22 December 1967. Thought for the Week: "The
true Western tradition is an integrated whole: its chief components
have been the Greek sense of form, balance, harmony, the Greek search
for quality and distinction, all transmitted through their art and literature
to Rome: the Roman sense of law and order and the ideal, common to both,
of the free complete man (though they denied it in the case of slaves
and barbarians): and thirdly, the Christian concept of the unique human
person, free to live in harmony with his supernatural destiny, though
tending always to lapse into spiritual revolt and variations on all
the deadly sins. These three main sources were integrated into one great
central tradition during the Middle Ages, much stimulated by the infusion
of the new blood of the tough adventurous Northern Barbarians."
Sir David Kelly in The Hungry Sheep. |
A QUESTION MARK CONCERNING FREEDOM FROM HUNGER FUNDS"Allotments totaling $24,000 from the Australian Freedom from Hunger Campaign were announced in Sydney yesterday. The allotments, the first from the 1967 Appeal, will go to two United Nations agencies, EAO and UNICEF, and to rural development projects financed by Australian Catholic Relief in Asia." - The Age, Melbourne, December 13. To some it will appear sacrilege, particularly at this time of the year to raise any questions about how and where Freedom from Hunger funds are spent. But the truth must be faced that there has been growing disquiet, particularly amongst Christian clergy associated with missionary work, about the subject for some time. Several months ago a visiting South Indian Bishop bluntly told a Gippsland, Victoria, meeting that the Freedom from Hunger campaign was making no real contribution towards solving their problems. There appears to be little doubt that the Freedom from Hunger Campaign is draining funds away from the Christian Missions, whose record in the field of humanitarian activities far surpasses anything yet contributed by the bureaucracies of UN agencies. It is also important to try to assess Communist influence in these bureaucracies. It is instructive to have a look at the two UN agencies mentioned in The Age report - FAO (incorrectly described as EAO) and UNICEF. FAO (Food and Agricultural Organisation) is housed in luxurious quarters in Rome. The Director-General is Dr. Sen of India. Dr. Sen manages on a salary of approximately $32,000, tax free, per year. He also gets a "representation allowance" of $8,000 per year. His bureaucracy has graphically demonstrated the truth of Parkinson's famous law concerning how bureaucracies feed upon themselves. FAO staff has trebled in the last few years. Dr. Sen is engaged in a constant battle with Rome's city authorities for more and more space for his offices and flats. All his growing staff receive comparatively high tax-free salaries. In an exposure of the FAO bureaucracy in the Scottish Sunday Express of June 4, Mr. John Steadman quotes a young British technocrat who joined FAO out of idealism, the same reason which caused him to leave a year later, as saying that he had bought a Fiat 850 and saved 1000 pounds sterling. "I couldn't put a penny by at home. Here in one of Europe's most expensive cities, we live in a sort of privileged ghetto." From all parts of the world come criticisms of FAO projects. This then is the bureaucratic monster to which people are contributing through the Freedom from Hunger Campaign. But the record of UNICEF (United Nations International
Children's Emergency Fund) is even worse than that of FAO. Ruth Crawford, a publications officer for UNICEF,
declared under oath that she had been a member of the Communist Party
and was still in sympathy with it. There was a Joyce Campbell, who admitted
that she had been employed by an officially cited Communist front organisation,
the American Committee for Yugoslav Relief. Her position with this front
was the reference that obtained for her a job with UNICEF. A number of Communists have been used to produce UNICEF Christmas cards. For example, the biggest and most expensive card produced in 1966 was a painting by the French Communist Jean Lucrat. The authoritative McGraw-Edison Company's Committee for Public Affairs Newsletter for December 1961, pointed out that "The United Nations International Children's Emergency Fund... appropriated $59 million between 1947 and 1958 to Communist countries: All "aid" programmes in Communist countries do not go to the needy, but to the Governments to use as they see fit. Every student of the Communist conspiracy knows how Communist Governments use food and medicine as political weapons to keep their victims under control. No survey of UNICEF's activities would be complete without reference to the UN aggression against Katanga in 1961, when hospitals were bombed and civilians indiscriminately killed. (See 46 Angry Men, price $1.09 post free) This aggression was partly financed by UNICEF. "When the UN was out of money for its Congo aggression, it borrowed $10 million earmarked for UNICEF, from the U.S. Government. This was UNICEF money - handed over with UNICEF's express consent.... In short UNICEF moneys were used to subsidise Katanga aggression."