THE JEWISH CHRONICLE . PAGE FOUR contention of ;;olitical Zioni5ts be granted that statehood is the sine qua non of the fulfillment of Jewish destiny. But upon this THE JEWISH CHRONICLE Issued Evers Friday by The Jewish Chronicle Publishing Company ANTON KAUFMAN President • point, Zionists themselves in these last (lays seem to be greatly divided. Fur our part, we have faith that the rights of the Jews throughout the world will be well safe-g , -dui at the Peace Table' MICHIGAN'S JEWISH HOME PUBLICATION Offices 307,4011 Peter Smith Building. should regard the Jewish tote Joseph L. Tepper Gives Sympo- party • sigrn of Views i of Washington as its exclusive propert The Jewish vote shall be an intelli- Statesmen on Value and gent, discri mina ting vote to be cap- - In wile. In this hope. ever y Je, w and every man of every faith who' Strength of This Untrammeled and that as a result, the Jew will be giv -. the opportunity to live Phone: Cherry 3381. RABBI LEO M. FRANKLIN, full, free, and happy life in whatsever whatsoever land he chooses as his . Editorial Contributor All correspondence to Insure publication must be sent In so as to reach this 'Rice Tuesday evening of each week. Subscription in Advance is not utterly selfish, will assuredly share. ls 32.00 per yell The Jewish Chronicle Invites correspondence on subjects of nterest to the Jswish people, but disclaims responsibility for an indossement of the views expressed by the writers. Entered as second-claim matter March 3, 1916, at the Postoffice at Detroit, Mich., under the Act of March 3. 1879. The Resolutions of the Jewish Congress. As was to be expected. the essential tvork of the Jewish Con- gress convened in the City of Philadelphia during the past week, was the passage of a resolution bearing upon the achi&entent of ZionisCaints. However, it must be conceded that the wording of the resolution—though apparently very carefully studied--is not entirely clear. It calls upon the Peace Conference .to recognize the aspir- ations and historic claims of the Jewish people with regard to Pal- e 74 i Th' and to declare • ' * that there shall be established such political, administrative and economic conditions in Palestine as will assure under the timsteeship of Great Britain acting on he- half of such League of Nations as may be formed, the develop- ment of Palestine into a Jewish cimunonwealth, it being clearly understood that nothing shall be done which shall prejudice the civil ands..sritious rights of existing non-Jewish communities in Palestine or the rights and political status enjoyed by" Jews in any other country." Althinigh strictly' in accordance with the tams of the Balfour Declaration, the last part of this resolution negatives the first. If it is the thought of the.framers of this resolution that to the people of Palestine shall be given the right of self-determination, so that in the event that the overwhelming population of Palestine shall come to he Jewish and hence a Jewish State shall be created from within, ( t I w proposition is entirely logical. But if on the other hand, 1 n th a comparative minority of Jews in Palestine, it is de- s ird t i set up a Jewish government, e simply restrict d by the guarantee that the civil and religious rights of existing non-Jewish communities in Palestine, or the rights and political status enjoyed whose at attitude and polici es are ci ,ailicitti,ltaetrefel sleoril;ee. isnt(- 1 - yn oti,t, any Jeu- interests a the interests of the electorate at large. N(1 Tlw sad estate to which the so- called "southern state's vote" and the . connection is there between the Jew- "negro vote" have fallen, the first 1/11l. s ,,ev eq rt a i r y S t a t Zast \sslia znt ize ' In no far as Christmas holds any religious implications, it can the having been regarded as a sure Demo- cratic and the latter as a fixed Repute d i s t r i c t p o l h i t ician will ask it (.1S,_ I h ve no appeal or interest Ito' the Jew. In so far as it celebrates war,. a lieati asset, is the strongest e ■ idenee the natal anniversary of Christianity's Saviour, it is an event that a resentful ton e. lie will re g ard the of the wisdom of that admonition. Although the history of America is f ;`ln,e„"„tincirea,i can iinly be construed is having brought sorrow and calamity to lanneraetts:Inglig, testioiffiii „, o. adaell, a history of parties, yet the time is our people. \Ve can th•r.efor• fully understand the protest that is precinct and an unjustified interfer- fast approaching when it will fie con- ro to use the n n e with his pregative raised by many of our people against the over - emphasis that is `' sidered a reflection on a voter's intel- le\cisb cute for his immediate sinister ligence to be labeled as the hereditary laid upon the Christina.: celebration in the public schools which property of this or that party. men o l Nevertheless, it would he difficult to particularly against should be entirely free front sectarian lints and that party ill its inception is surround. ,r,ra,tretalii,y,,stunicktentooraiw, ritten word ;11111 11, 101 the singing of songs bearing tip in the Nativity in schools where telsaagigne individual ed by a halo of idealism lowers 101/k 111) lit it as a religion. as the non - participation. of Jewish children sets then; apart to their or group of individuals, Ina to the •in the case of Socialism. good name and prestige of all Jews of disadvantage and often to