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Page 2 THE SOUTHERN ISRAELITE December 19, 1986
Dissident Marchenko’s death
shocks Soviet Jewry activists
LONDON (JTA)-Interna-
tional Human Rights Day was
marked here Dec. 10 by protests
against continued Soviet perse
cution of dissidents and the con
tinuing difficulties refusniks face
in trying to obtain exit visas.
The temperature of the pro
tests was raised by reports that
one of the best know n Soviet pol
itical dissidents, Anatoly Mar
chenko, had died in the notor
ious Chistopol prison in the
Tartar Republic while serving a
10-year term for “anti-Soviet agi
tation and propaganda.” He was
48 years old.
His Jewish wife, Larissa Bo-
goraz, whom he met while both
were serving internal exile terms
in Siberia, told reporters in Mos
cow that she had received a tele
gram Dec. 9 from the prison
warden saying that her husband
had died in a hospital. The tele
gram gave no date nor cause of
death. On Nov. 21, Bogaraz was
summoned by security police and
told to apply for the family to
emigrate. She and Marchenko
have a 12-year-old son, Pavel.
Bogoraz said the last letter she
received from her husband was
dated Nov. 28, asking that she
send a food parcel. The request
indicated that Marchenko has
abandoned a hunger strike he
began Aug. 4 to protest his
treatment in prison, where Ana
toly Shcharansky had also been
incarcerated. Two weeks earlier.
Bogoraz said, a KGB officer told
her that her husband was “feeling
wonderful." She added that she
had heard the authorities were
force-feeding him.
Marchenko, a Ukrainian non-
Jew, had spent a total of 20 years
in Soviet prisons since first being
arrested in 1960. Following his
first six-year incarceration, he
wrote “My Testimony,” a pano
ramic description of Soviet pri
son life which became a best
seller in the West.
In 1968. during one of his
periods out of prison, he spoke
up in defense of a group of Soviet
youths who had been arrested for
protesting against the Soviet
intervention in Czechoslovakia.
In 1981, having spent 15 years
in prisons and labor camps,
Marchenko was given a 10-year
sentence for anti-Soviet agitation.
It resulted from his membership
in the Helsinki monitoring group,
established to record Soviet com
pliance with the Helsinki human
rights agreements.
Shcharansky and Yuri Orlov
were his colleagues in the Hel
sinki monitoring group. Both have
been permitted to emigrate after
lengthy terms in captivity.
Marchenko's death leaves
Nobel Laureate Andrei Sakharov
as the last prominent human
rights fighter still visibly victim
ized by the Soviet authorities.
However, many lesser know n ac
tivists are fast coming to the fore.
Some 26 Jewish refusniks are
currently in prison or labor
camps; 25 more have served time
on charges of “slander” or mali-
ciois hooliganism; and some
I (),()()() others undergoing various
forms of pressure still wait for
exit visas.
AJF’s ’87 campaign gearing up
Atlanta Jewish Federation’s
1987 Annual Campaign will be
off to a strong start Jan. I, 1987.
Gerald Horowitz, general cam
paign chairman, has appointed
Harriet Zimmerman and Bobby
Rinzler to spearhead the Major
Gifts team.
In August and September, At
lantans participated in the Prime
Minister’s Mission and the Pres
ident's Mission to Israel. Eigh
teen of them visited the Soviet
Union prior to arriving in Israel.
In early November, the Fly-in
program, chaired by Elliott Co
hen, closed 23 leadership gifts
yielding an increase of 37 per
cent. This successful effort laid
the groundwork for the Major
Gifts dinner held Dec. 4 at the
home of Janet and Chuck Wolf.
The dinner program featured
Marvin Lender, a national vice
chairman of UJA. Over 40 men
and women attended the event
for those who give a minimum of
$25,000.
Rinzler, who introduced
Lender, said. “The evening ful
filled our expectations in every
way. Marvin Lender, by his per
sonal story, was an inspiration to
us all. His message, which enu
merated the remarkable achieve
ments of the Jewish communities
of America, both in their own
cities and on behalf of Jews all
over the world, set the tone for
the evening.”
Zimmerman introduced the
fundraising segment of the pro
gram. She spoke of the freedoms
we enjoy as Jews in the United
States and compared our situa
tion with that of our brethren in
other countries whose rights are
seriously limited.
Those in attendance pledged
well over $2 million to the 1987
Campaign. The leadership was
unanimous in applaudingthe suc
cess of the event. Horowitz said,
“I arn confident, that, based upon
these pre-campaign Major Gift
results, we will indeed achieve
our most ambitious goals for
1987.”
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1
TSI seeks first ’87 baby
Will yours be the first Jewish baby born in the Atlanta
metropolitan area in 1987?
In our Jan. 9 issue. The Southern Israelite will highlight the
family of the first arrival of the New Year.
Send the date and time of birth, hospital, attending physi
cian and photograph to; The Southern Israelite, P.O. Box
250287, Atlanta. Ga. 30325 by Jan. 6.
