THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, December 13, 1985 Nine months later, he joined the staff of the AJDC, the American Jewish Com- munity's effort to rescue and rehabilitate Europe's Jews. As the AJDC's deputy director, Feder was sent to help clear Jews from the Displaced Persons (DP) camp at Munich. "There was a tremendous movement of Jews from Eastern Europe after the Kelsy pogrom," he recalls. "Our catchment group in Germany went from 30,000 to 150,000. The people were all in transit. They didn't want to remain in Germany, but had to stay because immigration to the United States had not yet opened up. The Truman Directive was not yet in force. And going to Palestine involved going underground, running the blockade and risking interment in Cyprus. "Then suddenly everything changed," Feder remembers. A social worker from UNRRA came through a DP camp where Feder was working and complained that the inmates were lackluster. He recom- mended occupational therapy or recreation to keep them busy. "The colonel who was in charge," Feder recalls, "tapped his whip against his leg and said, 'There are women and there are men. Lettum do something!' And you know — that's what happened." The Jews got married. They had child- ren. "Someone brought 5,000 wedding rings to Heidelberg in a jeep. Life started again. Kids were born. I recall that I calculated that of all the women between ages 20 and 30 in our camps who were mar- ried, over 60 percent were pregnant or had babies. This period was a real revelation for me. Out of the garbage can, beautiful flowers. People were suddenly coming alive again." By 1952, all the DP camps had closed ex- cept the one at Bernwald. By 1955, Bern- wald, too, was closed. Those few hardcore cases who remained in Bernwald, said Feder, • were adequately cared for by the West German government. DPs had be- gun to immigrate to the United States. More Jews immigrated to Palestine. Joseph Schwartz of Baltimore, then the JDC's director, transformed the organiza- tion from what Feder termed a "non- Zionist" organization to an actively Zionist organization. "Joe Schwartz involved JDC in putting its money into ships — like the Exodus — to take people to Palestine. We were run- ning our programs in Germany very inex- pensively — with cigarettes — so substan- tial funds could be diverted to purchase ships," Feder recalled. Joe Schwartz's administrative virtuos- ity also irrevocably influenced Ted Feder's personal life. He made it possible for him to meet his future wife, Dr. Marika Feder, now a psychiatrist specializing in geriatrics. "Marika was part of a special group of about 150 Hungarian JeWish students who had come to Vienna to study medicine," Feder explained. "It turned out that their Continued on next page Ted Feder, who made up his mind to help Jews after World War II, achieved his ambition and became the director-general of the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee, as well as one of the most influential figures in post-war rehabilitation efforts. 15