SOVIET ANTI-SEMITISM

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Approved For Release 2010/04/27: CIA-RDP65B00383R000200190015-6 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE [From the Charleston (S.C.) News and Courier, July 21, 1963] WHEN "JUSTICE" CHALLENGES "ORDER" To hear Dr. Martin Luther King tell it, on his visit to Suffolk the other day, the preservation of order isn't of much conse- quence when it comes to a matter of justice. This view came out when he criticized "the so-chlled moderates, who are more devoted to order than to justice." In a sense, Dr. King performed a useful service in those few words. For he brought into unusually sharp focus a collision of values which forms the most explosive in- gredient in the current swirl of racial troubles. This relationship between order and jus- tice, of course, is an old, old question. Since tribal times, order has been an essential element of any kind of social structure. And while tyrants have again and again used the Instruments of order to perpetuate injustice, the maintenance of order has been just as essential to the preservation of hard-won in- dividual rights and to everything that has lifted people out of ignorance and misery. Even the freest of peoples, and certainly the American nation represents one of the farthest advances to date, have found it im- perative, in the words of the preamble to our own Constitution, to "insure domestic tranquility." For the founders, though they had joined in rebellion themselves against a govern- ment, faced the reality that the new gov- ernment must protect itself against rebel- lion. The laws and the force necessary to that end were among their first creations. Similarly, safeguards agains# civil disturb- ance and violations of the law must exist at all levels of authority if what we have here is to survive. The theory that violence, or threats of violence, or situations inviting violence, may be used in behalf of justice, is one that can be condoned only in the extremes of govern- mental repression and in the absence of democratic channels for working remedies. Because our system of agreed law is sim- ply the best we have been able to work out so far, there are almost bound to be injustices in some degree. Some can be cor- rected faster or more completely than others. Further, there are human inequalities which governments can do only so much to correct anyway. We would have only anarchy if all such victims of injustice considered themselves automatically freed of obligations to obey the law and' possessed of the right to act violently against the rest of society. When someone applies the label "justice" to something, as Dr. King does, this does not thereby render anything he does to that end either right or tolerable, not if we have anything in this country that is worth keeping. - For the "order" Dr. King sees as less than precious today may be indispensable tomor- row to preserve some of the very things he and his people are striving for. THE PEACE CORPS Mr. RUSSELL. Mr. President, the Peace Corps has been an unusual-inno- vation in our foreign relations. It is one measure that has met with general ap- proval throughout the country. I received in my mail-and I feel cer- tain other Senators have received a copy of the same communication-a let- ter written by three young Americans who are teaching in the area of Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. They state in their let- ter that all the information that has heretofore been released to the American people has been released by those who direct the Peace Corps. I believe that is generally true. I do not know of any committee that has been sent into the field in an attempt actually to examine the work of the agency in various parts of the world; but I found the letter from Addis Ababa to be quite interesting. The three members of the Peace Corps who wrote to me have given their impres- sions of the Corps, in which they are serving at this time. I ask unanimous consent that the letter may be printed at this point in the RECORD. There being no objection, the letter was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, tive view of Peace Corps merits, and does not give them the opportunity to judge accu- rately whether they want to pay for an ex- panded Peace Corps. Biased Peace Corps publicity is not only detrimental to the gen- eral public but is also detrimental to pro- spective Peace Corps volunteers. Misrepre- sentation before and during training some- times requires extensive readjustment by the volunteer after arriving in the field. There is some disillusionment and disappointment sometimes resulting in the resignation of volunteers from the Peace Corps. A story about Peace Corps volunteers by an independent reporter would offer an op- portunity for volunteers now in the field to express their individual hopes, opinions, and POST OFFICE Box 1096, ADDIS ABABA, ions, we believe would show a wide diver- Ethiopia, July 4, 1963. gence of views on a great many subjects. The Honorable RICHARD B. RUSSELL, - If nothing else, they would dissipate the U.S. Senate, myth of the Peace Corps volunteer stereotype Washington, D.C. that current publicity seems