Newspaper Page Text
PAGE 2 THE SOUTHERN ISRAELITE October 10, 1986
Happy New Year
insipmr litel
Plaza Walk Shopping Center
“Discount store but
a little bit more”
3872 Roswell Road 365-0422
Senior Citizens
LOW COST LIFE INSURANCE
PREFERRED RISK MONTHLY RATES
Your Age $100,000 $250,000 $500,000
60
$ 50
$ 122
$ 233
65
82
201
387
70
144
358
679
75
253
628
1151
80
639
1594
3158
90 CALL FOR QUOTATION
POLICY IMMEDIATELY IN FULL FORCE NO WAITING PERIOD. WE ALSO SPECIALIZE INSURING
INDIVIDUALS WITH HISTORY OF HEART DISEASE. CANCER, DIABETES, ETC.
CALL OR WRITE
Send name, address, date of birth to:
LYNWOOD GRADY & ASSOCIATES
4296-D MEMORIAL DRIVE • DECATUR, GEORGIA 30032 • (404) 296-0938
weekly
specials
Fresh Empire Chicken Legs 1.09 lb.
Fresh Empire Chicken Wings 59$ lb.
Breast of Veal 1.591b.
Ground Beef 5 lb. Family Pack 1.691b.
Chuck Roast blade cut 1.891b.
Short Ribs 2.49 lb.
Freebie 1 lb. Ground Beef
with ‘30 purchase
Poultry Specials not included
Hebrew National Salami and Franks 12 oz. 2.39 68.
Freezer Specials
All Veal Chops 2.99 lb. I
Club Steak 2.891b.
Shoulder Lamb Chops 3.79 lb.
Brand New Good Humor Ice Cream
Oscherwitz Franks 1 ib pack 2.59 ea.
Acme Herring in wine or creme 32 oz *3.491
Acme Herring homestyie 32 oz 2.99
Acme Herring wine cream sugar free 16 oz. . . . 2.29
Shmaltz Herring 2.991
Just Arrived
Smoked Sable 6.99 lb.
White Fish Chubs 4.99 lb.
Salmon Strips 2.99 lb.
Nova or Lox 8.99 lb.
Lox Flakes 2.99 lb.
Arthur’s Wine Cellar
We have largest selection of Kosher wines Kedem, Carmel,
Manischewitz, Mogen David
Buy by the case • Mix and Match
215 Copeland Rd., N.E.
252-4396
2166 Brlarcllff Rd.. N.E.
634-6081
c^Arfhurs
kgshef
meats
&deli
Under Strict Orthodox Rabbinical Supervision
AJF mission to U.S.S.R.
offers hope to Soviet Jews
Special to The Southern Israelite
In Leningrad, at the Radomyslsky apartment, are, left to right, Jack
Halpern, Iosif Radomslsky, Jack Horowitz and Bob Rinzler. In fore
ground are Lynne Halpern and Nina Radomyslsky, holding six-month-
old Dina.
He looked haggard; his face an
ashen gray. Sitting in the armchair,
arms crossed, hands grasping skin
just above the elbows, shoulders
hunched.
You would have thought that he
was grieving for the recent dead, or
perhaps that he had just returned
from the labor camps, still thinking
about his fellow Jews with sentences
yet to be completed. Five minutes
into the conversation, the transfor
mation is noticeable. Before too
long, in front of the visitors, the
melancholy withdraws leaving in
its place a vibrant, animated, ex
cited and excitable man, anxious
to talk about his experiences as a
refusnik, about the strong bonds
that tie the Jews of freedom with
the Jews of the Soviet Union.
The change that lifted joy up
through the recesses of determina
tion and stolid hope in the heart
and soul of Emmanuel Smelian-
sky—refusnik for 15 years—was
experienced by the 20 other refusnik
families that were visited by 18
members of Atlanta’s Jewish com
munity.
“Every advocate within the Soviet
Jewry movement stresses the im
portance of visiting refusniks,” says
Jack Horowitz, chairman of the
Worldwide Jewish Affairs Sub
committee of the Atlanta Jewish
Federation’s Community Relations
Committee. “Having spent eight
days, in Leningrad and in Moscow,
sharing in the life struggle with
these brave men, women and chil
dren, we know that it is vitally
important for these visits to be
a regular activity of the Jewish
communities of the free world.”
Sponsored by the Federation,
this mission to the Jews of the
Soviet Union had a profound effect
on the lives of all who participated.
“Inna Begun does not know where
her husband is,” remark Judith
and Elliott Cohen. “He has been
serving a seven-year prison sen
tence. Now 54, he has been shuttled
from labor camp to labor camp; he
is in extremely poor physical con
dition, and he has had no contact
with his wife. Yoshif and Inna
Begun are suffering because he
dared to teach Hebrew.”
The tension and pressures that
the wives of the Prisoners-of-Con-
science must endure are relieved a
little when visitors meet with them
to lend moral and political support.
Anna Lifshitz, whose husband
Vladimir is serving a three-year
prison sentence—he is a Hebrew
teacher—was visited by Howard
and Kathy Sachs and Bob Sherman.
Natasha Ratner, whose husband
Alexey Magarik is serving a three-
year prison sentence—he is a He
brew teacher—was visited by Bob
Fischbach, Bob Rinzler, and Glenda
and David Minkin.
Galina Zelichonok, whose hus
band Roald is serving a three-year
prison sentence—he, too, is a He
brew teacher—was visited by Elliott
and Judith Cohen and David Sar-
nat. Galina sent out an impassioned
plea for help for her imprisoned
husband. She asked that telegrams
be sent to Roald at his prison camp
on the occasion of his 50th birthday:
487010 USSR
Chimkentskay Area
Turkestan 10
Establish I. Ch. 167/5
Otrjad 7, Brigada 7
Zelichonok, Roald I.
Tanya Edelshtein, whose husband
Yuli is serving a three-year prison
sentence—he is also a Hebrew
teacher—was visited by Jack Horo
witz, Jack and Lynne Halpern, and
Noah Levine. “Tanya recorded a
message for us to bring back to
Georgia,” says Lynne Halpern.
“This message is a plea to all of us
to help save Yuli. He is deathly ill
in a prison hospital, suffering from
injuries sustained when in the labor
camp. Tanya fears that the doctors
will send him back to Siberia to
complete the remaining year and a
half of his prison sentence even
though he is not fully recovered
from a broken femur, a urethra
operation, and the after-effects of
food poisoning. Tanya implores us
to write immediately to the Deputy
Minister of the Interior and request
that Yuli not be sent back to the
labor camp.” The address is:
Deputy Minister of the
Interior Bogaturev
Ul. Ogareva 6
Moscow 103009
RSFSR USSR
One experiences a wide range of
emotions: from frustration to bit
tersweet pleasure; from sadness to
anger. “What was particularly
emotional for us,” agree Howard
and Kathy Sachs and Bob Fisch-
Continued next page.
Success is a journey,
not a destination ”
BEN SWEE TL ANl)
Wishing all our friends a success filled
journey throughout the New Year.