbinical academy last year led services for 100,000 Jews in 50 com- munities across South America at the High Holidays; 30 other kehillot are clamoring for rabbis, he adds. Quite a record. And yet this is not the reason Rabbi Meyer has ap- peared in the New York TiMe.13,. the Jerusalem Post, Hadassah Magazine, and on CBS-TV's "60 Minutes." It is not the reason he is addressing this attentive audience. The real reason he is here, and will speak wherever there are those willing to listen, is summed up in the dedication at the front of Prisoner Without. a Norne,', .0ell. , Without a Number, Argentine newspaper editor Jacobo Timerman's famous ac- count of his 21/2years of jail and tor- ture under the notorious military re- gime that ran the country from March 1976 to December 1983. It reads: "TO Marshall Meyer. A rabbi who brought comfort to Jewish, Christian and atheist prisoners in Argentine jails." And Timerman was one of the lucky ones — he got out alive and went to Israel. About 15,000 desaparecidos — missing per- sons — disappeared without a. trace during the military junta's "ditry war" against what they considered "internal subversion" and "interna- tional Marxism." At least 1,500 of • won, somewhat unexpectedly, by Dr. Raul Alfonsin;a lawyer representing the Radical Party. He defeated the Peronistas, whose ties with the mili- tary and anti-Semitic history made them suspect, and to prove his good faith Alfonsin appointed a national commission to investigate the disap- pearances. Though Rabbi Meyer is a Jew, a rabbi, and not even a citizen of the country, he was one of the ten people selected by Alfonsin last De- cember to investigate the crimes of the previous regime. (There have al- ready been some results: General Roberto Viola, a member of the rul- ing junta from 1978 to 1981, has re- cently been arrested for his part in Though a Jew, a rabbi, and not even a citizen of the country, Rabbi Meyer was one of ten people selected by Alfonsin to investigate the crimes of the previous regime. these unfortunates were Jews, in a country where the entire Jewish population now stands at • about 233,000 (Out of 28 million people). Without defenders of human rights like Rabbi. Meyer, that figure might have been much higher. It has been said that it is better to light one candle than to curse the darkness. Marsha! Meyer lit a large candle in Argentina, in thP days when darkness reigned, and people were afraid even to curse. He has seen some of his efforts bear fruit: disgraced following the disastrous Falklands war in 1982 and riddled with corruption, the Argentine niili tart' last October allowed free presidential elections. They the mass killings of the period.) In a lengthy interview with The Jewish News and in his speech at Shaarey Zedek, Rabbi Meyer, his voice often tinged with emotion, de- scribed the barbarities perpetrated by the military authorities before 1983. "Hundreds upon hundreds of young Jews were tortured to death, cremated, dropped alive from. helicopters over the Rio de la Plata. There were over 300 concentration camps, common graves with thousands of bones. What do you tell a mother 'or a father? Argentina entered the jungle — a land with no due process of law. "A family could be having. dinner, 10 o'clock at night. Suddenly there is a banging on the door, six or seven armed, non-uniformed men break in, strike the husband and wife with their rifle butts, blindfold them, and wait for their son to come home from an evening class at law school. , "Can you imagine the pain, the indescribably agony, of not knowing until today what happened to that son? What do you do? Where do you scream? "Your brother doesn't want to hear from you — he's got three sons of his own, he's afraid. You go to a lawyer. The lawyer says, 'Get out of my office, or I may disappear.' Even the psychiatrist or priest or rabbi is unhappy at your presenee — you might bring trouble. You have be- come a pariah. "So you start marching every Thursday in front of government house." Meyer was referring to the Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo who were "not only effective, but moved the world. Many are Jewish. They have traveled the world, they have seen the Pope, President Carter and others. They are heroines of the entire repressive period. They, .along with other battlers for human rights, are responsible• for the Alfonsin miracle." Rabbi Meyer sees the roots of what he 'termed "the military- fascist-Nazi dictatorship" of 1976- 1983 in the return of the aged former - dictator Juan Peron and his wife Isabel in 1973. Peron had been ousted in a coup. in 1955 but, incredibly, managed to remain a moving force in Argentine politics while in exile in Madrid. "He opened hip umbrella so wide, and promised everything to both left and right," explained Meyer. "But he was a dying man who couldn't deliver the goods, and 'died soon afterwards. His wife became president, but the extreme left and right started killing each other to see who would get the spoils. The left --- the Montoneros and the ERP (People's Revolutionary Army) — were anti-Semitic and anti-Zionist; many had been trained by the PLO. In 1974-1975, in my, synagogue, we buried six killed members by ter- ' rorists of the extreme left." As a countermeature,, the right formed the Argentine Anti- Communist Alliance, the "Triple A." These were "abaoluta downrightidl , ' , ,