to present to DEAR MR. RUSSELL: We are presently Peace the public. We would like to offer, as a few Corps volunteers serving in Ethiopia as sec- examples, some of our opinions based on 1 ondary schoolteachers. After completing 1 year of experience. year of service, we have decided that there Though we were told that we would suffer are some things which ought to be brought physical hardships, and though we expected to the attention of the general public at them when we came, it is our opinion that home concerning Peace Corps activities. very few volunteers in Ethiopia have experi- We believe that members of the Peace enced physical hardship. Publicity at home Corps currently serving overseas should be appears to emphasize the hardships that are given the opportunity to express some of endured by a minority and ignores the fact their opinions. We further believe that a that most volunteers live in comparative story about the opinions of Peace Corps vol- comfort. Peace Corps publicity also states unteers by an independent reporter would that volunteers live at a level comparable to be a service to the country. a national who is serving in the same occu- The Peace Corps is supposedly one of the pation as the Peace Corps volunteer. In most successful new programs of the pres- reference to the Ethiopia project this pub- ent administration. It is an infant Govern- licity is completely false. Volunteers do not ment agency which desires to expand its ' live on as high a level as State Department operations and increase its budget. Before officials or Peace Corps administrators, but Congress votes on new appropriations for the they also do not live on as low a level as Peace Corps, we feel that the general public Ethiopian nationals who teach secondary and Congressmen are entitled to more in- school. formation about its activities. Are the ob- It appears to us that there is confusion jectives of the Peace Corps Worthwhile? Ac- in Peace Corps administration. We received cording to the Peace Corps Act of September misinformation regarding Peace Corps policy 22, 1961, the purpose of the Peace Corps is: while we were in training. Now it is seem- "To promote world peace and friendship ingly impossible for us to ascertain our rights through a Peace Corps, which shall make and obligations in the Peace Corps. Peace available to interested countries and a-rear, Corps administrators do not know the pol- men and women of the United States quali- icies and do not provide us with written fled for service abroad and willing to serve, copies of Peace Corps policy. One begins to under conditions of hardship if necessary, to question the basis upon which administra- help the peoples of such countries and areas tors arrive at decisions. The Peace Corps in meeting their needs for trained man- administration also encourages the concept power, and to help promote a better under- that all Peace Corps equipment is Govern- standing. of the American people on the part ment-owned and consequently may be used of the peoples served and a better under- by any volunteer. We believe that this standing of other peoples on the part of the leads to the denial of responsibility by every- American people." one and results in the misuse of Government Few people will deny that these are worthy equipment. All these things are not con- objectives. The next question that should ducive to high morale in volunteers. It is be asked is, "Based on present information, our opinion that a study should be made to are these objectives being achieved?" Also, ascertain whether the purposes of the Peace "Could these objectives be achieved by some Corps could not be better achieved through method superior to those at present em- Government subsidization of private orga- ployed by the Peace Corps?" We believe that nizations rather than through direct Gov- these questions could rightly be the subject ernment action. of some independent study. We also believe In conclusion, we believe that-because that the general public is entitled to this in- the success and proposed expansion of the formation, because it is the public that must Peace Corps is an important issue at this pay for Peace Corps operations. time; because most of the information about At present information concerning the the Peace Corps is obtained exclusively from Peace Corps comes almost exclusively from Government sources which are perhaps Government sources. This is because few biased; because this bias tends to describe groups independent of the Government have all Peace Corps volunteers as stereotyped, made studies of the Peace Corps, and also selfless, dedicated, idealistic people, ignoring because few Peace Corps volunteers have the fact that there are widely divergent types completed their service overseas and returned of people in the Peace Corps; and because to tell of their experiences. We believe that we feel that Peace Corps volunteers should the information presently available through be able to express their individual opinions Government sources is inadequate. The of the work they are doing to the public at Government may not be deliberately trying home-a magazine or newspaper story in- to manage Peace Corps