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- GRAPEVINE, Page 23Two Is Better Than One
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- By DAVID ELLIS/Reported by David E. Thigpen
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- Before it disappeared into the mists of cold war history,
- East Germany believed it had found an unlikely ally in
- extremis: the World Jewish Congress. History professor Michael
- Wolffsohn of Munich's Bundeswehr University says records of
- private meetings held between East German leaders and W.J.C.
- delegations before the Communist regime collapsed show that a
- representative of the Jewish group expressed support for
- keeping East Germany a separate state. "Reunification is not on
- the agenda," Maram Stern, an aide to W.J.C. president Edgar
- Bronfman, was quoted as telling the East Germans. "The W.J.C.
- will do everything it can so that it should not come about."
- Wolffsohn examined the East German documents last summer, but
- they won't be seen again soon. After unification, the archives
- came under federal German rules and were sealed for 30 years.
- Elan Steinberg, W.J.C. executive director, calls the East
- German version of the meeting "rubbish. The credibility of the
- source of those records is not very great." And in May 1990,
- Bronfman said the W.J.C. viewed German unification as
- inevitable.
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