NEWS Hate-Crimes Providing Backdrop To Conference Prague (JTA) — As out- breaks of anti-Semitism were being reported from places as widely separated as Madison, Wis., San Fran- cisco and West Germany, leaders of the Roman Catholic Church and repre- sentatives of world Jewry gathered here for a long- postponed conference on the Holocaust and the res- urgence of anti-Semitism in Europe. The conference, which opened Sept. 3, was preceded by a joint visit to the site of the Theresienstadt concen- tration camp. Catholics and Jews stood in silence before a memorial to the tens of thousands of victims of the Holocaust who perished in the camp or were taken by the Nazis from there to gas chambers in Poland. After the visitors recited Kaddish in their memory, Psalm 130 was read in Heb- rew by Father Marcel Dubois of Jerusalem, a Catholic member of the International Liaison Com- mittee. The Catholic-Jewish meeting is the first of its kind in three years. Contacts between the Vatican Secretariat on Religious Re- lations With the Jews and the International Jewish Committee on Interreligious Consultations (IJCIC) were suspended for three years because of dissension over the Carmelite convent at Auschwitz. But the conference here opened Monday in an at- mosphere of good will and mutual understanding. Presiding were Archbishop Edward Cassidy of the Vat- ican Secretariat and Seymour Reich, chairman of IJCIC. Opening addresses were delivered by Bishop Pierre Duprey of the Vatican dele- gation and by Rabbi Jack Bemporad, interreligious af- fairs chairman of the Syn- agogue Council of America. Both faiths have brought scholars and experts from North and South America, Western and Eastern Europe, and Israel to ex- amine the history of anti- Semitism, the Holocaust and the role of the Catholic Church. They expect to produce a common document at the conclusion of the four-day meeting that will constitute an action program by the church to combat anti- Semitism, especially in Eastern Europe, where the Vatican has regained a strong influence in the wake of the demise of communism. Meanwhile, in Madison, Wis., public officials and re- ligious leaders held a joint news conference last week to condemn the wave of 18 anti- Semitic incidents that has occurred there in the last six weeks. "We must from the very outset denounce anti- Semitism at every turn," said Dane County, Wis., Ex- ecutive Richard Phelps. "We must be clear that people of such ill will and bigotry are not welcomed here." Mayor Paul Soglin urged the public to come forward with information that might Catholics and Jews stood in silence before a memorial to the tens of thousands of victims of the Holocaust. lead to the arrest of the perpetrator(s). No suspects have been identified. More than 200 people at- tended the news conference at the Madison Municipal Building, hearing additional statements from Madison Jewish Community Council Executive Director Steven Morrison, University of Wisconsin Chancellor Donna Shalala, Madison Public Schools Superinten- dent James Travis and the Rev. Charles Garel, a former president of Madison's NAACP chapter. The conference followed a weekend in which the B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation on the U.W. campus was van- dalized twice. During the evening of Aug. 25, a window was broken. The next night, anti-Semitic graffiti were painted on the building. The wave of incidents began on the weekend of July 14, when rocks were thrown through two windows of a trailer at the Camp Shalom day camp at Olin Park. Since then, both major Madison synagogues — Beth Israel Center and Temple Beth El — have had windows broken, anti- Semitic graffiti painted on them and trash strewn about their grounds. The vandalism moved to the U.W. campus during the weekend of Aug. 17 and 18, with windows broken and anti-Semitic graffiti painted on the Hillel building and on the houses of three frater- nities and one sorority with predominantly Jewish membership. Police in San Francisco have beefed up patrols at synagogues and Jewish in- stitutions after hate crimes were committed against three of them within a week. Although police have ruled out any link between the two cases of arson and one of vandalism at the three syn- agogues, they say such in- cidents most typically occur near the High Holy Days. Some congregants at the synagogues suggested, however, that events in the Persian Gulf might have been a factor. Inspector Lou Ligouri, SFPD liaison to the Jewish community, said he was able to rule out a con- nection between two of the fires because the fuel used to ignite them were different. Nevertheless, he said the incidents "smack of anti- Semitism." Ligouri noted that such acts tend to rise in the weeks before the High Holy Days. "To me this really smells of intimidation, so people in the Jewish community will be somewhat reluctant or in- timidated to attend ser- vices," he said. "By perpetrating two, three, four, five incidents, there's plenty of time for the news to get out and instill the in- timidation, that fear, in the community." As a result of the in- cidents, police will probably continue tighter security at Jewish institutions until the holidays end in early Oc- tober. "We (intend to) increase patrols or have officers make passing calls to areas that people are concerned about," said SFPD spokesman David Ambrose. In West Germany several Jewish cemeteries in the federal state of Baden- Wurtemberg were reported vandalized. The series of desecrations, which began last week and continued through the weekend, are in addition to several other such acts of vandalism. Now look what you've done. 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