publicity; however, dependently reporting the successes and we believe that since the Peace Corps staff is failures of Peace Corps volunteers in the apparently already convinced of the Peace field would be a service to the country. Corps' success, they tend to be biased in the Sincerely yours, information that they release to the general RAYMOND T. DONALDSON. public. The presentation of such a One- THELMA BINGHAM. sided view does not give the public an objet- PHILLIP W. BINGHAM. Approved For Release 2010/04/27: CIA-RDP65B00383R000200190015-6 Approved For Release 2010/04/27: CIA-RDP65B00383R000200190015-6 12484 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE SLEEPING BEAR DUNES Mr. HART. Mr. President, over the July 4 weekend the Public Lands Sub- committee of the Senate Interior Com- mittee visited Michigan's Sleeping Bear Dunes and held a 3-hour public hearing on S. 792, the Hart-McNamara bill to establish a national lakeshore in that area. The opposition turned out. In large numbers and reiterated its blanket oppo- sition to the proposal; and others in the area explained why they favored it. On July 8 the Detroit News commented on the situation in a well-balanced edi- torial.' In comment, I would point out that our Sleeping Bear Dunes bill goes to new lengths in lakesbore legislative history to assure continued private own- ership of homes and expanded functions of a lakeshore advisory committee on which local citizens would be represented. It provides for permanent private owner- ship of the homes within the area, in perpetuity, and it establishes a perma- nent advisory committee with which the Secretary of the Interior Is directed to consult-particularly with respect to park development and rights of property owners, both residential and commercial. Mr. President, I ask unanimous con- sent that the Detroit News editorial be inserted in the RECORD at this point. There being no objection, the editorial was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, , as follows: [From the Detroit News, July 8, 1963] DtNxs Pear Fuson Opposition to Senator HART'S proposal for a 77,000-acre park in the Sleeping Bear Dunes area of Michigan is as understandable as the enthusiasm of others to see it accom- plished. The opposition is grounded in the fear that control over the holdings and homes of local residents and owners will pass to a not too responsive Washington agency, the Department of the Interior. This feeling of a loss of independence and local decision- making power undoubtedly is a deeper issue than the size of the area to be embraced and the prospect of a tourist invasion. Proponents of the park rightfully argue it is a last opportunity to preserve for pos- terity a peculiarly distinctive part of Michi- gan's dwindling national beauty and share it with all. Here is the familiar standoff that occurs always when what is good for the many for years to come is weighed against what pleases local residents in their lifetimes. Certainly local opposition to the project was amply and convincingly demonstrated at the Frankfort hearing by a U.S. Senate committee on July 4. The setting of the hearing guaranteed that. Held in the area of potential park users, say in Detroit or Chicago, the results and sentiments ex- pressed might have been directly opposite. To resolve these differences should be the goal of park proponents. That can be ac- complished, it would seem, only by giving local residents some guarantee their voices will be heard to a sufficient degree in the administration of the L-rti iscrr1Ated. Mr. SEATIIdE.~eni de- tailed survey of current anti- tic activities through the world has been published by the American Jewish Com- mittee's Institute of Human Relations. It is a clear, at~t comprehensive analysis of discrimination against a minority group struggling for religious freedom. It is not surprising that the Soviet Union is one of the greatest offenders. Anti-Semitism inside the Soviet world is an old story. Moscow turns it on or off whenever It suits Soviet purposes. In- side Russia itself, Jews are, in effect sec- ond-class citizens. They are consistently discriminated against, and often are used as scapegoats. In the Soviet Union, where the state stands for atheism, Jews are considered a separate national group. No recognition is given to religion. Anti- Semitic discrimination seriously impairs their nationality rights-despite Soviet claims. We in the United States properly view these developments with revulsion and anger. To express our strong feelings, our Government should bring this prob- lem to the attention of the, world, and should seek some means of its solution or alleviation. Certainly our Government should not hesitate to publicize and docu- ment the religious persecution which continues throughout the Soviet Com- munist empire. Mr. President, I ask unanimous con- sent to have printed in the RECORD, fol- lowing my remarks, the article published by the American Jewish Committee's Institute of Human Relations, which specifically deals with anti-8emitism in the Soviet Union. There being no objection, the article was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: Ties Sovirr UNSON In November 1982, the only synagogue