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WHEREVER THEY MAY BE © 1972, The
Beate Klarsfeld Foundation
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to French Jews, unless the number of
foreign Jews is insufficient for the required quota. Such a proviso should not
be taken to mean that French Jews should have any privileged status; in the
course of eliminating the Jews of all European countries, the French Jews will
also be exterminated. And, to reassure you, you can count on a certain number
of French Jews being included in the quota you have indicated. Of
course I received no reply to my open letter. It had to be written, however, so
that anyone whose attitude had changed might have a chance to prove it. It
ended as follows:
Now the Federal Republic under Gustav
Heinemann deserves some respect, especially since Willy Brandt, whom I myself
have seen acclaimed in The Hague, London, Paris, Erfurt in the West as
well as in the East is its Chancellor. Now German youth, even that part
of it that was in revolt until October 1969, has some respect for the
government's programs, for the youth helped Brandt into power. Your possible
appointment, the result of an election deal, will serve only to stir up a
controversy we had hoped was settled, and at the same time it will bring
dishonor upon the government and on the reputation of the Federal Republic.
Western Europeans have given the committees the responsibility for
important economic, social, and political questions, and your presence in
Brussels can only affect them adversely.
The choice is even simpler for
the French. To them, approving Achenbach is equivalent to approving Abetz and
everything he stood for. I myself have already furnished the French government
with a report I compiled as soon as I got the astonishing news of your
candidacy, and in a few days all the other members of the EEC will have a copy
of it.
That is why, sir, I appeal to your sense of public duty, and
assure you that you will do yourself great honor by abandoning your candidacy.
You may be sure that if you do, in spite of the differences between us, I will
feel personally indebted to you. Photocopies of all the documents
quoted above were already in my possession. Serge had quit his job at
Continental Grains three months before, and we were living on his separation
allowance. It kept shrinking as we engaged in distributing our report and the
papers that supported it. Every time I heard the whir of the Xerox machine at
the post office, I thought of it as an infernal monster devouring our food and
rent money.
What drove us to do it was the conviction that we were the
only persons and we felt desperately lonely to rise to the
demands of the occasion. No government, no political party, no individual
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WHEREVER THEY MAY BE © 1972, The
Beate Klarsfeld Foundation |
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Back |
Page 99 |
Forward |
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