PAGE FOUR THE EWISH CHRONICLE THE JEWISH CHRONICLE people would take up their domicile in Palestine; the greater number will issued Every Friday by The Jewish Chronicle Publishing Company continue to live in the lands of whose citizenship they now form a com- ANTON KAUFMAN • • • President ponent part, where they enjoy full civil and religious liberty and where as loyal and patriotic citizens they will maintain and develop the principles and institutions of Judaism." MICHIGAN'S JEWISH ROME PUBLICATION Here is no endorsement of political Zionism but here likewise is Subscription in Advance $1.50 per year no belittling of those who hold that Palestine holds great possibili- ties for those Jews who believe that in Palestine and there only they can live full, free and happy lives. Offices 314 Peter Smith Bldg. Phone: Cherry 3381. RABBI LEO M. FRANKLIN, Editorial Contributor All correspondence to insure publication must be sent in so as to reach this ',flee Tuesday evening of each week. We hold, therefore, that the American Jewish Committee is to be congratulated upon the platform it has enunciated, one which should go far to heal the breach that has arisen between various groups in American Jewry. milted a forgery for which he was prosecuted, he skipped bail, fled to America, and not being cut out for an honest livelihood, he fell in with a similar character, a man named \Varszawiak, who was a hireling of the missionaries, learned the congen- ial trade of a religious fraud, amassed wealth and still keeps up his busi- ness of living on the credulity and vanity of misguided people whom he makes believe that he will fulfill the prophecy of the Apostle Paul, and that "all Israel shall be saved." Snobbish "Christians" Receive Him. The Jewish Chronicle Invites correspondence on subjects of uterest to the Jewish people, but disclaims responsibility for an indorsement of the views expressed by the writers. At the Altar of Judaism. Entered as second-class matter March 3, 1916, at the Postoffice at Detroit, Mich., under the Act of March 3, 1879. To the thousands of boys and girls who throughout the length and breadth of the land will on Friday of next week make their vow of fealty' to the faith of their fathers we beg to offer our sincere con- gratulations. Dr. Kohler's Anniversary An event of real significance in the annals of American Jewry is the rounding out in physical and mental vigor of three score and fif- teen years by Dr. Kaufman Kohler, the distinguished president of the Hebrew Union College. Especially gratifying is it to the mem- bers of Temple Beth El of this city to recall that it was this congre- gation that in the year 1869 induced Dr. Kohler to come to America, where his genius might have freer scope for development than Eurpoe at that time afforded. During his long and honorable career in the pulpit previous to his accepting the presidency of the Hebrew Union College in suc- cession to Dr. Isaac M. Wise, Dr. Kohler' served successively as leader of the congregation in this city, of Sinai Temple, Chicago, and of Temple Beth El, New York City. But Dr. Kohler stands distinguished pre-eminently as a fearless champion and defender of reform Judaism. In his pulpit addresses and in his voluminous writings he wields a virile pen in behalf of a Judaism true to the spirit of the old, but ever in close accord with the changing conditions of the new world. He was especially active in the promotion of the Pittsburgh Rabbinical Conference which in 1885 in the famous "Pittsburgh Platform" laid down the principles of Reform Judaism in a concise and unambiguous manner. Among the more important of the eight items in this pronouncement of princi- ples are the two following: "We recognize in the Mosaic legislation a system of training the Jewish people for its mission during its national life in Palestine and today we accept as binding only its moral laws and maintain only such ceremonies as elevate and sanctify our lives, but reject all such as are not adapted to the views and habits of modern civilization." * * * "We recognize in the modern era of universal culture of heart and intel- lect the approaching of the realization of Israel's great Messianic hope for the establishment of .the kingdom of truth, justice and peace among all men. We consider ourselves no longer a nation but a religious community and therefore expect neither a return to Palestine nor a sacrificial worship under the sons of Aaron nor the restoration of any of the laws concerning the Jewish state." This and other principles enunciated at the Pittsburgh Conference express rather satisfactorily in the main the convictions of a large percentage of the Reform Jews not only of America, but of the world today. In all subsequent meetings of the Rabbinical Con- ferences Dr. Kohlerhas been a leadinrfigUr6: —Itelffii- Miiiiii fre- quent contributor to the scholarly magazines both of Europe and of this country and has published a number of books bearing upon various phases of Jewish thought that are accepted as authoritative by Jewish scholars. Ilis latest book, "The Systematic Theology of Judaism," published within recent weeks, is a distinct contribution to our literature, Dr. Kohler's constructive work should serve as a rejoinder to those from whose lips the charge falls glibly that Judaism in Amer- ica has wrought nothing of permanent value. They who are accus- tomed to make this charge are apparently blind to the truth or so hopelessly prejudiced that they will not recognize facts that are entirely obvious. We share with his thousands of admirers the sincere hope that Dr. Kohler may be spared for many