In Lvov, the capital of the Western Ukraine, was closed. It had served a community of about 30,000. The closing was the culmina- tion of an intensive yearlong campaign by the communist party paper, Lvovskaya Pravda, which charged the synagogue with being "a shelter for Idlers, speculators, para- sites and moneygrubbers." In the spring of 1962, several members of the board had been arrested, convicted and imprisoned for "prof- iteering and hooliganism." The Identification of the synagogue with economic malpractices was purposeful. in- deed symbolic. Jews have been the prime targets of a drive against "economic crimes"; of the 58 trials for such offenses held in 36 cities from the start of the campaign until March 1963. more than half have involved Jews. SCONOIcrc cams Beginning in May 1961, the Soviet Union enacted decrees extending the death penalty to economic offenses like pilfering public or state property, counterfeiting, currency speculation and bribery. Most observers interpreted this drastic move as an attempt to wipe out the nearly universal graft and corruption in Soviet Industry and agricul- ture. Such practices are an Inevitable re- sponse to the realities of the Soviet econ- omy: shortages of raw and manufactured goods, unrealistic production goals, a com- plex bureaucracy and a low standard of living. As experts on the Soviet Union have pointed out, bribery to obtain needed sup- tion under these conditions. In a wider sense, the economic offenses express a desire to eke out, by whatever means, some measure of "private" security In a tightly controlled, Spartan economy. The death penalty is being publicized to frighten those involved In economic malprac- July 24 tires, and to scare off others who may be tempted by the financial rewards. During the 2-year period from may 1961 to April 1983, 141 persons were reportedly sentenced to death for economic offenses. Cases of this sort are covered more extensively In the Soviet press than others; the Government wants as many people as possible to learn that death by shooting Is the ultimate pen- alty for economic crimes. The barbaric severity of the punishment has shocked the outside world-witness a recent petition initiated by Henry Steele Commager, Lewis Gannett, William Ernest Hocking, Martin Luther King, Linus Pauling and Norman Thomas, and signed by 223 other prominent American scholars and clergymen. The document urged the Soviet Union to re- peal the decrees on the ground that "the con- science of mankind rebels against excessive and Inhumane punishment, of which capital punishment for economic crimes is a lamen- table example," JEWS AS SCAPEGOATS No less disquieting is the fact that nearly 80 percent of those put to death for eco- nomic offenses have been Jews. The Inter- national Commission of Jurists has pointed out that the application of the death sen- tences shows "racial overtones," and that the number of Jewish-sounding names in the lists of the condemned is strikingly large. Observers of Soviet affairs believe that this Is not accidential-that Jews, being a vulner- able minority, are made scapegoats for the bureaucrats In charge of the vast production and distribution machinery and forced to bear the brunt of public discontent with shortages or inferior quality of goods. In ad- dition, Jews are singled out for object lessons showing how severely the state regards eco- nomic crimes. The Soviet press emphasizes the Jewish- ness of the defendants in various ways. Rep- etition of obviously Jewish-sounding family names like Kaplan, Shapiro, Rabinovitch, Goldman, Zuckerman is most common. When the surname alone is not clearly Jew- ish, the first name and patronymic may be given in full instead of being abbreviated as is the normal practice, thus A. L. Kraisman appears as Abraham Lazarevitch Kralsman, and M. I. Maly as Mikhail Isaakovitch Maly. In mass trials involving dozens of people, Jewish names appear more frequently than others. For example, of 47 defendants in a trial in Frunze, the capital of the Kirghiz Soviet Socialist Republic, more than half were Jews or related to Jews-though Jews constitute less than 1 percent of the popula- tion in the Kirghiz Republic. Nine named Individuals "and others" were reported to have received death sentences; four of the nine bore Jewish names? Analysts of the press reports believe the defendants' names were presented In a manner intended to stress the high proportion of Jews. In another trial, at Dnepropetrovsk in the Ukraine, 24 defendants were accused of manipulating the price of apples. Though the majority were non-Jews, only the Jews were singled out for death sentences? Jewish defendants are depicted in the crudest anti-Semitic stereotypes as mani- pulators of gullible non-Jewish victims. Yet in reality most of the Jews executed for economic offenses occupied relatively minor posts, whereas non-Jews, who received light sentences, often held responsible posi- tions. For example, at a trial in Leningrad, on charges of diverting goods from official trade channels, a Jew named Kraisman was sentenced to death, though he was only an agent employed by the several trade orga- 1 Sovietskaya Kirghizia, Frunze, June 25, 27, 1962; July 22, 1962; Izvestia, Moscow, July 22, 1962. 