- Stantion Evans in Indianapolis News, January 26, 1962. In March, 1960 shortly after Castro's bloody take-over in Cuba, UNICEF voted to send the new Communist regime $170,000 for "health services", and for "environmental sanitation". UNICEF followed this up in 1964 with $125,000 for trucks and jeeps plus spare parts. This was in addition to UNICEF's emergency appropriation to Cuba in the same year for $105,000. Explaining why Milwaukee Roman Catholic Schools did not support UNICEF, the arch-diocesan administrator Mgr Goebel wrote in a letter dated September 8, 1962: "Our opposition to the UNICEF organisation was based on the protests of our former Catholic Army chaplains who maintain that UNICEF proceeds were not contributed to youth in need, but rather they were taken up by the Communists in the (Communist-controlled) countries." Like FAO, UNICEF is also engaged in bureaucratic empire building. The following is from the National Review (U.S.A.) of June 14, 1966. "Twenty million cents will permit UNICEF to occupy quarters on the sixth floor of the swank United Nations Plaza, instead of the unspeakable second floor. Yes, last week UNICEF was offered the second floor, identical in layout to the sixth, except for additional space at a saving over five years of $150,000 to $200,000, plus a large contribution from a New York company that wanted to rent the sixth floor. The executive director, touring in Africa, telegraphed to the real estate agents that under no circumstances would he accept second story space but insisted on the sixth, so, since ALCOA, the building owner, has a 'moral agreement' with the UN, that was that." One of UNICEF's claims is that for one penny they can provide 5 glasses of milk, by their figures, the UNICEF bureaucrats are depriving hungry children of 100 million glasses of milk so that they can be on the sixth instead of the second floor of the United Nations Plaza. This is the organisation to which monies contributed by Australians to the Freedom for Hunger Campaign have been allocated. Our advice is that those who feel they wish to help needy children outside Australia should contribute to Christian Missions. They will not only be assured that their contributions are being administered efficiently, but that they are not helping to finance Communist activities. |
CHRISTMAS GREETINGSIn this last issue for 1967 we take the opportunity of wishing our readers, both old and new, a Holy Christmas and a New Year leading towards a world governed by Christian values. We extend special Christmas Greetings to our many new readers who are obtaining this weekly news-commentary for the first time. They will for a start find some truths startling, and disconcerting. But, as we were told a long time ago, the truth alone shall make us free. |
UN ANTI-COLONIAL CAMPAIGN INTENSIFIED"The United Nations General Assembly called last night for a world-wide ban on assistance of any kind to South Africa, Rhodesia and Portugal until they 'renounce their policy of colonial domination and racial discrimination." - The Age, Melbourne, December 18. It is significant that all UN resolutions concerning "racial discrimination" and "colonialism" make no reference to the inhuman policies of the Communists. The type of colonialism practised in countries taken over by Communism is rarely mentioned at the UN. Members of the Afro-Asian bloc practise discrimination against one another, as witnessed how the Indians are being treated in Kenya and Tanzania. The attack on South Africa, Rhodesia, and the Portuguese territories of Angola and Mozambique is an essential part of Communist strategy. The UN General Assembly also demanded that South Africa withdraw immediately from South West Africa and release the group of terrorists recently tried for acts of terrorism. The fact that the World Court has ruled in favour of South Africa on the South-West Africa issue makes no difference to the Communists and demagogues at the UN, many of whom are only there because they successfully murdered their political opponents. |
FORMER CONGO PRIME MINISTER BEING SLOWLY MURDERED"Algerian President Houarie Boumedienne has been accused of torturing former Congo Prime Minister Moise Tshombe by the Tshombe Emergency Committee, a group organised to mobilise public concern in the United States and overseas to effect his freedom." - The Wanderer, U.S.A., November 9, 1967. The case of anti-Communist African leader Moise Tshombe is a striking comment on the present plight of the world. Never a day passes but Church leaders are speaking out on the alleged crimes of countries like Rhodesia and South Africa. Left-wing politicians like Mr. Harold Wilson are expressing concern about "matters of conscience", while groups are seeking to have various political prisoners released from goals. Most of these prisoners are either Communists or Communist-inspired terrorists. But not a voice has been raised by the Wilsons or Church leaders about the plight of Tshombe who was illegally seized while traveling in a plane piloted by two British pilots who were forced to land their plane in Algeria. The Tshombe Emergency Committee claims that they have reliable evidence that the former Prime Minister of the Congo is being tortured and drugged, and that his life hangs in the balance. They have appealed to the Algerian President to save Tshombe's life. But anti-Communist Tshombe would be just as safe in Moscow. It is clear that to the Western nations Tshombe is expendable. Their leaders only protest when the Rhodesians and South Africans deal with African terrorists. |