more years to continue his scholarly and inspiring work for Judaism and humanity. American Jewish Committee's Pronouncement on the British Declaration. May they be given courage and conscience to be true to their pledge of loyalty and may through them the cause of Israel and of humanity be forwarded. They who now consciously enter as mem- bers into the household of Israel are particularly fortunate that they do so at a time %Olen despite the whining cry of sonic that anti- Semitism is rife and bigotry regnant, the truth is that Judaism is ascendant as before. \Ve are living in a time when for the ideals of the Jew the whole civilized world is fighting. That same justice, that same freedom, that same democracy, that same sense of fair play %N'Ilich has been the goal of Israel through centuries and to the attainment of which not only for himself but for all men he has brought heroic sacrifices, is the ultimate goal of America and her Allies in these tremendous times. Men may not know that in fight- ing the battle of civilization they are fighting the battle of the Jew, but no one who reads the story of the Jew's past with sympathetic understanding or who is not utterly blinded by prejudice to an appreciation of the spirit which has goaded the Jew through untold centuries, can fail to realize that the interpretation of life as enunci- ated by the Jew has become the only one that today will satisfy the moral and the spiritual needs of America and her Allies. In dedicating themselves, therefore, to the service of Israel, the children of today may well be inspired by the thought that they are at the same time dedicating themselves to what is best and highest in modern life. This thought will react upon them for good in a two- fold way. Proud of a faith that centuries ago awakened to the moral value of things which modern men of other faiths are just beginning to appreciate, they will become staunch Jews. And happy in the realization that the ends which our fellow Americans are striving to compass are the same as those for which our fathers dared to live and die, their patriotism will be deepened and heightened and they will become, because of their dedication to Judaism, all the better American citizens. In the light of these facts there has never been a time when con- firmation has meant more to the children of Israel's household than it does today. May they who stand before the altar of their God sense the meaning of the sacred ceremony in which they arc privi- 4eged to participate and may they take out of it its fullest inspiration. Give! Give! Give! The Detroit Patriotic Fund, whose drive for $7,.100,000 is to begin on May 20th, should be answered in no niggardly fashion by the Jews of this community. Money in these days has no value save as it is translated into terms of service. The duty to sacrifice must be measured only by the limits of possibility. They who have much must give much. No man and no woman in these times has a right to a superfluity when uncounted thousands have not unlc 1i'SS than is The Apostate is Not New. needed for the sustenance of physical life, but when in addition they Let us drop him, for he "who are suffering from the onslaughts ref brutality in many forms. If there are any in the community to whom the appeal of the touches pitch defiles himself." It is interesting to examine this problem Patriotic Fund will come in vain, they should lie socially ostracised. historically. Honest Jews were, They prove themselves unfit to be the companions of high:minded through centuries, ostracized, locked and patriotic men and women. The funds to be raised in the single up in ghettos, prevented from making a decent livelihood• Intinilimed by a drive are to be used to carry forward for the year the work of the sign which by its yellow color, brand- great national war-relief agencies, as well as practically every civic ed them as if plague stricken, put to and private agency fur social !Thom Sectarian and non-sectarian the rack, flayed and burned alive, while the scamp was welcomed, show- organizations are represented in the group of societies that have ered with money and honors and whitewashed, when his dirty linen was banded together in this great movement. in public. There is nothing The Jews, always leaders in the federation movement and always exhibited new under the sun. We have records in the forefront of givers, must now lift the standards of those who of thousands of "Dr. C01111S" from all heretofore have not given in due pioportion to their own means or times. \Vith a few exceptions of mor- emotionalists, such as now are to the importance I if the various causes that have appealed to them. bid going over to the Christian Science The one big thing to be emphasized, so far as the Jews are con- Church, all our apostates are either cerned, is that they nmst give much more to the Fund than they can climbers or crooks, the latter class leading by far in numbers. Just in possibly' hope to take out of it for specific Jewish causes. While order to show how far back such these causes will be so financed through this Fund as to permit the characters are found in the Jewish directors of the various agencies to give themselves more largely community, we may quote Sherira Gaon, the head of the Jews of Baby- than heretofore to the discussion of social problems, we must lonia, in the tenth century, who (teals remember that our duty extends far beyond the limits of our men with the case of a child, born of a de- sectarian group, and that we must give generously and as befits big- serted mother whose husband had converted to Islam. hearted men and