1 1 A HAPPY 4A; " if AND JOYOUS •irgercile CHANUKAH C To All Our Friends, Families & Clients World Wide Financial Thanks Metropolitan Detroit's Jewish Community For Helping Us Make Mortgage Banking History! THE DET RO IT J EWIS H NE WS WORLD WIDE FINANCIAL so Southeast Michigan's Leader In Mortgage Lending 647-1199 1533 North Woodward, Suite 140 Bloomfield Hills, Michigan 48304 Demjanjuk Backer Supports Charges New York (JTA) — A longtime supporter of con- victed war criminal John Demjanjuk wrote a letter to a German archive 10 years ago asking for Mr. Demjan- juk's "original military card issued in Camp Treblinka." The letter seems to support charges that Mr. Demjanjuk did indeed serve as a guard in Treblinka. The Ukrainian emigre, who was convicted in 1988 of being the noto- rious Treblinka guard known as "Ivan the Terri- ble," has repeatedly denied ever having been at the camp. The letter might also refute new evidence un- covered in long- secret Soviet archives suggesting that a guard by the name of Ivan Marchenko was in fact "Ivan the Terrible." Jerome Brentar, a Cleveland travel agent de- scribed in various news- paper articles as Mr. Dem- janjuk's main financial sup- porter, wrote the letter in German to a war research facility in Munich called the Institute for Contemporary History. The 1982 letter was ob- tained by Charles Allen Jr., a researcher and writer on Nazi crimes. It was publish- ed in the latest edition of Reform Judaism, a publica- tion of the Union of Ameri- can Hebrew Congregations. Questions about whether Mr. Demjanjuk, a retired Cleveland autoworker, had ever been at Treblinka arose in the past year and turned the case against him askew. He had been sentenced to death by an Israeli court for war crimes committed at the Treblinka and Sobibor death camps. The Israeli High Court of Justice is reviewing the case and a federal appeals court in Ohio this year named a special investigator to study whether the Justice Department withheld possibly exculpatory evidence in his denaturalization pro- ceedings. Another letter has been made available to the Jew- ish Telegraphic Agency that was written to Mr. Brentar by the attorney for Kurt Franz, the commandant of Treblinka who is serving a life sentence in Germany for war crimes. The attorney, Rudolf Stratmann, wrote in January 1990 that his client did not know anyone named Marchenko. "But Franz does not re- member if in this context the name Demjanjuk was men- tioned," Mr. Stratmann wrote. A Jewish witness who was called in the Demjanjuk trial wrote a letter, also obtained by JTA, which described Franz and "Ivan the Ter- rible" as regular compa- nions. This new information was made available by the World Jewish Congress, "in light of the publicity already given to the other material," said Elan Steinberg, WJC ex- ecutive director. Mr. Brentar, in his letter to the Munich research facility, derided one of the key pieces of evidence against Demjanjuk — a military card from an SS He had been sentenced to death by an Israeli court for war crimes committed at Treblinka and Sobibor. training camp at Trawniki, Poland. He said it was "obviously forged by the Soviets" and tried to tie the case against Mr. Demjanjuk to Simon Wiesenthal, the Vienna- based Nazi-hunter. Mr. Wiesenthal had nothing to do with obtaining the card. Mr. Brentar wrote that Mr. Wiesenthal "persecuted" Mr. Demjan- juk "in a totally unjustified way." He wrote that Mr. Demjanjuk's "indictment is based, inter alia, on service identification obtained which was falsified by the Soviets, which Wiesenthal gave." Mr. Brentar wrote that it would be "very important," to find "Demjanjuk's original military card issued in the Treblinka camp, to compare it to the one for Soviet Wiesenthal's clique, which was accepted by the Cleveland court." Mr. Brentar sent the letter to what he thought was a