INSIGHT I
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1989
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PASSOVER
HOLIDAYS
Geneva (JTA) — The Swiss
government decided last
week there was no need to im-
plement a law barring Nazi
activity in Switzerland,
because there was no actual
threat.
Police Minister Arnol
Kholer said after a debate on
the subject that the several
neo-Nazi incidents that have
occurred in recent months
represent no real danger to
democracy.
He said the government
would follow these "symp-
toms" closely but would take
no "exceptional action."
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A
lthough they are sep-
arated chronological-
ly by more than five
decades, and culturally by an
even wider gap, there are
eerie similarities between
World War I and the Vietnam
conflict.
These similarities are the
focus of a new exhibit that
recently opened at the Jewish
War Veterans National Mem-
orial Museum in Washington,
"Lives Under Fire: A Com-
parative Examination of
Jewish Contributions to
World War I and the Vietnam
Conflict."
"The idea of doing a com-
parison of two different wars
came to mind — and from
there, we quickly developed
the idea of looking at both
World War 1 and the Vietnam
war," said Mark Dreyfuss, the
museum's curator.
The two conflicts also define
the outer boundaries of the
Jewish War Veterans'
membership; the group still
includes a number of World
War I veterans, although
their numbers are rapidly.
declining. And Vietnam vete-
rans, according to Dreyfuss,
are just beginning to become
a force in the 75,000-member
organization.
"There were some marve-
lous similarities and con-
trasts — and within the con-
text of both wars, we found
Jewish soldiers who exempli-
fied the kinds of soldiers we
wanted to honor," Dreyfuss
said.
The centerpiece of the small
exhibit is a display honoring
six Jewish military men —
three from each war. On
display are their uniforms,
photographs, weapons and
descriptions of their exploits.
Other exhibits provide a
sense of context; old photo-
graphs show Jewish life in the
innocent days before World
War I, and an album cover —
Sergeant Pepper's Lonely
Hearts Club Band — shines a
light on the upheavals touch-
ed off by the Vietnam conflict.
Dreyfuss and his colleagues
deliberately chose Jewish
soldiers of non-heroic propor-
tions. The World War I sol-
diers included an ordinary
foot soldier, a hospital worker
and a drummer; the Vietnam
era honorees included a Navy
and an Air Force navigator,
and a Marine.
"The point we wanted to
make is that they all faced
the enemy in their own
CIEI 0
KOSHER HOTEL
More of
Sunshine daily
Washington Correspondent
fashion," Dreyfuss said. "This
diversity of service was im-
portant to us; part of the point
was to demonstrate that Jews
were part of the whole range
of military activity."
Dreyfuss is pleased with
initial reaction to the
museum, and to its premier
exhibit. "I think it makes an
important point to the Amer-
ican public — that military
service, for quite a while, was
just another part of being an
American," he said. "And
Jews were no different than
anybody else."
Dreyfuss said he hopes the
success of "Lives Under Fire,"
which is on exhibit through
June, will lead to other inno-
vative exhibits at the muse-
um, which occupies the first
floor of the Memorial's "R"
Street headquarters, al-
though the next exhibit has
not been selected.
"We're kicking around a
number of ideas, including a
look at the soldiers who
liberated the concentration
camps — and at the medical
military, which was where
many Jews served," Dreyfuss
said. "I think it's becoming a
very exciting place."
L
GLATT
For Reservations
Phone: TOLL FREE
JAMES D. BESSER
z w
Apia iw
56
©
Exhibit Explores Parity
Of WWI And Vietnam
CA
H
CH
T
ER
LEVEE
ADAM
HERE
KALD
YARE
I
STE
J13 • Copyright 1988 Charles E.S. Goldstein