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INDEX OF THIS ISSUE

FEATURES
     A tale of two cultures
     Alyce's story
VALLEY
     Congregations join in events highlighting the needs of children
NATION
     Clinton signs bill to open war-crime files
     Federations taking control of combined new entity
WORLD
     Pope's 20 years marked by strides in interfaith relations
     Novelist's letter prompts fears of anti-Semitism
ISRAEL
     Talks bring first test as Sharon returns to Cabinet
     Global economic crisis having impact on Israel
OPINION
     Editorial - Saving a life
     Analysis - Strategizing began long before peace summit in U.S.
     In the Mail - Letters to the Editor
     Commentary - Not everything about 'new Germany' is good news
ARTS
     Einstein meets Picasso in ATC production
     Plotkin museum reopens Tunisian Legacy exhibit
BUSINESS
     Chabad of Phoenix opens thrift store
JEWISH FAMILY & LIFE
     Yosef Abramowitz - Take time to speak with kids about presidential scandal
TORAH STUDY
     We can master sin

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Novelist's letter prompts fears of anti-Semitism

LEV KRICHEVSKY
Jewish Telegraphic Agency
MOSCOW - Edward Topol's novels have been read by audiences all over the world. Now a letter that the Russian Jewish emigre has published in a newspaper here has outraged Russian Jews.

The full-page letter, which was printed last month in the Moscow weekly Argumenty i Fakty, called on Russian Jewish bankers not to throw Russia into a "chaos of poverty and wars." Topol, who emigrated to the United States 20 years ago and now lives in New York, also urged Jewish tycoons to "chip in a billion or two" to help Russia's economy.

The weekly's popularity - it has a print run of more than 3 million copies and is especially popular in Russia's provinces - has prompted worries about how the letter will be interpreted by the paper's readers. Many Jews said the letter implied that a Jewish conspiracy exists in Russia, and they are worried that it could therefore trigger an outbreak of anti-Semitism.

"The article made me feel very uneasy," said Lydia Tseitlina, an accountant. "All my Jewish friends were frightened."

"Those Jews who are active in business and politics act not as Jews but as Russians. Topol's letter provocatively alludes to the existence of some Jewish plan, and that is why it is very dangerous," said Mikhail Chlenov, president of the Va'ad, the Jewish Federation of Russia.

In the letter, Topol implied that a small group of Jewish business magnates exert an enormous control over the Kremlin. The 59-year-old author also claimed that the Jewish prominence in Russia could lead to Jewish pogroms and even to a new Holocaust.

One Jewish leader said he did not expect a Jewish author to write such a letter. "I would rather expect such an article from Anpilov or from Zhirinovsky," said Moscow Chief Rabbi Pinchas Goldschmidt, referring to Viktor Anpilov, the leader of the leftist group Working Russia, who is known for his anti-Semitism, and to Vladimir Zhirinovsky, the head of the ultranationalist Liberal Democratic Party.

During the Soviet regime, Topol's books were banned, but he gained international fame for a novel he published that focused on Soviet corruption. After the fall of communism, he became famous throughout Russia. Some 15 of his novels have been published here.

Many of Topol's novels have Jewish characters. Among the villains in his 1997 novel, "China Lane," is a character based on Boris Berezovsky, a Jewish media and oil tycoon who is influential in Russian politics. Berezovsky - along with Vladimir Goussinsky, a media baron and president of the Russian Jewish Congress, and other top Jewish bankers - was among the people to whom Topol addressed his letter.

"It is true that the number of Jews in the business and financial spheres are higher than their proportion in the population," said Goldschmidt. "But to say that all the banks are controlled by Jews is completely wrong."

Topol said this week that he only wanted to mobilize Jewish tycoons for the "sake of saving Russia."

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