EXPANSION FUNDEleven supporters have contributed a further $150 dollars to the Expansion Fund, making the total $26,296. We now request that all pledges be fulfilled. A final statement on the Fund will appear in our next issue, which will be on Friday, January 19, 1968. |
ON TARGET BULLETINA PERSONAL MESSAGE FROM THE NATIONAL DIRECTOR"By the time this Bulletin is issued, all Action
Groups and individual actionists will have come to the end of another
year of activity. This is a time for reflection on what Christmas means
to us. But before we do this let us ponder on the significance of the
nation's loss of its Prime Minister, Mr. Harold Holt. "We might with profit ponder on the fact that
in many other parts of the world political leaders have also been removed
by violence, the violence of man. But unlike a Constitutional Monarchy
like Australia, there is no civilised basis for the transfer of power
and authority. With the loss of Mr. Holt we have seen the smooth, traditional
constitutional machinery of our country operating efficiently to bring
Mr. John McEwen to the Prime Ministership until such time as the Liberal
Party can elect another leader, who will then almost certainly be asked
by the Queen's representative, the Governor-General, to form another
Government. "Mr. Holt's loss could not have come at a worse time for the Government parties, whose electoral support has been steadily eroded. We must hope that the large group of backbench Members of the Liberal Party, who have some understanding of the basic issues confronting Australia, will seize the opportunity to elect a real leader. Such a leader with a new Cabinet - there is some good talent amongst the backbenchers - could revitalise the Government and hold off the challenge of the sophisticated Fabian Socialist Mr. Gough Whitlam. "In this week's Thought for the Week we
have quoted from that great classic, unfortunately now out of print,
The Hungry Sheep, on the basic contributions to Western Civilisation.
Every Civilisation is the incarnation of intangible values into society
and its institutions. Once understanding and belief in the undergirding
values of Civilisation start to become eroded that Civilisation is starting
to die. Evidence of death may be masked for some time by feverish material
activity. But unless understanding and strong belief in the values are
replenished, then complete collapse is inevitable. "As I see it, the League of Rights is not just
another political organisation. It is seeking to create a new regenerating
force in Western nations. For this reason it is essential that the "hard
core" of League supporters constantly strive to equip themselves with
a much deeper understanding of basic principles, values and our institutions.
We have come a long way in recent years, but our campaign on the Senate
revealed a real gap in the knowledge of many supporters concerning the
subject of constitutionalism. This requires knowledge of the question
of power and the necessity for its effective division. "In all our work I feel that we should constantly present a balanced approach. Do not let us create the impression in any way that we are fanatics, or hate-mongers, as our enemies seek to paint us. What we are about is deadly serious, but let us treat it like a game. We can play it hard, be firm, and develop the will-to-win, without losing our sense of proportion. Christians should readily understand this. During this Christmas Season we can reflect with profit on a most appropriate text, as spoken by Christ Himself: 'I am the light of the world: he that followeth me shall not walk in the darkness, but shall have the light of life.' "Christ came into a world that was crude and ruthless. He dealt with the basic problems, which beset man today. His coming changed history. Man is still basically the same, although he now possesses more material power for doing evil than ever before. But we are not threatened by nuclear weapons or organisations as such like the United Nations. We are threatened by men who have far too much power. They are corrupted by power. A Christian society is one in which power is diffused and in which individuals can be made personally responsible for their actions. The League of Rights exists to encourage more and more individuals to set an example in their communities by using their divine attribute, individual initiative, and by accepting personal responsibility; of standing up and being counted. Christ came to be a servant of all. He insisted that individuals must render service, and that institutions, which include governments, must serve free individuals, not enslave them, Christ did not know Hitler, Stalin, Khrushchev or Castro. But he knew Herod. The nature of Caesar has not changed. His threat to the individual still exists. "As National Director of the League of Rights
I am charged with the personal responsibility of directing it. But this
would be impossible without the loyal support of all those who have
given so much dedicated service. I thank all those who are co-operating
in our work to uphold that Truth, which we were promised, shall make
us free. |