In addition to the story, parents will receive a $50 savings
bond compliments of TSI and additional gifts donated by
community merchants.
weekly
specials
Fresh Empire Chicken Legs 1.09 1b.
Veal Chops Second Cut fresh or frozen . , , 2.99 lb.
Ground Veal 2.29 lb.
Chuck Roast blade cut 1.99 lb.
Empire Potato Latkes 24 oz 1.29
Isaac Gellis Franks and Salami i2oz 1.89 pkg.
O We have the largest selection of Kosher
Wines and Hanuka Candies available.
Happy Hanuka
215 Copeland Rd., N.E.
252-4396
2166 Briarcllff Rd., N E
634-6881
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kpshei
meats
&>deli
Under Strict Orthodox Rabbinical Supervsmn
mJ
THIS WEEK
2ACH0R center opens
photo exhibit
II
BBs Gate City Lodge
seeks pinch hitters' ...
25
Singles
20
Arts & Entertainment
22
Business
.24
Obituaries
28
Classifieds
29
10 & 25 years ago
31
Xvws Bncfs
Holocaust Museum gets boost
NEW YORK (JTA)—The United States Holocaust Coun
cil has received a $3 million donation from the New York-based
Helena Rubinstein Foundation toward the construction of a
U S Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, D.C. I he
sum was described as the largest single gift received to date in
the campaign to raise $100 million to build the museum on
federal land near the Washington Mall.
Bnei Brak has ‘sweet’ sewers
TEL AVIV (JTA)- Sanitation workers who were called to
find out why sewers in the religious township of Bnei Brak near
Tel Aviv have been blocked for the past 10 days solved the
mystery. Somebody dumped about a ton of chocolate syrup
down the drain and it solidified. Bnei Brak Mayor Moshe
Orenstein is trying to find out who to sue.
The cost of removing the substance is estimated at about
$100,000. Municipal officials speculate that the chocolate was
found to be defective and the truck driver assigned to take it to a
dump some miles away decided to pour it down the nearest
manhole.
The chocolate may or may not have come from the Elite
Coffee and Confectionery Co. which produces most of the
country’s chocolate. Its general manager. David Moshevitz,
said he was “shocked.” He said tainted chocolate “is usually
burned as a solid, not disposed of in solution.”
Arens: Let Arabs into army
JERUSALEM (JTA) Minister-Without-Portfolio Moshe
Arens indicated Wednesday that Israel’s Arab citizens should
be allowed eventually to serve in the country’s armed forces. He
told a press conference it was difficult to envisage the ultimate
complete integration of the Arab population into Israeli society
without their participation in the country’s defense.
Shut burners prison bound
M W YORK (JTA) A Rumanian court has sentenced
four persons to long prison terms for burning down a syn
agogue in the Moldavian town of Behush on Oct. 30, the chief
rabbi of Rumania. Moses Rosen, told leaders of the World
Jewish Congress. The synagogue was burned to the ground
after its janitor was stabbed.
Rosen said that the court in the town of Bacau found the
tour guilty and sentenced them as follows; Gheorghe Podo-
leanu. seven years imprisonment; Florin Sandru and Vasile
Popa Mnganu, each five years in prison; and Mihai Vatav, four
sears in a reform school.
I he lour, ranging in age from 17 to 28, were arrested on
Nos. 9 and charged with arson and slabbing. They claimed they
had come to rob the synagogue and asserted that the fire broke
out accidently from two candles they had left burning.
I he apprehension of the criminals and their sentencing
demonstrates once again that religious denominations in
Rumania are protected by lass and that no one can attack the
Jews and go unpunished.” Rosen said.
Palestinians deplore stabbing
TEL AVIV (JTA)—The stabbing attack on 66-year-old
Daivd Lipschitz in Jerusalem’s Old City last Friday night was
carried out despite a heavy police presence and other civilians
nearby. Police Minister Haim Bariev disclosed in an Israel
Radio interview Monday.
He insisted, however, that Jerusalem “is the safest city in the
NV< ? r ar saFer than New York, Paris, London and many
other big cities-despite the problems we have.”
ipse itz, an Orthodox Jew, was assaulted near the Da
mascus Gate on his way from prayers at the Western W'all to his
no me in the Mea Shearim quarter outside the Old City walls.
e was treated at Hadassah Hospital and is reported to be
recovering. *
p , M ,° re , than a doz en prominent Palestinians, including
a s me i eration Organization sympathizers, issued a state-
i i Sunday deploring the attack. They rejected “attempts by
l C « sr , a , c 1 mc dia to link (it) to the Palestinian nationalist strug-
T n ,nc signatories included faculty members of Bir Zeit
1 \ >IV!\ 111 tFlc ^ Cst iLink and Hanna Seniora, editor of the
p, °- 1 l() F a ^ Jerusalem daily A1 Fajr.