In an exclusive interview, Jonathan Pollard's family breaks its silence American Prisoner Of Zion June 4, 1986: Pollard pleads guilty to selling information to Israel. March 4, 1987: Pollard receives a life sentence DAVID HOLZEL Staff Writer s In solitary confinement in the outh Bend, Indiana stands agreements, Pollard chose not to look federal prison in Springfield, the other way. in the middle of farm Instead, he began passing the in- Missouri, where he has been held country, just across the Michigan border. The formation on to the Israelis, and so since March 4, Jonathan Pollard can- town's best known land- began his descent into a web of in- not speak for himself. But through mark is undoubtably the University trigue which ended with his arrest in conversations with his parents and of Notre Dame, an enclave graced by November 1985 outside Israel's em- sand-brown buildings, two small bassy in Washington, D.C. In March lakes, pleasant drives and shady 1987, U.S. District Judge Aubrey E. "The worst thing for walkways. It is here that Dr. Morris Robinson, Jr. sentenced Pollard to life somebody who is in Pollard has spent the last 26 years in prison for selling classified infor- working as a microbiologist, and mation to the Israelis. A second count trouble is to feel like where he and his wife, Molly, raised of harming the interests of the United States was dropped for lack of their three children, Harvey, Carol you have been evidence. Anne Henderson-Pollard, and Jonathan Jay. The Pollards tried to instill their Jonathan's wife, was sentenced to two abandoned." passionate love of America in their concurrent five-year terms for aiding children, and their equal pride in be- her husband. Last week, Dr. Morris and Molly others who have known him well, Jay, ing Jews. "We are firm believers in the security of the United States and Pollard spoke with The Jewish News as he is called by his family, emerges in the necessity of the State of Israel," about their son, their daughter-in- as a highly intelligent, highly sen- Dr. Pollard says with conviction. "The law, and how the Pollard Affair has af- sitive young man, influenced both by two are interrelated." They also fected their own lives in South Bend. the anti-Semitism he faced as a child wanted their children to be cognizant Although they chose their words in school and the visits the family of the "many examples of indignities carefully, the Pollards used the inter- made to the Bergen-Belsen and heaped upon the Jews" throughout view as a form of catharsis. The only Dachau death camps. A "scholar in anonymity they sought was their every sense of the word;' as his father history. describes him, Jay, in his youth It seems Jonathan Jay, their refusal to be photographed. "became a military historian with a Until now, the Pollards have youngest son, took these lessons to fantastic recall ability." maintained a public silence, fearing heart and, as a civilian analyst at the During the years he worked for U.S. navy's Anti-Terrorist Alert that any publicity they might Center in Suitland, Maryland, sought generate could hurt their son. Recent- the Navy, Jay served on two U.S. ly, they changed their minds. "We delegations which exchanged in- to act on his convictions. When, in April 1984, intelligence were told to keep quiet (by their at- telligence with Israel. According to began to cross his desk which he con- torney, Richard Hibey)," Dr. Pollard his parents, his security work earned sidered vital to the security of Israel, says. "I've stopped. It's counterproduc- him two superior citations and the se- and which, he discovered, was not be- tive. It has kept the Jewish communi- cond highest award a civilian can ing disclosed to the Israelis in accor- ty in this country in the dark (about receive from the Navy, for an opera- tion "that can under no cir- dance with exchange of information the case.)" 24 Friday, June 26, 1987 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS cumstances be revealed." The record of those awards, plus a psychiatric report testifying to his mental stabili- ty have disappeared from his files, his parents charge. Missing files are not the only discrepancies in this tangled affair. The Pollards charge that recent in- sinuations that their son is a drug abuser is part of an ongoing program of character assasination, designed to cow the American Jewish communi- ty into silence on the Pollard case. The American Jewish communi- ty has, on the whole, kept silent or de- nounced Jonathan Jay Pollard, a situation which distresses his parents. But they reserve their greatest anger for U.S. Secretary of Defense Caspar Weinberger and Israel's top leadership. Weinberger, they say, "manifests an antagonism to Israel which is out of control." Israel's top leaders, they say, knew fully about the Pollard operation, and callously abandoned him when he got caught. Dr. Pollard recalls that Weinberger forbade American soldiers in Lebanon from speaking to Israeli soldiers there; that after the brutal terrorist attack on Marine headquarters, Weinberger refused an Israeli invitation to treat the wound- ed in Israel and, instead, had them flown to Germany; and that he claim- ed the information which Jay gave to Israel upset the region's balance of power, a statement for which the