PIEDLT KOIVEWISI I (I RCN ICLC PAGE TWO derstood that she was lost—that she ROUMANIA EXPELS' JEWS. down, threw a florin on the counter Mg outwardly, but within her? Within was her father's Inn with its could no longer save herself—and she and demanded: "la this your daugh- ter?" To which Michael made stem. songs and dances and games. Between asked for Just one favor, "Squire, I As a result of an order issued by merIng reply: "Yes, yes, my daugh- her and the outer world stood always am in your hands. You are too mighty the Rumanian government to expel the picture of the young nobleman. for Intl to withstand you, so I beg Just all aliens, the Rumanian authorities ter." The young nobleman gazed and When she closed her eyes her blood one thing of you. You have sullied my in many districts are expelling Jews gazed and could not tear his eyes ran riot within her, and she saw her- body—that is over and dune with. Do at large and in Siebenbuergen. Jew- away from the girl. The next day he eel( dancing with the young noblemannot sully my soul. Let me retain my ish families that have been resident came again to drink mead, and like at the Inn, or riding with hint—gallop- I faith and my thoughts. Let me think there for many generations have also wise on the third day, and the fourth. Mg on his milk-white horse over fields and pray in the olden way." been expelled. The Jewish National ISSAC LEIB PERETZ. The nobleman liked the girl and Council appealed to the minister of Ile stood at the counter, twirling Ms afar. And when her husband leaned little black mustache, his eyes blaz- over she would shut her eyes and I granted her wish, thinking to himself: the interior, Argtoienu, but his reply ing—until they hid the girl from him, would embrace and kiss—whom? The ' "What harm will it do to me? I don't was so evasive that no help is to ex- In the olden times a Jew named who went around in a deeper trance young nobleman. Her husband, wao intend to marry her, anyway." Once pected from him and the council has Yachlel Michael kept an inn In a than ever. The young squire persist- loved her beautiful eyes, would plead he even bought her a prayer-book from now turned to the Zionist World Or- little village near Prague. The squire ed In calling, and Michael trembled. with her: "Dear life, open your pretty a Jew in l'rague, and brought it to her ganization for intervention. of that village was a wealthy noble- One day he spoke his mind abruptly: eyes—those gates of Paradise." But on as a gift. She accepted it with joy, In Klausenburg and Grosswarfein man—a count, whose Innkeeper was "Sell me your daughter. Is her name no account would she do so—nor would but soon let it drop from her hands Hebrew gymnasiums have been estab- likewise a man of no mean estate, a Esther?" Yachiel Michael's white she let him withdraw, but held him in on the table. lished. "My hands," she said, "are not man of many good deeds who spent beard began to tremble and a mist her arms us in a vice. • • • worthy to touch this holy book." The a great deal of hie money In Prague swept before his gray eyes. "No; she J. D. C. IS HANDICAPPED. VI. nobleman wondered at her, but re- —a man of learning who visited there she is called Malkah." And thus the childless Malkah lived mained silent. "Well, imagine that she is called the rabblnisch head of the yeshiba, The joint distribution committee is of whom he bought matzoth and Esther and that you are Mordecai, year after year, a stranger to the has And Nachoma, to the squire's castle, considerably handicapped by the fact other provinder for holidays. On and that I am the king. I shan't band she held in her embrace—a beau. led a life which was exactly the re- that at the order of Washington, no his sojourns he asked the holy man place a crown upon her head, but you taut apple, worm-eaten at the core. verse of the life led by her sister in passports are being issued to Ameri- Very different was the lot of Ya - Prague. Both shut their ere and cans for Soviet territory. to pray that a male heir be born unto shall get this inn as a gift, to have him. The rabbi, knowing the de- and to hold forever." And the youth chid Michael's older daughter, Na. walked about dreamily. But whereas We also learn that in Reval relief crees of Providence, refused, but to gave Yachiel Michael a term where- chums. Malkah sinned with her soul in a pure provisions amounting in value to half After the sumptuous wedding feast body, Nachoma, on the contrary, with a million dollars are held up because comfort the petitioner he said: "Save in to make up his mind. up a large dowry for your daughter, I of his younger, Yachiel Michael left her body defiled, kept her soul pure. of lack of transportation facilities. IV. Prague for home with just a few coins and then come to me and I'll find a When the squire approached her she Some of the provisions are going to Yachted Michael saw that thiAgs in his pockets. At the border line of would shut her eyes and think: "My waste. desirable eon-in-law for you." With this pledge to comfort him, Yachiel were in a bad way. So one morning his village he saw all his household mother is kissing me. My mother is Representatives of the joint distri- Michael returned home. Ile had two he hitched up his horses and went to goods, the bedding. the tables, the embracing me and teaching me my bution committee are negotiating daughters, eci he began ;laying up l'ragne, straight to the rabbi of the benches of the Inn, lying pell-mell un. morning prayers." with Gukowsky, a Soviet representa- der the open sky, with one of the dowries, first for the elder one and yeshiba. "Blessed be God!" she whispered, tive, regarding the establishment of "Rabbi, is it permitted to marry off squire's peasants keeping watch over then for the younger. In default of a a fixed rate of exchange for the dollar son, be looked forward to having a a younger daughter before an older them. The watchman did not allow hardly daring to utter the holy words forwarded as relief money. with her sinful lips. • • • great scholar for a son in law. Cod one?" him to enter the village. It Is not—remember Jacob and His wife and daughter began to prospered him, a nd when he had IX. UKRANIAN BANDITRY. hoarded up five hundred florins he Laban!" weep and plead: "Let as at least en- Life does not last forever — both els- But Yachiel Michael pothe1 ont his ter the village to talk to the squire!" said to Dvoehe, hie wife: "The time Paris.