titerhumiliation. Second, it is of equal importance a well-balanced and judicious use of that the Jewish voter thi not regard the franehiss. ( In the other hand, we must recognize the fact that to the the issues from a narrow point of. It is error to suppose that Jewish great majority Ill Christians, Christmas has lost its character as intellect, ingenuity, commercial power iew. the should always defer to the general and national welfare. a holy day anti it has become a holiday. Entirely apart from any and the like is sufficient to perpetuate The Jew should exercise a degree our welcome and assure our safety in religious associations that it may have had in other days, it hal: these 1;nited States. it is far more.' 11 self-abnegation and add his weight the suite that has in sir ". t h e """- become a season tit ga ol cheer and of fellowship, especially for important that we demonstrate in He must especially be good. the children of the household. Try as the may not to be alTected actions, 'and 'especially at the ballot mon careful not to permit to be be , box, a high conception of our civic conceit b\ by the spirit of such a time, he cannot succeed. Joy, cheerfulness, duties, and a (hie appreciation of the guided by an appeal to good fellowship 1S 111 the air. That to" give is to receive is the great responsibility that the exercise means of "race-flattery." Friends Remembered. dominant note that is struck at this season. The higher meanings of the franchise. entails. Fot, after 'Yet, where the common interest all, this franchise is'the real corner- . of peace and of good will are emphasizede Certainly then, it must stone of democracy. ' will be equally served, preference Therefore, if, to us, the United should he given to the cause, parte ■ ;r smack of narrowness to try to shut out this spirit from our hearts. States is one of the few great asylums individual who best sersee our inter- All this does not imply that Jews :ire justified in the introduc- the world over, where the oppressed i ests and is friendly to us as Jews. can and will come for the enjoyment It is not merely our privilege, but tion of the Christmas tree and other non-Jewish symbols into their of these inalienable human rights that our clear duty to be nn the alert in homes. That would be stupid. But we must not be narrow. were proclaimed gospel by the found- defense of our rights as Jews and at Christmas is in this country more nearly an American holiday ers of this government, it is our sol- the proper time to make ion- political emit and imperative obligation by all influence fell in such a way as to en than it is a Christian I ) dy (lay.' Surely it is in this spirit that means at our command to give courage our friends and cause our Jews look upon this glatkiim• s e ason. In this year above all strength, dignity and longevity to the traducers to stiffer from a stricken years, its message of peace and of good will .s.- Tiutild be received in institutions upon which this govern- conscience. meat rests. welcome . by J own and by non-Jews ;dike. May that message llow can the Jew in America best Ur. Joseph Medoff has been elected effectuate that purpose? is a question realize itself in ever greater fullness throughout the earth. of too much moment, I sought the instructor in Hebrew and librarian of judgment of disinterested and mature'Gratz College and superintendent of minds high in the counsels of govern- ' the School of Practice, succeeding Christmas and the Jew. Irelanted. le re - ment, but whom 1 cannot, for,obvious Rev. Dr. who R. ft reasons, quote. Let me give a brief :eentlY for Montreal to become the rabbi -Th'Ylle Spanish and Portuguese sunnmiry of their views. synagogue there. Ur. 'Medoff is a No Party's Pawn. First and foremost, it is of the graduate of the University of Penn- greatest importance that no political sylvania and of Dropsie College. teller of the right of self-determination of small peoples, in which if he is correctly quoted, Dr. Weitzmann—leader of the English Zionists and virtual head of the movement—thoroughly believes. In this connection, we are reminded of what Dr. John II. Finley, recently returned from Palestine where he went as the bead of the American Red Cross Mission, had to say. "Palestine," said Dr. Finley, is tnique among all countries. We all have an interest in it. . either Jew nor Gentile nor Moslem has any exclusive title to it. Rather it belongs to all the nations of the western world, and itOis my hope that it will loom On the horizon of all Americans as it does tot mine. All Chris- tendom must take an interest "Redeemed by gallant British arms, it ought to be held in trust for all civilization rather than . intrusted to any single na- tion, race, or creed. It should be a home for the Jews if they wish to go there, as well as for all others, Christians and Moslems alike." course, it is tut hate in the day to diSCIIS ,, whether the Galician Pogroms Will Be Investigated by Committee of Both Jews and Gentiles Demand of Polish Leaders for Inquiry Agreed to by Julian Mack and Louis Marshall for Jewish Organizations. INQUIRY STARTED IN EUROPE ALSO '‘• NENV VORK ---011 Nov. 29, Mr. Palestinian problem is the most important problem confronting Louis Marshall, president of the Am- world Jewry today. .