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October 25, 1985 - Image 48

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1985-10-25

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

48 Friday, OCtober 25, 1985

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

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NEWS

Detroiters Arrested
At D.C. DernionStratiOn
Special

to The Jewish News

Washington — Two Detroiters
were among nine persons ar-
rested Tliesday across the street
from the Soviet Embassy during
a demonstration on behalf of
Soviet Jewry.
'The Detroiters were William
Graham of West•Bloomfield and
Dorothy Mahlin of Southfield.
They were in Washington to
attend a meeting of the Union of
Councils for Soviet Jewry.
Graham told The Jewish
News that the group was
charged with "demonstrating
within 500 feet of a foreign em-
bassy." After spending time in a
police -jail, the group posted
bond and is expected to appear
in court within the next two
months.
"The generation once removed
had to explain why they did
nothing for the Six Million (kil-
led in the Holocaust)," Graham

told The Jewish News by tele-
phone from the police station. "I
don't want to have to explain to
my children and grandchildren
why I did. nothing for the two
million (Jews in the Soviet
Union)." -
The nine persons arrested in-
cluded a rabbi from Massachu-
Setts; Konnilyn Feig, a Gentile
author from California; and
Sergay Bruor of Boston, a Soviet
.Jew who became a U.S. citizen
just last Friday.
Unlike anti-apartheid demon-
strators arrested outside the
South African Embassy in re-
cent months, anti-Soviet demon-
strators have been prosecuted
for protesting near the embassy.
Observers say. that the South
Africans have refused to press
charges against demonstrators,
while the Soviets have followed
through on all complaints
against demonstrators.

Soviets; Allow Refusenik
To Leave For Israel

Tel Aviv (JTA) — Mark
Nashpitz, a long-term Soviet re-
fusenik, arrived in Israel Sun-
day night with his wife Lud
milla and their five-year-old son
Benjamin. .
Nashpitz, who first applied for
an exist visa in 1971, had been
told some weeks ago that he
would never get a visa, but last
Friday, he was suddenly in-
formed that he and his family
had to leave the Soviet Union
within 48 hours.
Meanivhile, 2,000 protesters
marched-toward the Soviet Con-
sulate in Montreal Sunday
chanting "Free Soviet Jewry"
and carrying placards demand-
ing the release of Jews from
Soviet jails.
Held annually since the mid-
1970's,' the Montreal march for
Soviet Jewry protests the deten-
tion and persecution of Soviet
Jews and the Soviet Union's re-
fusal to grant permits to Jews
wishing to emigrate to Israel.
The demonstrators also de-
nounced the treatment of re-
fuseni ks , ostracized and

penalized for wishing to leave
.the Soviet Union.
In Washington,' 22 Jewish
student activists were arrested
last week at a protest in front of
the Soviet Embassy as 150 of
their peers demonstrated in
support across the street.
The protest and arrests were
organized a few weeks ago by
participants in the National
Jewish Student Conference on
Public Policy, Issues, which
began in Washiniton last Wed-
nesday -and which is sponsored
by the B'nai B'rith Hillel Foun-
dation.
In a related development,
Jewish Agency Executive
Chairman Leon Dulzin last
week predicted a breakthrough
in the plight of Soviet Jewry. He
also described a growing
"Zionist movement" in the
Soviet Union.
"The Jewish people will live
to see a great mass-immigration
of Soviet Jews to Israel," Dulzin
said in Jerusalem at a briefing
to 227 American Jews from 45
communities who participated in
the United Jewish Appeal's
Presidents Mission to Israel.

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