women to all these causes represented in the Patri- We base often heard the anecdote The American Jewish Committee at its recent New York meet- ing found itself faced by a most difficult situation which, however, it met sanely and wisely. Composed of all elements represented in American Jewry, the Committee called upon to declare itself in regard to the Palestinian situation, could neither ignore the problem which is one of the most vital that Israel has yet had to face, nor could it stultify itself by endorsing the extreme position held by either rabid Zionists or by uncompromising anti-Zionists. And yet its declaration is not a feeble and meaningless com- promise between the two. \Ve regard the statement of the Com- mitte as a rather manly and direct declaration of a position that is likely to meet with the approbation of a large majority of thoughtful American Jews. It will not be received with enthusiasm by the most rabid political Zionists nor will it be endorsed by those who in their opposition to Zionism are blinded to the important part that otic Fund and Community' Union. Zionism is playing in the life of the Jew today. We shall have more to say upon this subject in our next issue. Perhaps we are particularly gratified because the declaration of For the present we need only urge upon our people when called the Committee seems to reinforce the attitude which has been taken upon by the Committee of workers to GIVE! GIVE! GIVE! in these columns since the Balfour declaration. Entirely out of sympathy with political Zionism and believing that a non-religious interpretation of Judaism is a contradiction in terms we have con- sistently held, as a perusal of our past editorials must convince the skeptics, that the rehabilitation of Palestine for the benefit of those of our co-religionists who wish to live there should be highly encour- aged by all sections of American Jewry. \Ve have said time and again in these columns and elsewhere that Palestine because of its sentimental ,associations does offer to some Jews in lands of oppression a better opportunity for self- By Dr. Gotthard Deutsch. realization than could any other land anywhere. Written for The Jewish Chronicle This sentiment is very clearly echoed in the declaration of the , s will be seen by the following quota- American Jewish ====issist „ tion therefrom: OLONEL ALEXANDER S. thorities, attested to by the Austro- "The Committ • ciomatic that the Jews of the United BACON, a New York law- Hungarian consul, "Dr. Cohn" is "TOUCHING PITCH." States have here t • children, have acqu can citizenship, ar•! • which they love iv , ' • The Committee, 11, •.• who, moved by tr.;.M.,. • for the Jewish pe. ,! hearted sympathy .: anent home for themselves and their Assumed the correlative duty of Ameri- anqualified allegiance to this country, whose people they constitute a part. indful that there are Jews everywhere yearn for a home in the Holy Land ,urtured for centuries, has our whole- )wever, that but a part of the Jewish The impression received from the perusal of the interesting, though at times disgusting story, may be an il- lustration of the wise saying of Ben Sira: "fie who touches pitch will de- file himself." It is really remarkable how honest, intelligent and—let us be frank snobbish Christians, the same who avoid contact with respectable and intelligent Jews in clubs and sum- mer resorts, will accept with open arms an out and out crook, who flat- ters their vanity by making them be- lieve that he sacrificed everything in order to become a Christian and that he will make his fellow Jews confess that they have to accept Christ in or- der to become civilized human beings. It is simply inconceivable that Chris- tians, living in an environment, where they can observe Jewish life in a thou- sand synagogs, will believe "Dr. Cohn's" claim that, at the age of 17, he received a diploma as rabbi from the rabbi of Presburg, the head of one of the most famous orthodox rabbini- cal schools, that he left this diploma in the hands of another rabbi, that Dr. Klein, the venerable rabbi of a prominent orthodox congregation in New York, recommended the stranger to a pulpit in Philadelphia, but that just at that time "Dr. Cohn" found a Hebrew translation of the New Testa- ment which, for the first time, told him something about Jesus and made a Christian of him. Dr. Klein, a man of spotless reputation, tells under oath that he does not recall ever hav- ing met the man. It is possible that a man who is often besieged by people appealing for help might forget such an incident, though it is rather un- likely that he should not remember having recommended a man to a congregation, but there is a much stronger point. "Dr. Cohn" claims that he was introduced to Dr. Klein by a letter from Dr. Schnitzer, rabbi of Rom:trout. while Dr. Klein declares under oath that he never received any letter from this rabbi. It should lie clear even to a child that a man would not write a letter of recommen- dation to a colleague who is entirely unknown to him, and that a man like Dr. Klein would not remember whether Dr. Schnitzer, whom he knows by reputation, ever wrote him a letter or not. In addition, "Dr. Cohn" has not a line to show the truth of his claims, while Colonel Ba- con publishes verbatim the search warrant for his arrest as a forger and other documents, proving that "Dr. Cohn" is neither a Cohn nor a doc- tor, but an ex-innkeeper from a Slav- ic village of 300 people in northern Hungary. Vet intelligent and repu- table Christians will receive him with open arms. because he flatters their vanity. of the prospective convert