2 Pravda Ukrainy, Kiev, Apr. 4, 1962; Trud, Moscow, Mar. 21, 1962. Approved For Release 2010/04/27: CIA-RDP65B00383R000200190015-6 Approved For Release 2010/04/27: CIA-RDP65B00383R000200190015-6 1963 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE 12485 nizations involved; the top officials, factory ligious bodies have been authorized to ac- literary research institutes, theaters and directors and managers received short prison quire new vestments, ikons, and the like. dramatic schools were abruptly closed, as terms .3 And Jews have not been free to print re- was the large Yiddish schoolsystem. in some cases the press and the prosecu- ligious calendars- except that A.,ri. . +, , _ ~,_ Since t who was 'shot for current s eculation. in 0111[411 queniities Ior their own use. Y P While the Russian Orthodox Church, the Tiflis, Georgia, the local paper wrote: "Even Roman Catholic Church, the Moslems, and the religious books of the Torah have been other creeds have been provided with facili- used" to hide foreign currency. Later, the ties for training reasonable numbers of paper reported that. the defendant had re- clergymen, there were no provisions for fused to sign a statement of his testimony rabbinical training until recently, and there on a Saturday because of his religious con- are hardly any now. In 1057, a rabbinic victions, and.that "speculation went on in academy was opened in Moscow, but was full swing in the Lord's temple. While pray- never permitted to function properly. Its ing, they emptied each other's pockets." I building needs were not met, and its enroll_ 2n Vilna, four Jews were sentenced t o death for currency speculation, among them the first woman convicted in a case of this nature. Here the press and the prosecution involved the synagogue and the rabbi in the proceedings. The national trade-union daily, distributed throughout the Soviet Union, claimed that the defendants had gone to the local rabbi to settle their finan- cial disputes, and concluded with an unmis- takably anti-Semitic note: "These people stood apart from our life. They were not interested in how the Soviet people live." 5 The case was also used for an attack on reli- gion. in general. According to one report, witnesses testified about the complicity of "representatives of the clergy of different religions," specifically local Catholic priests, as well as the local synagogue .6 In singling out Jews for economic offenses, publicly identifying them as Jewish through emphasis on their affiliation with the s ynago - gue (the only Jewish institution remaining In 1962, the Government discontinued its in the Soviet Union), punishing them more previous practice of providing flour, labor harshly than non-Jews in more responsible and facilities for baking matzoh, the un- posmitiioon s o and heshooting i a et disproportionate Government leavened bread used during the Passover sea- nur Stalinist policies even while con- a supply at home (a a mwere ethods few could fol- demning them, low, because of technical and ritual difficul- Soviet leaders consistently deny that the ties), but at the same time the press fea- Government's policy toward economic of- tured semiofficial attacks on private baking, fenders is in any sense anti-Semitic. Thus, Since then, individuals who sell home- Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev wrote to Ber- baked matzoh have been imprisoned for con- trand Russell in Februar ductin ri 1963 t y g p va : ..W ulluer- e businesseilt s, voaing health represented in the supreme Soviets of most "It is for the sake of justice that our peo- regulations, "illegal commercial activities" constituent republics, especially those three- pie have to punish those who want to live or "price speculation" ascribe to our State pursuance and encour- agement of the policy of anti-Semitism are not a new phenomenon." .Similar denials have accompanied the closing of synagogues, the arrest of congrega- tion leaders, and the ousting of congregation officials. But there can be little doubt that such acts are intended as attacks on the remnants of Jewish community structure. THE CAMPAIGN AGAINST THE SYNAGOGUE Though all religions are subject to restric- tions and hostility in the Soviet Union, Judaism is singled out for special disabilities which add up to a program of planned attri- tion. . Jewish congregations, unlike others, are isolated; they may not form national or re- gional associations by which they might help one another and maintain spiritual unity. Religious leaders are not permitted to leave the country for visits with Jewish officials or institutions elsewhere, while members of other faiths have -visited coreligfonists, at- tended conferences, gone on pilgrimages, and even r+-Ai- -- down down to 3 or 4 through bureaucratic ma- neuvering. Finally, a harsh discriminatory restriction is implicit in the Government's long-stand- ing ban on the Hebrew language. Whereas most of the religions represented in the So- viet Union conduct their rituals in the con- gregants' languages, Judaism requires some knowledge of Hebrew for an understanding of services and prayer books; but none has been taught since 