AFTER THE WAR
PROBLEM OF THE JEWS
(British Official Wireless.} "(Received January 22, 12.45 p.m.) • RUGBY; January 21. Professor Selig Brodesky, in his first presidential address to the Board :of Deputies of British Jews in London, said that when the war was over and Nazi domination had been removed j from Europe there would be hundreds j of thousands, perhaps millions, of Jews and others with no shelter, no employ-1 ment, and no basis of existence. Hitler" had not merely prosecuted and massacred Jews. He had uprooted, displaced, evacuated, banished, and atomised his victims into an amorphous; powder of human agony. Discussing how the post-war problem that resulted was to be dealt with, he said Jewish eyes and hearts turned to Palestine" where the achievements of 60 years had given concrete form to the hopes and prayers of 100 generations. '•'... '...■> -■ ,--': ■'~;■■ '
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Bibliographic details
Evening Post, Volume CXXIX, Issue 18, 22 January 1940, Page 6
Word Count
140AFTER THE WAR Evening Post, Volume CXXIX, Issue 18, 22 January 1940, Page 6
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