PERSECUTION OF JEWS IN RUSIA EXTENSION OF REMARKS OF HON. J. CALEB BOGGS OF DELAWARE IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES

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CIA-RDP66B00403R000200190022-4
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May 11, 1964
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. Approved For lase 2005/01/27 : CIA-RDP66B00403I00200190022-4 Appendix Address of Francis Cardinal Spellman Be- fore Dinner of American Jewish Con- gress EXTENSION OF REMARKS or HON. JAMES C. HEALEY Or NEW YORK IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES Thursday, May 7, 1964 Mr. HEALEY. Mr. Speaker, with per- mission to extend my remarks in the CONGRESSIONAL RECORD, I wish to call the attention of my colleagues in the Congress to a very timely and eloquent address delivered by His Eminence Francis Cardinal Spellman, archbishop of New York, before the annual dinner meeting of the American Jewish Con- gress, in New York City on Thursday, April 30, 1964. Cardinal Spellman was introduced by the Honorable Newton N. Minow, former Chairman of the Federal Communications Commission, and I would also like to include his very excel- lent and appropriate remarks: INTRODUCTION OF CARDINAL SPELLMAN (By Newton N. Minow) Nineteen hundred and sixty-four is a time of first stirrings of new interchange between Jews and Catholics-an interchange that uti- lizes channels of feeling as well as channels of intellect-an interchange which will, we trust, take place with increasing frequency and increasing confidence all over the world. The late Pope John, who projected this spirit as a potent force in our time-and Pope Paul, who is pressing forward this historic work- have won the prayerful support of freemen everywhere. The leaders of the Roman Cath- olic Church in America, with Cardinal Spell- man standing_ in first rank, have given the most vigorous support to this movement for change. Leading authorities have charac- terized his Eminence, Cardinal Spellman, as the most influential figure in world Catholi- cism, second only to the Pope. Those who live and work here in his parish need only look around us to see their achievements that have been accomplished by our Catholic brethren under the full guidance of Cardinal Spellman. We see a great network of religious and social institutions: churches, schools, hospitals, charitable and youth-serving agencies. They have enriched our community and they have enriched the Nation. They are contributing with the dedication, the loyalty, and the vigor of American Catholicism and to his able spokesmen and leaders whom we are privi- leged to have here with us this evening. As we all know, Cardinal Spellman is quite a traveler from the North Pole to the South Pole, from Greenland to Korea-there is no corner of the world so far away that Cardinal Spellman will not travel to for the comfort and cheer of the American serviceman, Your Eminence, your trip from the chancellory to the New York Hilton this evening is much shorter than most of your journeys; however, the distance, measured not in miles, but in the progress of interfaith relations, is very great indeed. It is an extraordinary honor for me to present the archbishop of New York, His Eminence Francis Cardinal Spell- man. ADDRESS OF FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN BE- FORE THE AMERICAN-JEWISH COMMITTEE ANNUAL DINNER, APRIL 30, 1964 I wish to extend my sincere congratula- tions to our celebrated guest of honor, Mr. Dean Rusk, on receiving the American Liberties Medallion of the American Jewish Committee. Being Secretary of State is an overwhelming responsibility and sometimes, I am afraid, a thankless one which exposes a man to the slings and arrows of public criticism. While any award is scarcely ade- quate recompense for Mr. Rusk's trying labors and successes, at least he may know from tonight's citation the gratitude of this company and that of countless fellow Amer- icans for the dedicated service he has ren- dered to our Nation. I myself feel greatly honored that you have invited me to give a brief address at your annual dinner. The invitation came originally from Mr. A. M. Sonnabend, who for 2 years served the committee selflessly and effectively as its president, and whose un- timely death was, I know, felt deeply by all your members. My prayer is that his soul may rest in peace, and that the important work which meant so much to him will continue to prosper under your new presi- dent, Mr. Morris Abram. The American-Jewish Committee has given distinguished service to the cause of brother- hood. This it has done without ignoring the unavoidable distinctions of race, color, and creed. Today it stands in the forefront of the civil rights movement, thereby ful- filling the best traditions of Judaism. Well