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April 10, 1992 - Image 40

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1992-04-10

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

"1 NEWS ImlImm"

1..

Let's Make
a Deal!

Palestinians
Stay In Denmark

MOVE IN


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THE FINEST
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SINCE 1968

THREE WAYS TO
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Copenhagen (JTA) —
Citizens of Denmark are
protesting that something is
rotten as their legislature
approves asylum for 460 Pa-
lestinian refugees in Den-
mark.
The Forketing, or Danish
.parliament, decided last
week that the refugees, who
have lived here for the past
18 months under the protec-
tion of the Danish Church,
should not be returned to
Lebanon, the country from
which they came.
The same consideration
has not been given other
refugee groups, Romanians,
for example, whose applica-
tiOns for asylum were re-
jected.
The parliament's decision
was contrary to the wishes of
Justice Minister Hans
Engel, who said he rejected
"special treatment" of any
group.
It drew sharp criticism
from Foreign Minister Uffe
Elleman- Jensen and was
opposed by most of the polit-
ical parties, the news media
and public opinion.
They were upset by the
disclosure from official
sources that about 120 of the
Palestinians, ostensibly
seeking a haven from
persecution, freely visited
Lebanon or Syria last year to
get married or attend family
reunions.
Mr. Elleman-Jensen
remarked on television that
if the Palestinians were able
to travel to and from those
countries without problems,
evidently they were not in
danger.
"Something is rotten and
we have to examine this ac-
tivity," the minister said.

Photos Found
Of Anne Frank

ARNIE WEISS

MIKE GERMANSKY

TAMAROFF

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Amsterdam (JTA) — A
book of hitherto unpublished
photographs of Anne Frank
was introduced to the media
at the Anne Frank House
here last week.
It is intended primarily to
show schoolchildren that
Anne Frank, who died in a
Nazi concentration camp,
was a child just like them-
selves. Making them ac-
quainted with her personal-
ly may help fight racism and
discrimination among
school-age youngsters.
The photographs, which
show Anne Frank from early
childhood through the age of
12, come in part from an
album preserved by Miep
Gies.

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