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June 26, 1987 - Image 16

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1987-06-26

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

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Jewish people!'
The Vatican statement,
which quoted extensively from
the Pope's speeches on his re-
cent visits to West Germany
and Poland strongly condemn-
ing the Holocaust and anti-
Semitism in its forms, left no
doubt that the Pontiff is deter-
mined to receive Waldheim in
audience regardless of ac-
cumulated evidence of his com-
plicity in Nazi atrocities and
persecutions during World War

II.

The announcement that
Waldheim will be granted a
papal audience shocked and
outraged Jews all over the
world. They have been urging
the Pope to reconsider. Theo
Klein, president of the French
Jewish community, stated in a
letter to the Vatican Secretary
of State, Cardinal Caseroli, that
if the meeting takes place,
"European Jewry will speak
out about the Catholic church's
silence during the Second
World War while Jewish

families were annihilated!'
Tullia Zevi, president of the
Union of Italian Jewish Com-
munities, was quoted widely in
the Italian media as remarking
that the Pope "is honoring a
man upon whom a war crimes
enquiry is pending." The
Italian government has repu-
diated Waldheim's visit.
In the United States, repre-
sentatives of major Jewish
organizations called for an ear-
ly meeting with the Pope to
clarify his decision to receive
Waldheim. At the same time,
the American Jewish Congress
announced withdrawal of its
sponsorship of a meeting
American Jewish leaders had
scheduled with the Pope in
Miami next September 11.
The Italian government,
which had earlier said that
Waldheim would be received
with all of the ceremony ac-
corded a visiting head of state,
issued a statement distancing
itself from Vatican policy on the
issue.

JCCouncil

Continued from Page 1

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16

Friday, June 26, 1987

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

president of the Council. "We
want to emphasize issues that
are important to our communi-
ty and important to them!'
The family gatherings,
chaired by Jody Jacobs and
Cathy Radner, will pair
families with similar interests.
Jewish organizations in the
Detroit area have been asked to
supply the Council with
volunteers from their boards
and general membership. Non-
Jewish ethnic organizations
within the community have
been asked to do the same. The
'volunteer families will be ask-
ed to fill out questionnaires,
and the Council will pair
families with similar interests.
The Council plans to con-
clude the year-long celebration
of its anniversary with a con-
ference devoted to family con-
cerns in the spring of 1988, and
make it a natural outgrowth of
the paired families' discussions
in September.
"We want to make this not
only a celebration of our past,"
Cohan said, "but a celebration
of our community in which we
all live!' He said the anniver-
sary programs should help im-
prove relations and "the reac-
tion from our non-Jewish
friends has been very positive!'
The Oct. program at Or-
chestra Hall will feature enter-
tainment groups from the
Jewish, black, Polish, Hispanic
and Arab communities, as well
as a ten-minute audio-visual
presentation on the Jewish
Community Council's history,
philosophy and activities. The
Council is also forming a
speakers bureau staffed by cur-
rent and past officers and
members, and chaired by
Marian Shifman. A booklet is

also being prepared, summariz-
ing the Council's positions on
current affairs and issues of
concern to the community.
Members of the 50th an-
niversary committee planning
the year-long series of events
include Rhea Appleman, Alex-
ander Blumenberg, Oscar
Hertz, Martin W. Hollander,
David Lebenbom, Judge Susan
M. Moiseev, Oakland County
Commissioner Lawrence R.
Pernick, Ida Rosenblum, Rose
Schwartz, Kenneth D. Sidlow
and Kathleen Straus.

Aliyah Promoted
Through Tours

Jerusalem (JTA) — A pilot
group of about 3,500 Jews will
visit Israel this summer under
the auspices of the Jewish
Agency's Aliyah Department to
see if they want to settle here.
According to Haim Aharon,
who heads the department,
about 70 percent of the par-
ticipants in past pilot visits
eventually immigrated. The
aliyah promotion program in-
cludes lectures and seminars on

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