might the words of the Prophet Isaiah be its motto: "Seek justice; undo oppression." Its achievements are the more remarkable when one remembers how often and how unjustly the Jewish people have suffered from slander and oppression. Such a people might be expected to concentrate on Its own vindi- cation and welfare. The American Jewish Committee has, on the contrary, earnestly striven to promote the welfare of all, and has in its activities given substance to the conviction that we are all children of God and indeed our brothers' keepers. That we are our brothers' keepers is more than a pious cliche. It is a lesson the whole world sorely needs to learn. As a matter of fact it has become an imperative for sur- vival In our day. By every means at our disposal we must wage war on the old sus- picions and prejudices and bigotry which have set brother against brother and have spawned a brood of evils threatening the very existence of our society. Definitely we must win that war. The sad plight of minorities in many places bears testimony to the existence of racial and religious prejudice. The struggle of millions of American Negroes to achieve first class citizenship underscores it. The shameful murder in this very generation of 6 million Jews and of millions of other in- nocent victims of tyranny proclaims it. The widespread oppression of Catholic and Pro- testants and other religious groups both now and throughout the past tells a story of pre- judice that darkens the pages of history. Prejudice is mysterious and Its roots are deeply buried. No rational being can fully understand it or comprehend all the reasons behind it. But one thing I do know: pre- judice can never be justified by the teach- ings of religion. Hatred can never be justi- fied by those teachings. The founder of my faith gave one supreme commandment to all who would follow Him: "By this shall all men know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another." This point needs stressing in the light of a recent survey examining the reasons behind anti-Semitism. Asked why the Jewish peo- ple have often suffered outbreaks of persecu- tion, a surprising number of people replied that in their opinion it was a punishment for their part of the crucifixion of Christ. Frankly I was appalled. This is not Chris- tianity. I don't know where they learned it but surely it was not from the teaching of their church. It is one of those distorted and terribly harmful notions which somehow gain cur- rency and like a cancer spread among cer- tain people who wish to justify their own biogtry. The question of responsibility for the crucifixion of Christ must be carefully stated and clearly understood. I am reminded of an Incident which happened to a priest of my acquaintance when he was riding in a taxicab here 1 day last year. The cab drivers of New York, as everyone knows, are cele- brated for their conversational talents. Not infrequently they emerge as homespun phi- losphers and this particular driver was even a sort of sidewalk theologian. Over his shoulder he said to the priest: "I understand that those bishops over in Rome are saying that everyone who ever lived is responsible for the death of Our Lord. Does that mean that the poor Indians who were hunting buffalo on the plains of America at the time were responsible? Why, they didn't even know its was happening. How, could they be responsible?" He asked a good question, to which there is only one answer. Responsibility for the crucifixion of Jesus as an event of history belongs only to those individuals who were present at the time and who cooperated in His death. It is simply absurd to maintain that there is some kind of continuing guilt which is transferred to any group and which rests upon them as a curse for which they must suffer. The Christian faith, on the other hand, does teach that Christ Our Saviour died for all of us, in expiation for the sins of all mankind. In this sense we do believe that we are all mystically implicated in His death-but all without exception and all in the same way. And His dying for us must never be thought of as a curse upon anyone, but rather has a blessing upon all. Anti-Semitism can never find a basis in the Catholic religion. Far from emphasizing the differences which divide Jews from Chris- tians, our faith stresses our common origins and the ties which bind us together. In the early days of nazism, when the wave of anti- Semitism threatened to engulf Europe, Pope Pius XI stated clearly: "Abraham is our patriarch, our ancestor. Anti-Semitism is not compatible with this sublime reality. It is a movement in which we Christians can- not share. Spiritually we are Semites." I recall well quoting those words in my broad- cast to the Hungarian leaders and their peo- ple in June of 1944, a broadcast which I