http://jta.virtualjerusalem.com/index.exe?0008291 Hadassah
Lieberman's family history creates
confusion in Czech Republic By Magnus Bennett PRAGUE, Aug. 29 (JTA) -
A Czech magazine is
calling into question details about the
Jewish background of the Czech-born wife
of Democratic vice-presidential candidate
Joseph Lieberman. Tyden magazine last week claimed that
international media, and the White House,
had published inaccurate information about
Hadassah Lieberman's family
history. Lieberman herself, however, disputes
most of the same claims. Among claims disputed by the magazine
are that Lieberman's father was a former
chief rabbi of Czechoslovakia and that he
was a successful lawyer in Prague. They
also contradicted media reports that
Lieberman was born in a Czech refugee camp
for Holocaust victims. Lieberman says her father was a lawyer
and a rabbi, but agrees that Samuel
Freilich was never the chief rabbi of
the former Czechoslovakia, though she says
he was ordained in Europe. The claim that Lieberman's father held
that position has surfaced in some news
reports and was mentioned in a 1995 White
House news release. Sally Aman, Lieberman's
spokeswoman, maintains that the false
information were mistakes that are being
recycled. Lieberman has always been
consistent about her past, Aman said. Historians and official representatives
of the Czech Jewish Community are still
concerned about the details surrounding
the life of the senior Freilich, who died
in 1993. "I am sure that" Freilich "was not a
rabbi," said Alexander Butik, a
historian based at the Jewish Museum in
Prague. "He became a rabbi in the U.S.
after the war." Colleague Andrea Braunova, a
librarian, said, "Maybe he was a local
rabbi somewhere, but I can find nothing to
confirm that." Tyden also
referred to a report in The
Washington Post that said Freilich
was a successful lawyer in Prague
between the world wars. The magazine
said no Samuel Freilich appeared on the
official lawyers' register of the time,
nor was he registered with the Justice
Ministry. It pointed out, however, that
he might have worked as a company
lawyer. Inquiries about Freilich have been
complicated by a recent privacy law that
bars the country's national central
archive from releasing any citizen's
personal data, including birth details,
health records, and their religious and
political affiliations. Details of Freilich's early days,
therefore, are sketchy. There are records
that show a Samuel Freilich from the
village of Maydan in the former
Czechoslovak region of sub-Carpathian
Russia -- now part of Ukraine -- graduated
from Charles University in Prague in
1934. Little is also known about Freilich's
life between the completion of his studies
and the start of World War II. Butik said
he believed Freilich returned to his home
region and set up several Jewish schools,
but could not confirm this. Another area of confusion relates to
the circumstances of Lieberman's birth.
Lieberman says she was born in Prague in
1948, but some news reports claimed she
was born in a refugee camp for Holocaust
survivors. What has not been disputed is that
Lieberman's mother, Ella Viderova,
survived the Auschwitz
and Dachau
concentration camps, while her father
endured a Nazi slave labor camp. The
couple married in 1946 in Prague, and
moved to America several years
later. (JTA correspondent
Sharon Samber in Washington contributed to
this report.) |