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TIME: Almanac 1993
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TIME Almanac 1993.iso
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1210552.000
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1992-08-28
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GRAPEVINE, Page 23Two Is Better Than One
By DAVID ELLIS/Reported by David E. Thigpen
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.