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THE JEWISH NEWS
Hungarian
Changes Tune
Budapest (JTA) — A
Hungarian politician known
for his anti-Semitic diatribes
made a surprise appearance
last week at a ceremony
commemorating victims of
the Nazis.
During his appearance,
Istvan Csurka went out of
his way to shake the hands
of Jewish leaders in atten-
dance and to lay a wreath to
the victims.
Istvan Zoltai, the leader of
the Hungarian Jewish com-
munity, said the handshakes
were like that between
Israeli Prime Minister Yit-
zhak Rabin Ind Palestine
Liberation Organization
Chairman Yassir Arafat.
Zoltai said he was very sur-
prised that Csurka showed
up.
Csurka has used a radio
program and a ruling party
newspaper to repeatedly
blame Jews for Hungary's
problems. Csurka was
among several Hungarian
political figures attending
the Oct. 14 ceremony, which
was held at Hungary's only
monument to Jewish victims
of the Nazi-appointed Prime
Minister Ferenc Szalasi,
who came to power Oct. 15,
1944.
Szalasi, leader of the fas-
cist group Arrow Cross, was
responsible for the murders
of thousands of Jews.
Zoltai, the Jewish leader,
expressed hope that
Csurka's presence at the
commemoration represented
a change of mind and that
his attitude toward the Jew-
ish community would im-
prove in the future.
But Rabbi Tamers Raj said he
feared that Csurka attended the
event for purely political rea-
sons.
Jewish Leaders
Meet Rabin
Jerusalem (JTA) — Leaders
of one of the biggest Ameri-
can Jewish umbrella groups
have met with Prime Min-
ister Yitzhak Rabin and
other Israeli leaders to be
briefed on the peace process
and to convey a message of
strong support from their
constituency back home.
"We told Rabin that polls
show 80 percent plus (of
American Jews) support the
decision to go down this road
with a mixture of hope and
anxiety," said Maynard
Wishner, chairman of the
National Jewish Commun-
ity Relations Advisory
Council. LI