\ great many thinking Jews are entirely erican Jewish Committee, and Judge Julian Mack, president of the Zionist convinced that before the problem of the Jew in Poland, in Galicia, Organization of America, issued a and in R.ountania, it sinks into comparative insignificanc e . statement replying to the .11nerican representatives of the Polish National Speaking. of the Jews if this land, Ex-Tres. Taft writes only Committee and of the Polish National this Week in the New York Public Ledger, " \Ve shall be derelict I.tepartnient, who had denounced the reports of Galician Pogroms massa- in our duty if we do nut require as part of the fundamental law cres as groundless and who' declared id these new republics, that the Jews shall have as great religious that they had made joint demand for freedom as they have in the United States." AYere such condition the appointment of an interallied and „r all new states by the Peace Con- American commission to be sent into Poland to investigate existing condi- freres, the incentive hi Jews to emigrate to l'alestine from what tions and thus set at rcpt the allega- are now their lands of persecution would of course in greatest tions that Jewish pogroms had been carried out there. • part be removed. In their statement Messrs. Mack and Marshall joined in the demand for Nor can their permanence and security in Palestine be any such an -investigation of the reports more assured than it can be in these other lands, unless the treat- of the pogroms which they declared ies and agreements that shall be made in behalf of the Jews, be had come to them fromauthoritative and unprejudiced reports in Copen- enforced by a League ■ )f Nations. .\s Mr. Taft clearly establishes hagen. Amsterdam, London and the in the article referred to, "Roumania agreed in the Berlin Con- V ague. groas to accept as part of its constitutiOn, a declaration of com- plet• religion; freedom and that 1111 C111/ell S11011111 be discriminated against 011 account Of his religion. Ilut the' Roumanian govern- ment had the audacity after incorporating this guarantee in its fundamental law, to declare that Jews who hail lived in Roumania for two or three uhildred years, were not citizens but aliens." The great need of the hour listen is that Jews shall be made free and be given equal rights everywhere and that the guarantee of these rights shall be backed up by the concert of nations leagued together. adopted by the Jewish Congress at Philadelphia bears upon this point. It is our belief that with or without the passage id this restitution 11) the Jewish. Congress, the representatives of the United States at the Peace 'rabic Would have insisted upon the incorporation of its _main provisions in any compact to lie arranged as the basis for the settlement of the war. The resolution reads as follows: "That this congress of American Jews requests the peace colzurnsisioners representing the L • nited States of America at the peace conference to use their high and kindly offices to the end that it shall he made a condition precedent to the gram of au- tonomy:independence or freetlom to any nation or land, that all the inhabitants thereof shall have equal, civil, political, religious and national rights without distinction of race or faith and that such rights shall be guaranteed to (bent and their descendants in perpetuity" Should the spirit of this latter resolution be incorporated in the final decisions at the Peace Table, then the former resolution in regard to Palestine %you'd be superfluous, unless of course the • akt' ''' %••• • ,r(— )N ■ ter is obviously different. It contradicts the fundamental insis- ''he other resolution lure d d by trhitn: n i andidate or or 4 ili ' Vote. Byy JOSEPH L. TEPPER. by Jews of other countries shall not be interfered with, the mat- to be included in the creation Jewish Voter Has Power and Opportunity to Advance the Public Good and Maintain Jewish Rights in Approaching Elections • Special to the Chronicle. LONDON—The Polish leader, %a- le\ ski, who is in Switzerland, in a telegram to the Board of Deputies here. gives an explanation regarding the attacks upon Jews in Lemberg and outlines what has been done to bring those responsible to justice. He further states that the Polish Government is already making resti- tution for the damages which have been sustained by the victi m,: of the Dogrom. Zalevski asserts that the pogromin Lemberg was - made by criminals, who,. as a result of the armistice, were re-' leased from prison. Sixty of the rioters have been\ executed and 1,500 others have been imprisoned. According to Zalevski, the Polish Government is already paying dam- ages to Jews who have suffered, and an investigation commission of Jews and Poles is now engaged in tnaking an investigation into the recent po- groms. In order to satisfy the Jews it is also planned to have an interna- tional commission to make an inde- pendent investigation. !deports front other sources, how- ever, indicate that only Jews of then assimilationist type have been ap- pointed on.the investigation commis- sion. It is also reported that the worst sufferers from the pogrom were the non-assimilationists. including Zionists. THE FRANKLIN SEDAN OFFERS THE UTMOST IN MOTORING SATISFACTION Maximum comfort and service, at minimum cost and trouble—that briefly is what constitutes motoring satisfaction. And such satisfaction is the product of certain definite principles of construction that are found in larger measure in the Franklin Sedan than in any other fine enclosed car. 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