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April 22, 1994 - Image 126

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1994-04-22

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

• .>

-5
6088 W. MAPLE AT FARMINGTON RD. • W. Bloomfield • 851-9666
SUNDAY 8-3
OPEN MON. THRU SAT. 9-6

•-•



t•X4

Wartime Files
Give New Insight

;M;?"...6

4?,

American Heart Association

WERE FIGHTING FOR YOUR LIFE

4111.1..t

FROM THE PAGES OF

JEFFREY
SENBERG'S

4

RECIPE

BOOK

The social events for which JEFFREY ROSENBERG'S
KOSHER CATERING is proud to serve are inscribed in
everlasting record. Pride in our ability to offer only the finest
inpreparation and service are equally bound. As "Creator of
Perfect Catering," JEFFREY ROSENBERG enters these
pages to share the pleasures of your occasion.

‘40".ARkg,-Z- Wsk:a* , : esWO'',W4V§ A.,
‘teks:atz* •VVINAORatalg,
‘*6



GRANDMA ROSENBERG'S
FAMOUS PICKLED FISH

Ingredients:

lbs. trout (1 1/2 lbs. per person) 3 onions
1/2 box spices (medium size)
2 cups vinegar
1 lemon (used after fish is cooked)
2 1/2 cups water
1 box lemon gelatin
2 bay leaves
1/2 cup sugar
Cook onions, water, spices for 20 minutes to 1/2 hour. Strain.

4

Add vinegar and sugar to taste. Add fish and boil 25 minutes,
then gelatin, which is disolved with some hot fish liquid. Place
in container alternating lemon slixes with the fish. Let stand
one week before using.

Let us assist you with your wedding, bar or bat mitzvah, banquet, etc. The absolute
finest in kosher catering is the credo by which we will always extend our services.

29901 Middlebelt
Farmington Hills

Catering: 626-5702

Mat Sha lom Synagogue

851- 5100

Under Supervision of the Council of Orthodox Rabbis

Wed. - Sat. 10-6
Sun. 12-4

2599 Crumb Rd., Commerce Tw • . • 669-0066

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Geneva (JTA) — According
to recently opened archives
here, Switzerland was not as
hospitable to Jews during
World War II as has been
widely assumed.
For years, Holocaust
researchers in Israel have
been seeking access to the
Swiss federal archives in
Bern, which contain some
46,000 files on Jews who
sought refuge in neutral
Switzerland during the war
years.
But it was not until Swiss
Secretary of State Jakob
Kellenberger visited Israel
in 1993 that Bern agreed to
provide limited access to the
files. His agreement was a
limited gesture, however,
since a 50-year embargo on
the files' release was about
to expire anyway.
Recent research on the
files by historians chosen by
the Israeli government has
shown that Switzerland's
record of accepting Jewish
asylum-seekers during
World War II may be more
complicated than has been
generally believed.
Israeli researchers, work-
ing alongside Swiss officials,
have found that some 23,000
Jews were granted asylum
in Switzerland during the
war. Official Swiss figures
show that 10,621 Jews were
sent back over the border,
but the latest studies in-
dicate that the total was
more likely in the range of
20,000 to 30,000.
Preliminary studies also
indicate that Jews fleeing
into Switzerland were often
handed over personally by
Swiss military police to the
Nazis.
Many who succeeded in
entering Switzerland were
later expelled. On Aug. 13,
1942, Swiss Chief of Police
Heinrich Rothmund gave
the order to send back all
non-political refugees over
the age of 16 — an order
targeted at fleeing Jews.
To date, only 150 files from
the massive archive have
been thoroughly researched.
Information in the files is
often fragmentary, and some
only refer to a Jew's brief
"passage" on Swiss territory
before being expelled. Some
of the files show refugees
having held as many as five
identity cards.
The archives, which are
considered a treasure-trove
of information on that period
of Swiss history, include
identity papers, records of
interrogations and reports
by the Swiss authorities.



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