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Full Text of President Truman’s Letter to Prime Minister Attlee

November 14, 1945
See Original Daily Bulletin From This Date
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The full text of the letter sent by President Truman to Prime Minister Attlee on Aug. 31 in which he requested the admission of 100,000 Jews to Palestine, as released today by the President, follows:

MY DEAR MR. PRIME MINISTER:

Because of the natural interest of this Government in the present condition and future fate of those displaced persons in Germany who may prove to be stateless or non-repatriable, we recently sent Mr. Earl G. Harrison to inquire into the situation.

Mr. Harrison was formerly the United States Commissioner of Immigration and Naturalization, and is now the representative of this Government on the Intergovern- mental Committee on Refugees. The United Kingdom and the United States, as you know, have taken an active interest in the work of this committee.

Instructions were given to Mr. Harrision to inquire particularly into the problems and needs of the Jewish refugees among the displaced persons.

Mr. Harrison visited not only the American zone in Germany, but spent some time also in the British zone where he was extended every courtesy by the 21st Army headquarters.

I have now received his report. In view of our conversations at Potsdam I am sure that you will find certain portions of the report interesting. I am, therefore sending you a copy.

I should like to call your attention to the conclusions and recommendations appearing on page 8 and the following pages – especially the references to Palestine. It appears that the available certificates for immigration to Palestine will be exhausted in the near future. It is suggested that the granting of an additional one hundred thousand of such certificates would contribute greatly to a sound solution for the future of Jews still in Germany and Austria, and for other Jewish refugees who do not wish to remain where they are or who for understandable reasons do not desire to return to their countries of origin.

On the basis of this and other information which has come to me I concur in the belief that no other single matter is so important for those who have known the horrors of concentration camps for over a decade as is the future of immigration possibilities into Palestine. The number of such persons who wish immigration to Palestine or who would qualify for admission there is, unfortunately, no longer as large as it was before the Nazis began their extermination program. As Isaid to you in lotsdam, the American people, as a whole, firmly helieve that immigration into Palestine the sould not be closed and that a reasonable number of Europe’s persecuted Jews should, in accordance with their wishes, be permitted to resettle to resettle there.

I know you are in agreement on the proposition that future peace in Europe depends in a large measure upon our finding sound solutions of problems confronting the displaced and formerly persecuted groups of people. No claim is more meritorious then that of the groups who for so many years have known persecution and enslavement.

The main solution appears to lie in the quick evacuation of as many as possible of the non-repatriable Jews, who wish it, to Palestine. If it is to be effective, such action should not be long delayed. Very sincerely yours Harry S. Truman

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