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January 04, 1991 - Image 24

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1991-01-04

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

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Continued from preceding page

Warren Eisenberg, director of the International Council of
the B'nai B'rith, feels Nazi war criminals should not be
prosecuted in the U.S.

under American law," for in-
stance, lying about one's war-
time activities in applications
for citizenship.
Mr. Morris says he rejects
the notion that emigre groups
want to hinder OSI's work.
"I'm Jewish myself. I don't
believe that." He says that
"mainstream Baltic and
Ukrainian groups" see
themselves as victims of
Soviet violence and find it
offensive that the U.S.
government is cooperating
with the Soviets in the prose-
cution of emigres.
Mr. Morris believes that
"heavy duty factual and in-
tellectual work has to be done
before any proposal (for U.S.
prosecution of war criminals)
could be put before Congress
and have any chance of suc-
cess."

C

ongress has never held a
hearing to air the contro-
versy over OSI's meth-
ods. Instead, the pressure
from Congress on OSI is to
pursue alleged war criminals
more vigorously. Some legal
experts think the basis for
war crimes prosecutions in
the United States already
exists. Jordan Paust, a law
professor at the University of
Houston, points out that the
United States at Nuremburg,
and Israel in the Eichmann
case, used the "universality"
doctrine — that some crimes
are so heinous that the perpe-
trators are enemies of all
mankind and can therefore be
punished by any nation.
Askold Lozynskyj, a
Ukrainian-American attor-
ney, says, "We're looking for

support from Jewish organi-
zations" to help change U.S.
policy on war crimes prosecu-
tion. But continued support
by Congress and Jewish
organizations of the current
approach appears certain.
Officials of American Jewish
groups say it's unrealistic to

The "universality"
doctrine says that some
crimes are so heinous
that the perpetrators are
enemies of all mankind
and can therefore be
punished by any nation.

press for criminal prosecution
here. "I'm not sure politically
we [the United States] could
manage it," says Warren
Eisenberg, director of the In-
ternational Council of B'nai
B'rith. "It would raise ques-
tions we aren't prepared to
handle."
Neil Sher says that OSI has
been "opening new investiga-
tions and filing charges at a
more rapid pace than any
time in our existence." He
adds that remaining cases in
the OSI docket could lead to
further deportations to the
USSR. This, no doubt, will
keep the tensions between
American Jews and the emi-
gre communities high.
Neil Sher says he is fearful
that "a new generation of
Eastern European Americans
is being fed a distorted view
of history." Men such as Ar-
tukovic, Linnas and Dem-
j anjuk, he says, "are actually
being treated as heroes and
martyrs. This is a tragedy." ❑

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