ACCESSION NUMBER:00000 FILE ID:95042706.NNE DATE:04/27/95 TITLE:SPECTER STRESSES TOLERANCE, BROTHERHOOD IN COMBATTING TERRORISM TEXT: (Senator Arlen Specter, others at Holocaust remembrances) (550) By Joanne L. Nix USIA Staff Writer Washington -- On the 50th anniversary of the liberation of concentration camps in Europe, Senator Arlen Specter (R-Pa.), chairman of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, spoke to a gathering of Holocaust survivors and their families gathered on the steps of the Nation's Capitol. "In today's society," he said, "memorial services for victims of hatred, extremism and violence are all too frequent." He cited the Oklahoma City bombing, which occurred last week when a terrorist bomb exploded at a Federal building leaving hundreds dead and injured, as the latest in a string of terrorist attacks, both inside the United States and outside. "We must commit ourselves to principles of tolerance, brotherhood and justice," he said. Specter was a featured speaker at the ceremony which was held on the steps of the U.S. Capitol building in Washington on April 27. The program, now in its sixth consecutive year, is coordinated in the United States by B'nai B'rith, a worldwide Jewish service organization. Hundreds of communities throughout the world are also publicly reciting the names of a cross-section of the millions of Jewish and non-Jewish men, women and children who were murdered during the Holocaust. The title of the ceremony "Unto Every Person There is a Name" was chosen "to restore some dignity to those who were stripped of their identities and robbed of their lives," said Tommy Baer, international president of B'nai B'rith. "We remember the six million Jewish victims each year by reading as many names in as many communities as possible. According to Specter, the U.S. Capitol building is "the greatest symbol of freedom and justice in the world." He described the reading of Holocaust victims' names as a significant expression of the dignity of humankind. Specter also reported that following the Memorial ceremony, he was scheduled to chair a Senate Judicial Committee hearing which would explore ways to prevent "the sort of tragic terrorism we witnessed last week in Oklahoma City." "But," he warned, "principles of freedom, including freedom of speech are fundamental. We must answer (those with whom we disagree) but we must be careful not to deny them the right to speak ... even though I disagree with everything he or she might say." Specter began the reading of the commemorative list of names. One by one other members of the Senate, including Jim Jeffords (R-Vt.), Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.) and Rick Santorum (R-Pa.), stepped forward to continue the reading. They were followed by Holocaust survivors. At the same time, another ceremony was being held inside the great hall of the U.S. Capitol building where hundreds of high-ranking guests -- top government officials and members of Congress were seated with diplomats from many nations. This ceremony also featured some of the men who, 50 years ago as soldiers, helped liberate survivors of Nazi concentration camps. One of those men now is the 92-year-old Senator Strom Thurmond, who told the audience he entered the Buchenwald Concentration Camp in Germany in April of 1945 and saw hundreds of bodies. NNNN