THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS For Men & women . BRAND NAME SHOES & BOOTS Bronfman Will Meet With Soviets To Raise Jewish Emigration Question Vienna (JTA) — World Jewish Congress President Edgar Bronfman revealed his plans to go to the Soviet Union towards the end of March for talks with Soviet officials in his dual capacity of business executive and a leader of Diaspora Jewry. He is the head of Joseph Seagram and Sons Co. Bronfman told a news confer- ence at the Hilton Hotel in Vie- nna, where the WJC governing board is winding up its three-day meeting, that the Soviets had ex- tended him an invitation to visit in both capacities and he was practically on his way just before Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev died. The timing of his visit, Bronfman told reporters, "is bet- ter now than at any other (recent) time because the United States and the Soviet Union are begin- ning to talk, and things are now in a state of thaw." He expressed the view that the situation of Soviet Jewry fluc- tuates with the state of relations between the two superpowers. "Soviet Jews are basically hos- tage to the cold war and the U.S.-USSR climate," he said. If there is a relaxation of tension on other issues, a relaxation of the situation of Soviet Jews "will be much easier to accomplish." There was also discussion at that meeting of Bronfman's pro- posal that a traveling exhibit from the collection of Jewish documents and artifacts in the Leningrad archives be brought to the United States as part of some Edgar Bronfman kind of cultural exchange pro- gram. The suggestion met with some enthusiasm and Bronfman hopes to pursue it further in Mos- cow. Morris Abram, chairman of the National Conference on Soviet Jewry, welcomed the idea for the Bronfman trip. But he warned that if Bronfman receives only "token gestures," his visit would serve only as "propaganda" for the Soviet Union rather than be a means of easing the plight of Soviet Jewry. Meanwhile, the WJC received an appeal, telephoned to Vienna, from four Jews in Moscow and four in Leningrad, who described themselves as "Jews with Israeli citizenship who are being de- tained in the USSR." Their appeal read: Wholesale Diamonds & Jewelry Remounting Jewelry & Watch Repair AT DISCOUNT PRICES! JEWELRY APPRAISALS SAVE UP TO 75%! . SUITE 312 ADVANCE BLDG. INFERS SQUARE Next to Loolotam's Orckard Lk & 14, Farm. Hills 851-4190 SOUTHFIELD PUZA 551-0 N 062 411 23077 Greenfield at 9 Mile (31 3) 557-1860 ■ IMIMIP 20% OFF ALL SHOE ORGANIZERS . . . thru February Congressman Sander M. Levin, right, and Union of Councils for Soviet Jews -National President Morey Schapira, center, congratulate Pennsylvania Congressman Lawrence Coughlin as he receives a UCSJ award for his work as 1984 chairman of the Congressional Call to Conscience for Soviet Jews. Congressman Levin is the 1985 Co-Chairman of the Congressional Call to Conscience for Soviet Jews serving with co-chairman Sen. Rudy Boschwitz of Minnesota. "We would like to draw your at- tention to our critical situation in the USSR — the authorities closed the borders for our repatri- ation and reinforced the repres- sion. Unfortunately not all the Jews in the world are yet aware of our unbearable situation, which is not only our problem, but the problem of all Jews in the world." The appeal concluded with a call to the WJC to take all steps to "save us." The appeal was signed by Dmitry Chazankin, Inna Brochina, Igor Kharakh and Gre- gory Rifkin of Moscow; and Yakov Gorodetzky, Boris Zelkin, Mikhail Zivin and Mikhail Winaver of Leningrad. In Washington, optimism was expressed that despite the almost total shutoff of Soviet Jewish emigration and the officially- sanctioned anti-Semitism in the USSR, including physical vio- lence against Jews, the renewal of United States-Soviet arms talks could lead to increased emigra- tion and less repression for Soviet Jews. This feeling as well as the need to continue the struggle here was expressed to the more than 150 aides of U.S. Representatives and Senators who attended the bi- ennial congressional briefing of the Union of Councils for Soviet JeWs on Capitol Hill. Many Con- gressmen and Senators also made appearances. Elliott AbramS, assistant secre- tary of state for human rights and humanitarian affairs, stressed that the issue of Soviet Jewry has been raised by the Reagan Ad- ministration at even high level meeting with the Soviet Union, including the meeting in Geneva earlier this month between Secre- tary of State George Shultz and Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko. He said the issue will be raised at the forthcoming nu- clear arms talks. Reagan had named Max Kam- pelman as the head of the U.S. negotiating team for the upcom- ing arms talks with the Soviet Union since, as the head of the U.S. delegation to the Madrid talks reviewing the Helsinki agreements, Kampelman had been outspoken in his criticism of Soviet human rights violations including those against Soviet Jewry. Avital Shcharansky, wife of imprisoned Soviet Jew Anatoly Shcharansky noted that on the second day of the Shultz-Gromyko talks, the Soviet government an- nounced that Shcharansky's mother and brother could visit him for two days in his prison camp, something they have not allowed in the eight years he has been imprisoned. She said he also has now begun receiving the med- ical treatment and medicine he had needed. In a related development, six refuseniks in Moscow are the latest targets of the Soviet war against Jewish activism, the Greater New York Conference on Soviet Jewry reported. According to the GNYCSJ, the homes of Natasha Beckman, Dmitri and Inna Khazankin, Dan Shapira, Alla Khazankin (Shap- ira's fiancee and Dmitri Khazan- kin's sister), Inna Vilenskaya, and the parents of Inna Khazan- kin were searched and dozens of Hebrew books and personal pos- sessions were seized. Shapira was arrested and is being held by Soviet authorities. The GNYCSJ noted that four of those searched were related, and that Inna Vilenskaya is the fiance of Igor Kharach, a close friend of the Khazankin family. In mid- 1984, Kharach, Shapira and Dmitri Khazankin signed an ap- peal to the Soviet authorities cal- ling for the repatriation of Jews to their homeland, Israel. Anticipating this, Kharach sent a letter to the Soviet authorities saying that he knows they plan to arrest him for his de- sire to live in Israel, and re- quested information on what they planned to charge him with so that he could begin to prepare his defense. • Do-lt-Yourself and Custom Closet Installations • Custom Plans for Remodeling or New Construction • Huge Selection of Closet and Home Storage Products • Quality Name Brands . . . Low Prices • Trained Staff to Solve Storage Problems • Unique Gifts LUTTER • ONTROL ■ .. 1111-.1 YOUR ORGANIZATION STATION 28956 Orchard Lake Rd (between 12 & 13 Mile Roads) (313) 855-9678 Member of the Industry Foundation. 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