—A peculiar case of the man- is ripe for marrying off our eldeet, bitter heart before the sage and told But the peasant lowered his firearm ters died young. And when their souls left their bodies, the soul of the young- ner in which a pogrom was averted Nachoma." Dvoshe fell in with the him all. and threatened to shoot. Yachiel He told the rabbi about his pros. Michael understood that it was all er one. Malkah, emerged like a black is reported here from Berschad, the plan and they began to figure—three hundred florins for the dowry and poring wealth, about the five hundred over. lie could not return to Prague raven from her white body, and was province of Podolia. A bane! of two hundred for the bride's outfit, florins, and reminded him of his because he had no money—just a few immediately lost somewhere in the Ukrainian bandits arrived in Berschad gifts and wedding expenses. And, fur- promise to choose a son.in-law for florins left over after the wedding— eternal darkness. The older sister's, with the intention of making a po- Nachoma's, white, clean soul, as soon grom. Jewish leaders, however, pre- ther, they vowed a feast to the poor him from the yeshlba. and then he did not wish to disgrace The man of piety pondered the mat- his newly married daughter by his as It was released from her sinful vailed upon them to accept a large that Prague would long remember. body, rose gently, like a fluttering dove sum of money instead, the pogrom- ter and then said: No, Yachiel, It But there were delays; the squire poverty. So, with his wife and daugh- ists at the same time insisting that sent his innkeeper on far-off errands, won't do." ter, he betook himself to another vil. to the holy heavens. She stood before the Jewish community should sign a "But why not, rabbi? Has my Mal- the gates for a while, In trembling then snowfalls came and blocked the loge, where he begged and obtained road, the summer was a troubled one, kah-God forbid!—a sin upon her permission to sell all manlier of petty hesitation, but God's mercy went out contract that they will all remove to soul? She is a child, a young sapling, Palestine within the next three years. then the holidays arrived and Yachiel ware. And there, after a few years of to her and opened wide the gates, and Michael could not leave the Inn. You and whichever way she will be bent bitter poverty, the old couple died and comforted her, and wiped the tears According to the report the contract was duly executed. from her eyes. see, man proposes and God disposes. "I didn't say that she has sinned. Nachoma became an orphan—all alone The community at large knew noth- II. But consider; suppose I were to in the village, with no one to befriend ing of these things. The rich woman ABUSE MUNICH RABBIS. her. She earned very little because Now Nachoma, the innkeeper's old- choose for your youngest a youth from her stock of goods was scanty. Be- of Prague had a grand funeral. She eat. was really worthy of a husband the yeshiba—that is to say, a youth sides, the peasants disliked her be- was given a place in the center of the BERLIN—At a special meeting from the Prague yeshiba. She was a poor in this world's goods. What cane she, the Jewish pauper, would graveyard, amidst the pious, and a organized by the National Socialist would it profit you? A student of shy beauty and a kindly soul. Iler the Torah, he would sit and study. not permit any coarse, familiar ap- splendid tombstone proclaiming her Workers Party in Munich, quotations goodness shone through her calm many virtues. were cited from the Talmud to show • • •You are not going to take proach. eyes—an obedient daughter and a them She kept writing letter after letter When the nobleman sent the body of that the Jews are taught to hate Into your home in the village?" pious one. She observed the ritual, to her sister in Prague, but this sister the older girl to Prague for burial, no humanity. Rabbi Bahrwald, a lead- "Of course not. Not as long as the lit the candles, read prayers—in sort, of hers, as we know, lived In a world member of the Burial society cared to ing Rabbi of Munich supported by young squire is there." a woman worthy of the bridal canopy. of guilty dreams, and she read no let- touch her sinful body. So they hired "Well, then you will have to leave five other Jewish scholars, desired With the youngest daughter, things them in Prague. You will hire a lodg- ters, the neglected orphan received no some carriers who burled her In si- to show the meeting that these quo- went a little wrong—Just a little— ing for them and leave them, and send answer. So one night she got up, lence. tations were incorrect when they nothing much to speak of. Sh was a them money to live on. What will abandoned her empty stall, and left Men only see the surface of things. were abused and beaten up by the strange, pensive creature, with droop- the young couple do. The husband the village secretly on foot. She wan- gathering. The Munich Kchillah has X. lug eyelids, walking white-faced as if will sit In the House of Learning dered forth, trusting to God that she petitioned the government to take In a dream. When anyone called her day and night, and she, the young would find her sister in Prague, be- Some years thereafter a part of the measures to safeguard the Jews of It was like a summons from another bride, what will she do? What cause, after all, "a sister is not a Prague cemetery was annexed to the the city. world; she would tremble and almost thoughts will. she think? In what stone." city for a street opening. So the • fall. And when she looked up with land of dreams will she roam about?" bodies had to be disinterred and placed VII. VIENNA.