1917. During the same period, no Hebrew Bible and only one token edition (3,000 copies) of the Prayer Book have been printed. Therefore, most Jews who still attend synagogue cannot actively participate in the service. No comparablez restrictions are imposed on the Moslems, who use Arabic as a special language for religious purposes; an Arab Koran was issued in 1958, 0sr, 01 live. policy of harassment dating back-toa1957. InCaree snof Jews, especially at the local Beginningd in that year, the amounts pro- level and that of the constituent republics, dote by stag bakeries were progressively are markedly limited by discrimination. For curtailed. Synagogues were accused of mak- the higher executive positions the rule seems .ing huge profits from the "illegal produc- to be "last hired, first fired." Jews have tion" and sale of matzoh; in 1960, the of- virtually disappeared from sensitive areas ficers of the Riga congregation were charged like the diplomatic service and the armed 115,000 rubles in taxes on their alleged pri- forces. Elsewhere, for example in cultural vate profits, and elsewhere synagogue officials and scientific pursuits, especially able Jew- were forced to resign their positions, ish individuals may still be found in the Like other restrictions on Jewish religious middle ranks; but the Jewish share of em- practices, the campaign against matzoh ap- ployment in higher education, science and parently is intended to separate Soviet Jews political life has not kept up with the na- from their historical traditions. The press tion's expanding opportunities. has virulently attacked the ancient feast of Passover, which commemorates the liberation voress of PROTEST of the Hebrews from slavery in Egypt and As the Soviet Government's anti-Semitic their emergence as a religious people. Such policies have become increasingly plain, traditions, it is alleged, are chauvinistic; much indignation has stirred in the out- they "give rise to nationalist feelings, and side world. To name but one protest among poison the minds of Jews by diverting their many: in December 1962, a telegram to Pre- thoughts to 'the land of their fathers' (while mier Khrushchev, drafted by the American killing) love for the Soviet motherland? Jewish Committee and signed by American religious leaders of all faiths, scored discrimi- JEWISH CULTURE CURTAILED natory acts against Jewish religious and Unlike other minority groups in the Soviet cultural institutions- Tlnir.,. r_--- ---- - -gregacions ~?al life in their own language. Official tellectuals have been shocked to realize that - In- have been forbidden to manufacture urgent- quarters insist that Russian Jews are cul- anti-Semitism is once more being actively ly needed religious - articles such as prayer aurally assimilated and not interested in fostered. A protest, unusually explicit by shawls and phylacteries, whereas other re- Yiddish-despite the fact that in the 1959 Soviet standards, was voiced during 1961 by census 20 percent of them did name it as one of the country's most popular poets, $ Sovietskaya Rossia, Moscow, Jan. 27, Mar, their mother tongue. Yevgeny Yevtushenko, in a poem entitled 1, Aug. 26, Nov. 16, 1961 In 1948, all of the countr 's Yiddi B bi Y " . y a ar sh jour -. 4 Zaria Vostoka, Tiflis, Nov. 26, 30, 1961. nals and publishing houses, cultural and Babi Yar is a ravine, just outsid I Trud, Moscow Jan 16 196 , .,. 2 Sovietskaya Litva, Vilna, Feb. 3, 1962, No. 112-6 where Sovietskaya Moldavia, Siehinev, duly 23, Ukrainians Jews Nazis In murdered 141, No about 1959, monument monument marks this tragic place; the Government has scale. The Minister of Culture, Ekaterina Furtseva, has indicated that any Govern- ment moves in this field are merely gestures addressed to the Soviet Union's friends abroad. Until the late 1950's, Yiddish song recitals and literary readings by old artists remained virtually the only cultural expressions per- mitted. The response was great; though not of a high standard, the performances at- tracted a total audience of 3-million in 1957 alone. Today a handful of Yiddish theat- rical and musical groups, all amateur, are active; they are in great demand in the major cities, but their schedules are sharply limited, and their achievements do not be- gin to compare with those of the Soviet Yiddish theater in the days of its profes- sional glory. Beginning In 1959, half a dozen Yiddish books, all by authors long dead, were re- issued, but only in small editions (10,000 to 30,000), which were soon sold out. In 1961, after years of insistent pressure from abroad, the Government permitted publication of a Yiddish magazine, Sovietish Heimland, Reference works and textbooks published in recent years treat Jews and their cultural achievement as virtually nonexistent. For example, a recent edition of the "Great So- viet Encyclopedia" devotes only 2 pages to Jews, as against 116 in an earlier edition. DISCRIMINATION IN PUBLIC LIFE AND EDUCATION Since World War II Jews have been elimi- nated from the Soviet Union's political lead- ership to a striking degree. As far as is known, there are none in the upper echelons of the Communist Party or the Government , with the sole exception of