made at the request of Pope Pius XII to protest A2385 Approved For Release 2005/01/27 : CIA-RDP66B00403R000200190022-4 Approved DPJJR000200190022-4 May 11 the bloody persecution of Hungarian Jews. I reminded them that their action was "in direct contradiction of the Catholic faith," and I told them that "no one who hates can be a follower of the gentle Christ, and no man can love God and hate his brother." Pope Plus XII, in his Christmas message of 1942, had passionately lamented: "Hundreds of thousands of persons, through no fault of their own, have been condemned to death or to progressive a ctinction." He decried their exile and persecution "for no other reason than race." The New York Times on that occasion commented editorially: "This Christmas more than ever the Pope is a lonely voice crying out in the silence of a con- tinent." In June of 1943 Pius XII again pro- teeted publicly: "For centuries the Jews have been most unjustly treated or despised. It is time they were treated with justice and humanity. God wills it and the church wills it. St. Paul tells u: that the Jews are our brothers." It-is Is the teaching of the Catholic Church and it can sever be otherwise. My friends, God is love, and His will for all of us is fraternal charity and understanding. It is high time that all, Christians and Jews alike, applied this great religious principle to their dealings with one another. It is high time to stress the bonds of brother- hood. which should characterize our relation- sh?p The beloved Pope John XXIII taught the world a lesson which I pray it will neither Ignore nor forget, when in greeting a delegation of Jewirh victors to the Vatican in 1962 he opened w'de his arms and said: "I am Joseph. your brother." In that one sim- ple gesture, springing from his great heart. he proclaimed to the world the true meaning of the Christian spirit. Last week our Ilew York World's Fair opened. The fair's motto is one that every man should carry in his mind: "Peace Through Understanding." Understanding Is the way to peace. Men are weary of the hostilities of the part. They are tired of the feuding of their fo-bears. May they all-- Jews, Christians, anti all men of good will- begins at last to say: Together let us live in place. Let us try" to understand one an- other better-little by little, step by step, to accept our differen' es and to respect one another's convictions; to attack prejudice where first we may encounter it, within our own mind and heart. And having conquered it there, let us go firth to work with every man, our brother, for a better, and a happier world. or HON. J. CALEB BOGGS Or t'RLAWARE IN THE SENATE 03 THE UNITED STATES Monday, May 11, 1964 Mr. BOGGS. Mr. President, all free- dom-loving people share a sense of out- rage that in the :3oviet Union the reli- gious and culturid life of Jews is re- pressed. Last September I joined with 63 of my colleagues in sponsoring Senate Resolu- tion_ 204 which expresses the sense of the Senate "that persecution of any persons because of their religion by the Soviet Union be condemned." The resolution calls upon the Soviet Union, "in the name of decency and hu- manity," to "cease executing persons for alleged economic offenses, and fully per- mit the free exercise of religion and the pursuit of culture by Jews and all others within its borders." A group of 88 clergymen and leaders in the religious life of Delaware recently sent a message to Premier Khrushchev demanding an end to persecution of Jews In Russia. The list of signatures In- cludes 41 Protestants, 34 Catholics, and 13 Jews. A news story in the Wilmington Eve- ning Journal, entitled "Stop Persecution of Jews, 88 Here Tell Khrushchev," sum- marizes their protest, and r ask unani- mous consent that It be printed in the Appendix of the RECORD. There being no objection, the news story was ordered to be printed In the RECORD, as follows: STOP PERSECUTION OF JEWS, 88 HERE TELL KHRUSHCHEV A demand from Delaware that Premier Khrushchev end repression of Jewish religi- ous and cultural life in Russia was forwarded to the Soviet Embassy in Washington yester- day. It was signed by 88 religious leaders of northern Delaware. They also asked for an end to the Soviet Government's persisting enmity toward religion. Among the 88 signers are the Catholic and Episcopal bishops and public leaders who are active In religious life. The message to the chairman of the Cen- tral Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union is sponsored by the Dela- ware Unit of the American Jewish Committee and Is similar to an appeal sent December 7, 1962, signed by 46 of the Nation's outstand- ing religious leaders. The message was sent for forwarding to Ambassador Anatoly F. Dobrynin in Wash- ington by Louis J. Finger, chairman of the State unit of AJC. The message