—Gedeon Szoke, Johann strangely intent eyes, one felt un- "You are right," admitted Yachiel So she left the village with no other elsewhere. The man who opened Na- Hajdu and Stephen Hajdu who were comfortable under her gaze There Michael, hoarsely. "What, then, shall choma's grave near the gate found provision than a crust of bread in her found guilty of having instigated po- was also a sinister suggestion about I do?" hand, and upon reaching a forest nothing but a parceiful of decaying groms in Kuszentmiklos, Hungary, her doings. It was impossible to get "Whatever is best," answered the bones. climbed up the nearest tree, intending her away from the inn, especir.liy at rabbi, "and I shall help you to marry Malkah's body, on the other hand, were sentenced to death says a re- to stay there among the branches until night when there was singing and her off properly. I myself shall send was found almost intact, fresh, with a port from the Hungarian capital. dancing. For hours at a time she for a marriage brisker and tell him dawn. As she eat there, saying her sweet smile on her white face. "Thus would sit and watch the peasants where to go. Be must go to a house evening prayers, she heard the barking fares It with the plow," the people PARIS.—As the result of the inter-' making love to their sweethearts, where there are many people, reput- of dogs and the pattering of their feet. reverently said. "Even the worms have vention of Mr. Nahum Sokolow, with The sounds grew louder and she under dancing, whirling about and singing able and well off. but somewhat In- no power over them after death." the chief Allied Commissioner M the dulgent. When you will tome to me stood that a party of noblemen were their chants. But people see things only on the Plebescite territory of Upper Silesia, about your other daughter you shall hunting for game in the forest. She surface. They do not know the hearts the expulsions of foreign Jews which When she was dragged off to bed get what I promised you—a great tried to hide herself among the branch- to sleep with Nachoma she would close scholar worth its weight In gold. es. but the dogs gave mouth, barking of men and women, and what is going were being carried out there on a large scale, have now been stoired. her eyes until she knew her sister to Meanwhile, marry off the younger." up-tree, and two riders approached in on in their Immortizi souls. be asleep, then jump out of bed, bare- haste to see what was the matter. The V. foot, and peep through the keyhole two riders were both young noblemen • or a crack in the wall. If, perchance, And so it came to pass. The inn- and they climbed up the tree and took her mother would catch her at It and keeper kept his coon , d sad secretly the girl down by force, and built a drag her away, her body would burn arranged a fine m for Malkah . fire to look at her in its glare. They as if fever-stricken, her eyes shoot And Malkah knew malting of the beheld a Jewish girl, a very pretty one, sparks, and Dvoshe, frightened, would whole matter until the very lust min though half starved. They assured run back to Yachiel Michael and tell ate. She did not know why she was her tiv.v would do her no harm—God him about it. "If only we were per- clad in costly clothe, and •'iy she f alibi! They told her that she shone mitted," he sighed, "to marry off the was awakened early one morning and in the darkness like the morning star. youngest first!" led away to Prague. But when she All that was necessary was to change "We ought to ask about this," an- perceived at last what it all meant she her clothes. Then she would be as swered Dvoshe. Meantime the follow- uttered not a word. Her outward con- bright as a queen and as fragrant as a lag things came to pass. duct was blameless throughout. She rose. Her heart sank at these words. Then she heard the two quarreling was a little pale, to be sure, and her III. eyes were always lowered—but what about their prey—each one wanted her The squire of the village had an of that? The good God had created for himself, each claiming that she be- only son, brought up In Paris, accord- her thus, and made her beautiful. She longed to him. that his dog had been ing to the custom of the nobility, who never look a step without her mother the first to scent her. Finally. they decided upon a duel to came to see his father once in a in-law; never asked for anything; ate twelve month, during vacation term. whatever wax given her; put on what. the sleuth. and whoever would remain To common men be was most of the ever dress they chose for her. Neat alive should take her. They took their time invisible, a hawking and a hunt- and silent, and lovely. When she went stand opposite each other and were leg far afield. out In her Sabbath finery, the women about to tire. Suddenly they changed their mind. Onee.•on a very hot day, while rid- whipered after her: "A princess!" They detailed that they had better ing past the Inn, the youth had a She paid no heed. At the synagogue draw lots. This they did, and the one she took her place near her mother. ' to dismount, to step sudden notion, of them who won immediately drew into the inn and to order a glass of in-law, lowered her silken eyelashes. mead. Yuchiel Michael awl ed him opened with her little while hands the her up on his horse and galloped away with trembling hands. Ile tasted the silver clasps of the gilt edged prayer- to his castle mead and grimmaced. In his disgust book and her lips began to tremble. VIII. he might have thrown the glass at • • • She had a scorn for jewelry, • • • In the morning she came to the innkeepers head, but just then so they all said: "What need has she he espied Malkah sitting at the other of jewels? 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