V. E. Dimchitz, first deputy chairman of the planning of- fice. Before the war, 4.1 percent of the deputies to the Supreme Soviet of the U.S.S.R. were Jewish; by 1958, the figure had Approved For Release 2010/04/27: CIA-RDP65B00383R000200190015-6 Approved For Release 2010/04/27: CIA-RDP65B00383R000200190015-6 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD -SENATE J ;12486 July 24 remained coldly Indifferent to all regeusts our goals as a nation. Since many of the In the United States as possible. A recent for one and, Indeed, has generally remained students will be the leaders of their weekend spent by a group of foreign students was typical of the programs arranged for silent about the holocaust a European Jewry them. from the under Hitler. In his poem. Yevtusheato, nations vital part in of U years U.S. efforts to come. to It should promote s be ill- a Among the 40 were young people though not a Jew, identifies himself with dent exchange programs. The program Middle East. Europe, Canada, the Far East, suffering Jews from the days of Egyptian bondage along these lines offered by Cornell Uni- Africa, and Latin America-22 countries in tho ose those who would d c carry and on ri the e evil indicts varsity is an example of a highly success- all. Included Australia. the Chwere lle, acouplTurkeyes from well as four nuns from Chile, and tradition of persecution in present-day ful effort to Introduce foreign students to Japan, Russia. He points up the existents of s American life. I was very glad to be The students came down by bus from Cor- historic Jewish people, which Soviet doctrine able to meet these students in Washing nail to Washington in the manner of ordi- dentee. ton and to learn of the important work nary tourists, but during their long weekend 'Sabi Yath appeared in a journal pub- through this program by Cornell Univer- in the capital they saw and heard much create by ens Soviet fdays rs Union and Writers Consentl to have printedain the RECORD cooperation of casual individuaallsa and Gov publication, hetjournal few of the after Union of the Russian Federated Republic following my remarks the text of this ernment departments, they obtained new in- printed several attacks on Yevtushenko. in article. sight into the political system under which Which his depiction of anti-Semitism in There being no objection, the article Americans live. Even before their arrival the visitors from Russia was rejected' In the ensuing con- was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, abroad were made to feel welcome, for many Stet between " 'liberal" and a party-l the lib liberal as follows: more homes had been offered than there were deplored It, while became an issue: the the party r OREIGN STUDENTS GIVEN CLOSZVP an;w or students. As a result, some families which deplored the adherents of the pty U.S. PEOPLE AND GOVERNMENT were unable to give the students overnight line denied wd it existed. On December 18, 1882, the "Thirteenth WesxtxaroN.-For the more than 60,0D0 hospitality entertained them at dinner. In each case, the hosts were Cornell alumni, Symphony" by Dmitri ShostakoVich. Russia's foreign students now in the United States, each best-known composer, had its premiere in living abroad is both a pleasure and a chal- working in cooperation with the Interna- Mot symphony contains a choral lenge. tional StudentOffice at Cornell. o The man of whom are section, , set to word ord from "Sabi Tar." The The pleasure Is derived largely from whom to ?umedp~itions o2 responsibility expected heir day before the first performance, Khrushchev favorable impression of Americans. to and other top members of the Soviet Gov- they have come to know as friendly, gener- return home, were given an opportunity ernment met privately with several hundred ous and sincere people. The challenge is talk with some of the men who are engaged prominent intellectuals and writers; at this the basic one of adjustment to a different in ecissiioon?akinngvin then legislative branch meeting, complaints were made that the way of life. of the verses would be used by "enemies of the Some 160 countries are now represented Atd Building, Senator the old Senate of a luncheon In Soviet Union" to support charges of anti- at 1,800 U.S. cotraditions and ores cover lleges and universities. BBurk told the t KzNN that, while of New eban Semitisna. t h aub#eg nie Their and sometimes these p from ance exists among some groups in the United off the the text for for the e second performance a wide range, of the symphony, In Februruary ry 1988. adding a comparatively quiet world to the bustle States. "they represent only a minority, and Russians and Ukrainians to the Jews who of an American metropolis is not only con- a minority that is steadily getting smaller." lie in Bahl Tar and omitting a slogan ascribed fusing but painful for a student. Even at Senator EDMUND S. MvSTUE of Maine, describ- to anti-Semites ("Thrash and kikes and save a small-town college he is confronted by lug himself as the son of an immigrant from Russia"). The music was not altered. strange and bewildering customs. "Russian-occupied Poland," said that every- AN rwzxTaicABLl viss Fortunately, the young visitors