calls attention to the consti- tution of the U.S.S.R. which grants freedom of conscience. The message said persistent hostility to religion is, nevertheless, a matter of record. While most faiths are permitted `the bare necessities such as seminaries and sacred literature, even these are dented Jews, it continued. "'Hard pressed as they are by blanket re- straints," the message reads, "none of the other major religions of the Soviet people, neither the Orthodox, Armenian, Catholic, or Protestant churches, neither Buddhism nor Islam. have been subjected to the extraordi- nary disabilities inflicted on Judaism. and its followers." The only Jewish seminary In the nation is in Moscow and has only 4 students and it opened in 1958, the message continues, there were none for a generation and the few remaining synagogues are served by rabbis ordained more than 40 years ago. No Jewish Bible has been printed in 40 years and no articles for Jewish ritual can be produced and, in 1962. even the sale of unleavened bread, essential for Passover observance. was banned. The teaching of Hebrew is forbidden, ac- cording to the statement, and the -once- flourishing Yiddish schools, literature ahd theater have been stamped out even though a half million Jews declared Yiddish to be their mother tongue In the 1959 census. Much smaller ethnic or linguistic groups have schools. theaters, books, and newspa- pers in their own languages. "T.iese conditions conjure up memories of the anti-Semitic Stalin regime. which you yourself have denounced." the document re- minds Khrushchev. The message called the Chairman's at- tention to the United Nations Universal De- claration of Human Rights and said "unless the Soviet Government conforms," it "for- felts the confidence of all peoples." "By deeds alone, can your. government con- firm that the Soviet Union in truth upholds the rights of minorities and the equal dig- nity of man." In addition to Catholic Bishop Michael W. Hyle and Episcopal Bishop J. Brooke Mosley, signers are: Leon V. Anderson, the Reverend Roberto Baiducelli. the Reverend James G. Birney, James B. Brooks. Charles A. Cary, the Rev- erend Gordon T. Charlton, Jr., Louis S. Co- hen, Philip Cohen, the Reverend John J. Conmy. Arthur G. Connolly, the Reverend Chas. J. Conway. Richard F. Corroon, and Philip F. Crosland. The Right Reverend Monsignor F. J. Des- mond, the Reverend John H. Dewson, the Reverend Anthony F. DtMichele, Dominick Di Sabatlno, Thomas B. Donahoe, the Rev- erend Edward A. Dougherty, the Reverend Henry Dreyer, Rabbi Herbert E. Drooz, Wil- liam Duffy, president judge of superior court, the Reverend William F. Dunkle, Jr., the Right Reverend Roderick B. Dwyer, Samuel Elsenstat, president Jewish Federa- tion of Delaware, Louts J. Finger, the Rev- erend Henri I. Foltz, Robert W. Frelick, Rabbi Leonard B. Gewirtz, and the Reverend Robert J. Gillespie. Edward J. Goett. Maurice D. Goldstein, the Reverend George W. Goodley, Karl F. Green, the Very Reverend Lloyd E. Gressle, presi- dent, Wilmington Council of Churches, Frank A. Gunnip, Thomas H. Hogshead, the Rev- erend Paul F. Huber, the Reverend James Hughes. the Reverend Ellsworth Jackson, Jr., Harry Jacobs, E. Melvin Jewett, the Reverend Edmund F. Julien, Edward Kauffman, Robert F. Kelly, the Reverend A. H. Kieffman, Rabbi Jacob Kraft, Morris Leibowitz, and the Rev- erend Edward M. Leinhelser. Clement J. Lemon, the Reverend Thomas F. Luce. Jane du Pont Lunger, Stewart Lynch, judge of superior court, the Reverend Mal- colm J. MacQueen, Adolph Markel, Jr., the Reverend Philip U. Martin. the Right Rev- erend Monsignor Wm. J. McElwaine, the Rev- erend John J. McGee, the Reverend Henry A. Miller, the Reverend Paul It. Miller. the Reverend Ralph L. Minker, Jr., the Reverend Robert E. Mohr, Thomas W. Mulrooney, Frank J. Obara, the Reverend John L. O'Hear. Stewart E. Poole, W. Ellis Preston, Dr. Willard F. Preston, and the Reverend James -B. Pritchard. William F. Raskob, the Reverend Roy E. Raymond, the Reverend Roddey Reid, Jr., Harry J. Repman. the Reverend Percy F. Rex, Harry Rofel, Gilbert S. Scarborough, Jr., Col- lins J. Seitz, chancellor, Melvin A. Slawik, Edward B. Sledz, the Right Reverend Mon- signor Joseph D. Sweeney, David R. Tread- well, Sally K. Treadwell, the Reverend Gil- bert F. Van Bever, Mrs. Winston J. Wayne, the Reverend Donald C. Wilson, and the Rev- erend Stuart G. Wysham. EXTENSION OF REMARKS OF HON. JACK WESTLAND OF WASHINGTON IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES Monday, May 11, 1964 Mr. WESTLAND. Mr. Speaker, re- cently there appeared in an issue of the Republican Islander, official publication of the Island County Republican Cen- tral Committee in my district, a reprint of an article that reminds us of a time Approved For Release 2005/01/27 : CIA-RDP66B00403R000200190022-4