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Shcharansky, Orlov
To Testify On Soviets

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22 Friday, January 23, 1987

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Anatoly
Ex-refuseniks
Shcharansky and Yuri Orlov
are expected to testify today in
Washington, D.C. before a
commission of inquiry on
Soviet human rights viola-
tions.
Sen. William L. Armstrong
(R-Colo.), Sen. Charles E.
Grassley (R-Iowa), former
Senator Richard B. Stone and
law professor Eleanor Holmes
will hear the testimony, under
the auspices of the Union of
Councils for Soviet Jews.
Detroit's Ukrainian com-
munity on Jan. 18 observed a
requiem mass on the 40th day
since the death of Prisoner of
Conscience Anatoly Mar-
chenko, who died of heart fail-
ure in Christopol prison. He
was 48. Marchenko, who was
not Jewish, was a founding
member of the Helsinki Watch
Group in Moscow, and spent 20
years in prison. He had appar-
ently turned down several op-
portunities to leave the Soviet
Union for Israel.
A great deal of publicity has
been given to Arnold Lokshin,
the 47-year-old American citi-
zen and scientist who publicly
opted to emigrate with his fam-
ily to the USSR. But refusenik
Osip Lokshin, who calls him-
self "a namesake and perhaps
even a relative," sees bitter
irony and basic unfairness in
their stories.
In a letter to Arnold, Osip
wrote: "Moscow papers have
written about you sympatheti-
cally and with approval.
Kishinev papers have written
about me with hostility and in-
dignation. You wished to leave
the USA and you left. I wish to
leave the USSR but I am de-
prived to do so .. .
"The OVIR office told me
that my cousin in Israel is not
considered a close enough rela-
tive. I would be interested to
know whether American offi-
cials recognized that you had
close relatives in the USSR or
did they allow you to leave
even though you had distant
ones? How many years were
you held in refusal? Who inves-
tigated you?

"You talk about a night-
mare. I spent three years de-
prived of my freedom for tak-
ing part in a demonstration,
the Kishinev protest march on
March 30, 1981. I participated
because I did not consider the
refusal of the authorities to let
me leave the Soviet Union
legal. . . . You worked as a di-
rector of a laboratory. I am an
engineer with 20 years experi-
ence, yet I am presently em-
ployed in non-engineering
work and am denied other em-
ployment.
"I wish you success in your
new homeland Comrade Ar-
nold."
Jeannie Weiner of the
Jewish Community Council's
Soviet Jewry Committee corn-
mented, "It required a great
deal of courage to even write
that letter from an Lokshin to
another within the USSR."
Ex-Prisoner of Zion Dr. Vla-

dimir Brodsky recently re-
ceived a letter from Mila Vol-
vovsky. Her husband Leonid, a
computer engineer and He-
brew teacher, was arrested in
June 1985 and sentenced to
three years in a labor camp for
"defaming the Soviet regime."
She writes: "Besides bron-
chitis, antritis, paradontosis,
gastritis which he has had for a
long time . . . now he has
padiculitis and severe pain in
his joints. As he was telling me
when we last met, the pain is
most acute in his hands. It does
not stop at night and in the
morning it is at its worst. The
sensation is as if 'the flesh was
torn away from the bones.' It
could be polyarthritis but he
can expect no treatment. His
crowns have broken, but there
is no dentist available. All
complaints are in vain. The
chief of the medical unit, Dr.
Alexandra Ignatieva says the
health should be taken care of
when one is free . . ."

Israel Embassy
Commemorates
King Birthday

Washington (JTA) — The
anniversary of the birthday of
the Rev. Martin Luther King
Jr. was commemorated at the
Israel Embassy here last
week with calls for the
restoration of the coalition of
whites and Blacks which
marked the civil rights move-
ment that was led by the slain
Black leader.
Coretta Scott King, widow
of the civil rights leader, took
note that. the Embassy was
packed with more than 200
Washington area Jews and
Blacks for the ceremony.
This is the fourth con-
secutive year that the Em-
bassy has marked the birth-
day of King, who would have
been 58. The Embassy held
the event in cooperation with
the Martin Luther King Jr.
Federal Holiday Commission,
the Jewish National Fund of
America and the America-
Israel Friendship League.

Waldheim Talks
Of Austrian Past

Vienna (JTA) — President
Kurt Waldheim suggested to
his fellow Austrians that their
country has a problem with its
past which "we have tried to
suppress in recent years" and
advised them to learn from ex-
perience. He also warned
against evading the past.
The president spoke at the
traditional New Year recep-
tion for the diplomatic corps at
the Hofburg Palace. It was his
first allusion, since his election
last July, to historical events
that continue to haunt Au-
stria. He did not intimate that
his own personal past was part
of the problem.