who asked for support at a mission station, and when money was tendered to hint, said. "The last time I was baptized, 1 got twice as much." Such cases have actually occurred. Rabbi lsserlein of Marburg. in the Austrian province of Styria, who lived in the fifteenth cen- tury speaks of it as a frequent oc- currence that tramps would be con- verted several times to Christianity and between one conversion and an- other would "schnorr" from Jews as Jews. One Moritz Gutman of Cra- cow, convicted in a Berlin court for some crime in 1894, had his record examined which proved that, although only a little over twenty years old, he had at 'nineteen different stations con- fessed Christ "for the first time." The "Climbers." The climber case is not as frequent as the profiteering class, but it also shows an interesting variety. Abra- ham of Lund went to the full length , yer of good standing and a really one Izsak Leib Joszo% ics. who l f or after his conversion he entered a devout Christian. sees fit to idled a few years in a Yeshibah from monastery. became Abbot of Villen- publish the story of a missionary who which lie was expelled, and after- e uve in 1572, held his office for 22 calls himself "Dr. Cohn" and claims wards kept a rum shop—the English y ears, when the monks rebelled to be a former rabbi. According to language has not a suf sufficiently ex- a gainst the Jew-Abbot. and he was testimony presented in court and to pressive word for a "Dorfschenk"—in c ompelled to resign. His resignation official evidence from Hungarian au- a village of 300 people. Having corn- I vas as thorough as his conversion, for 1151 "LET US FIGURE" DECORATING PAINTING PAPERHANGING Apartment Owners '8 Our continual service con- tracts will interest you, Let us take care of the de- corating in your flats. Detroit Decorating Service Corporation 520 Book Bldg. Cherry 2011 he went to Venice, where he lived as a Jew. More tragic was the fall of another climber. Philip Lang had gained the unlimited confidence of Emperor Rudolph 11 (1576-1612), who was insane, surrounding himself with alchymists, sorcerers and magicians, among whom Jews seem to have at- tracted his confidence to a high de- gree, for he had a private conference with Chief Rabbi Loewe ben Bezalel of Prague, ordered the Italian inven- tor Abraham Colorni to translate for him the cabbalistic book, "The Key of Solomon," and perhaps Lang had made himself the Emperor's favorite by cabbalistic pretenses. At all events he became very powerful, fleecing Jews and Christians alike, and exact- ing tributes from princes and nobles who desired a favor from the Emper- or. Ile ended in the penitentiary. Climbers of a character that does not have to fear either the law or the ostracism of society are very frequent among politicians, authors, artists, financiers and all others who find Ju- daism the only bar to full social rec- ognition. Samson Gideon Abudiente, the leading London financier of. the eighteenth century, had the ambition of seeing his not a landed estate own- er. He raised him a Christian, while he still reserved for himself a grave in the Jewish cemetery. Lord Lard- ley, as the son of Samsun Gideon was called, had a grandson, the Reverend Lard lee Childers, who was the recto' of an Episcopal church, and the lat- ter's son, Hugh Childers, was a mem- ber of Gladstone's cabinet. Hugh Eardley Childers, M. I'., son of the last named, died in 1912, at the age of fifty, and may already have grand- children to whom this fact, if known at all, is an old story. Samson Gid- eon's name is still commemorated among the benefactors of the Spanish and Portuguese synagog in London on Vont Kippur. The financial aris- tocracy is the best customer of the baptismal font and they need no Doc- tor Cohn to convince them of the truth of Christianity. They are as easily cOnvinced as was a Jewish as- pirant to a professorship in Germany, who upon the question of the pastor, as to whether he was convinced of the truth of Christianity, frankly replied: "I sincerely and steadfastly believe that without Christianity I shall never Become professor ordinarius." Simi- lar cases are too numerous to men- tion. The latest instance of more than common importance is that of Gerald Isaacs, the only son of the first Jewish lord Chief Justice and Earl, Lord Reading. lie married Miss Mond, the daughter of Jewish par- ents, who, in a fashionable boarding school, hail become as thoroughly convinced of the salvation of Jesus Christ as the above mentioned candi- date for a professorship. The de- voted lover would not hurt her feel- ings and was married in a church. The second and third Barons Reading will be communicants in Westminster Ab- bey. A "Blue Blood" Exception. One noted exception from the gen- eral run of conversions in the ranks of the gilded blue blood deserves to be mentioned. Baron Philip von Schey, a Vienna financier, died child- less in 1881. His will stipulated that his heirs would lose their share in his estate. if they were to leave the an- cestral faith. A grandnephew who had rapidly. acquired the spendthrift habits of true nobility, did not wish his creditors to get the benefit of his uncle's wealth, and so he converted to Christianity, living up, at least in part, to the spirit of his uncle's wishes. The "Dr. Cohns" of our past history are too numerous to be mentioned. Only a few typical cases shall be enumerated. Moses Gerson Ha- Kohen of Mitau was a disciple of the famous Rabbi Jonathan . Eybeschuetz of Altona. Having committed rape, he saved himself from the penitentiary by conversion to Christianity and was appointed lecturer in the university