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Lech Walesa Ambivalent
In Meeting With Jews
New York (JTA) — Jewish
organizational leaders
emerged from an • hour-long
meeting with Solidarity
founder Lech Walesa Nov.
17 praising the Polish hero's
sincerity in reaching out to
them, but uneasy over his
denial of Polish anti-
Semitism and his attitude
toward the conflict over the
Auschwitz convent.
Walesa was visibly torn
between his desire to build a
bridge of friendship between
Poles and Jews and his
ironclad loyalty to the Polish
Catholic church and the
Polish people, according to
those who attended the
closed-door meeting.
While denouncing anti-
Semitism, Walesa said he
-did not believe hatred of
Jews was part of the Polish
character, and that Polish
Catholic primate Cardinal
Jozef Glemp is "not an anti-
Semite."
In the midst of the dispute
over the Auschwitz convent,
Glemp accused world Jewry
of violating Poland's
sovereignty and of poisoning
the international media
against the nation.
Asking for a "common
understanding" between
Poles and Jews, Walesa said
that "the Holocaust was our
common tragedy. We must
put an end to fighting and
remembering our common
past, work together to
transform Poland's future."
In response, Seymour
Reich, chairman of the Con-
ference of Presidents of
Major American Jewish
Organizations, which con-
vened the meeting, told
Walesa that while Jews "are
prepared to engage in a new
beginning with • Poland, we
can't forget the past, or the
anti-Semitism that was
rampant in Poland."
The most emotional
moments. during the
meeting, observers said,
came when Polish Jewish
survivors of the Holocaust
addressed Walesa.
Benjamin Meed, president
of the American Gathering
of Holocaust Survivors, ask-
ed Walesa to see to it that
the remnants of Jewish life
in Poland that remain, in-
cluding synagogues and
cemeteries, be preserved.
Such preservation was
necessary, Meed said, to re-
mind future generations of
the once-flourishing Jewish
community in Poland and its
destruction during the
Holocaust.
"I will personally guar-
antee that any remaining
Jewish holy sites will be
declared historic shrines.
Jews died in the concentra-
tion camps simply because
they were Jewish. This must
and will be acknowledged,"
Walesa said in response.
When presented with a
3,200-year-old vase , by the
President's Conference, he
kissed it, because, he said,
"it came from Israel."
Scholarships To Aid
European Leaders
BEN GALLOB
Special to The Jewish News
N
ew York (JTA) — A
Swede and South
African have become
the first two students enroll-
ed in Yeshiva University's
unique program to ease the
shortage of trained profes-
sional leaders for European
Jewish communities.
Shaul Friberg, 32, of
Stockholm, is studying in
the university's four-year
cantorial school. Moshe
Kruger, 25, of Johan-
nesburg, is attending the
university's Rabbi Isaac
Elchanan Theological Semi-
nary, which requires five
years of study for ordination.
Dr. Norman Lamm, presi-
dent of the university, an-
nounced last -June the plans
for the program, which was
made possible by a seed
grant. of $120,000 from the
Doron Foundation of Tel
Aviv, which fund education
and welfare programs.
Professor Jeff Gurock,
Lamm's assistant, said, the
the Doron-funded program is
unique in that it requires
overseas students to commit
themselves to serve the
Jewish communities in their
native countries after
graduation.
Gurock said evaluation of
potential candidates for the
program was restricted to
students studying at Israeli
schools, and that the
realities created by those re-
strictions demonstrate the
student commitment to
Judaism.
Each candidate is initially
evaluated by the univer-