do not face one In America is a member of a minority. their problems alone. Those who are in- "We have majority rule in this country. In a The best and most recent 'survey of the volved in the rapidly expanding student- democratic ideal," he said, "but because we condition of Russian Jews is "'The Status of exchange movement-and this includes not also belong to minorities, we are careful to the Jews in the Soviet Union" by Moths only universities but private organizations, protect the rights and interests of ml- DecterP The article concludes: foundations. and the U.S. Government--are noritie ." "In sum, Soviet policy places the Jews in eager, to facilitate the foreign student's ad- During the weekend the group visited the an inextricable vise. They are allowed justmant to American life. Department of State, where Daniel W. Mon- aee, nor to aemigra a nor live a full Jewish Special orientation courses are given at tenegro, Director of the Office of Public Serv- lif nor to emigrate (as many would wish) the start of the school year, and most col- ices, described the structure of the Depart- t0Israel or any other place where they might leges have foreign student advisers whose ment and how American foreign policy is live freely as Jews. The policy stems, in task it Is to give advice as needed on every- carried out. Later he freely answered ques turn, from doctrinal contradictions abetted thing from religion to money, and who often trt~ made by the students. by traditional anti-Jewish sentiments. On act as a bridge between the students and the National Aeronautics and Space Ad- ministration, the National Aeronautics n, Spe - the one hand, the authorities want the Jews the townspeople. At to assimilate; on the other hand, they irra- All this helps create an atmosphere of mnistration, oo W. discussed its Director rrof that this discussed Its tionally fear the full penetration of Soviet mutual understanding. As one young man n explaining Programs, which assimilation implies. So the Jews from Malaya remarked after 9 months of agree In ti ters. xpla P r program involves is es, are formally recognized as a nationality, contact with Americans, "I may cooperation with agency for other hi sexchange ie fund t information it as a religious group. as equal citizens-but with everything you do, but at least i think is an are at the same time deprived of their na- I understand why you do it." with other.. He pointed out that, in a num- tional and religious rights as a group, and of In the course of their stay In the 'United ber of instances, the United States has full equality as individuals." States, the students have an opportunity worked hand in hand with other countries "Soviet policy as a whole, then amounts to participate in American life not only at in making space probes. to spiritual strangulation-the deprivation school but also in their communities. For Subsequently the students were conducted of Soviet Jewry's natural right to know the 9 years the 294 people of Burns. Kans., on a special tour of the White House, visited Jewish past and to participate In the Jewish have invited groups of foreign students from the National Gallery of Art, the Supreme present. And without a past and a present, the University of Kansas to share their Court Building, the Lincoln Memorial, the the future is precarious indeed." Thanksgiving Day and experience life In a Smithsonian Institution, and the Jefferson typical small town in the Midwest. Oth- Memorial. or communities periodically invite foreign It was a busy weekend for the students FOREIGN STUDENTS AT CORNER students to spend weekends with local famt- and Obviously a rewarding one, for they lies who are always delighted to meat pat- later summed up the program as "typical pie from other lands. American friendliness." j~rIr. SKEATING. Mr. President, student One of the major schools playing host to exchange programs between the United foreign students is Cornell University, lo- OLD FED- very and foreign countries can play a cated in upper New York State. Its 17 col- AUTHORITY TO WITHHOLD worthwhile role in international Ieges, which offer specialized education in ERAL FUNDS BECAUSE OF RACIAL relations. If foreign students have an everything from agriculture to hotel man- -AL MINATI opportunity to get a true picture of our agement In addition to the traditional lib-Dismn eral arts course, attract young people from Mr. HART. Mr. President, some weeks country, then we hope they will always every part of the world. At present Its for- ago, together with the senior Senator retain a better understanding of the eign student population numbers more than from New York [Mr. JAviTS], I directed 850 persona representing 85 foreign coun- tries. to the several executive agencies in- workings of the U S. Government and of u[ries in order to determine whether ?Literaturnays Oazeta Sept. 19 1981. Cornell, like other institutions of its kind. they felt Lord weoe admis wh any i Literature I Zhizn, Sept. 21, 1961. makes a special effort to give these young lForeign Affairs, January 1983. people as broad and true a picture of life Federal-funds program which in any re- Approved For Release 2010/04/27: CIA-RDP65B00383R000200190015-6