A merica ffewith Periabral Carter Only Jewish Jewish Newspaper Printed in English CLIFTON AVM! • CINCINNATI 30, OHIO 11- EbETROITAWISII HRONICL Now Tellphone GLENDALE 8-3-2-6 MICHIGAN'S JEWISH HOME PUBLICATION NEW POGROM WAVE I. ZANGWILL ANALYZES ON JEWS GROWING HUMORISMS OF YIDDISH IN POLAND, UKRAINE Noted Anglo-Jewish Author Explains Derivation Alarming Reports of Excesses Come from All Parts of Poland. APPEAL TO RUSSIANS TO "BEAT THE JEWS" WARSAW.—(J. T. A.)—Alarm- ing reports of excesses and pogroms against Jews reach here from all parts of Poland. The soldiers of Kor-1 fanty now returning from Upper Si- lesia carried out a four-hour attack on the town of Kieltz. The military forces and police were powerless to prevent their activity. In the town of Lash another group of Korfanty'a insur- gents attacked a Jewish hotel and beat most of the guests including women, most brutally. Jewish pas- sengers on the railroad line between Bleshno and Tchenstochovo were mis- treated and thrown from the cars. One Jew by the name of Jacob Ya- chimowitch was mortally wounded , and taken to a nearby hospital. Attacks by armed civilian bands as well as by returning soldiers of Kor- funti's insurgent army, took place Thursday at Bendzin, Sosnovki and Graniza. Meyer Zayonz was severe- ly wounded. Another disturbance has occurred, where, among others, Aaron Lastman, 60 years old; Jacob Bergman and Moishe Weisskopf, 70 years old, were brutally beaten on Sunday evening. Several hundred hooligans attacked the town synagogue. They demand- ed that the doors be unbarred and that the Rabbi surrender to them. When the demand was refused, the synagogue building was badly mutil- ated, the doors were forced and the synagogue furniture wantonly de- stroyed. Aged Jews found in the Synagogue were badly beaten. Pre Year, $3.00; Per Copy, lreests DETROIT, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, JULY 29, 1921. VOL. X. NO. 10. Denies Palestine Britain's Burden Sir Stuart Samuel Declares Jews Contribute More Than Their Share. of Word Yiddish and Quotes Numerous Stories and Anecdotes from Vernacular LONDON. — (J. T. A.) — In his opening address as chairman of the Board of Deputies' meeting held on Sunday, Sir Stuart Samuel, brother of the High Commissioner of Pales- tine, reported at length on conditions of Jews throughout the world, dilat- ing particularly on conditions in Pal- estine as he saw them during his re- cent visit there from which he re- turned only a fortnight ago. Sir Stuart declared that the Jews in l'alestine were not a burden to the British government; that, on the con- trary, they contributed far more to the expenses of the Palestine admin- istration than was their . proportionate . constituting only 10 dut y. per cent of the population of the country, they paid one-sixth of the current expenses of the administra- tion. He asserted likewise that the necessity of maintaining large mili- tary forces in Palestine was not due to the Jews, nor to the Zionist pro- gram of the government. Ile declared that large sums'will have to be forth- coming in the nearest future to fi- nance the immediate development of Palestine and the colonization of the Chaluzim who Were in the country and of those immigrants for whom the possibility of settlement would have to be provided. In the same speech Sir Stuart Samuel urged that an exhaustive re- port of conditions in Ukraine and Eastern Europe be presented to the British Foreign Office and that that office be urged to adopt diplomatic measures to prevent the recurrence of the horrible tragedies that have' afflicted the Jews in those regions. It is learned here that since his return from America, Dr. Chaim Weizmann has urged the Itritish gov- ernment to make a clear and definite interpretation Of the Balfour Declar- ation so that it will no longer be pos- sible for officals, either in England or Palestine, to give it maximum or min- imum content. Before definitely settling the whole matter the British government may send a prominent representative to Palestine to make a careful survey of the situation there. • Commenting on the officialdom in Palestine, the Times criticized the minor officials in the Palestine admin- istration, maintaining that they are the cause of considerable harm. By ISRAEL ZANGWILL. (Copyrighted, 1921, by Jewish Correspondence Bureau.) Dr. Gotthard Deutsch of Cincinnati, who makes a specialty of omnis- cience in Jewish history, says of me in hia latest book, "Jew and Gentile:" "To him international vocabulary is indebted for the invention of the term 'Yiddish.' It is the best name for a diaect which in its previous form of Judeo-German is awkward, and under the name of Jargon, unjust." Far be it from me to contradict a [(avant who is usually in the right. But if I invented the term it was inadvertently. Presumably, it was in "Children of the Ghetto," published in 1892. At any rate, the term was adopted by Alexander Ilarkavy of New York, whose "Directory of the English Lan- guage" dated 1898, and it may be said to have been finally fixed when, in 1899, Leo Weiner, instructing in the Slavic languages at Harvard Uni- versity, published his excellent "History of Yiddish Literature in the Nine- teenth Century;" though I note that M. Pines, Doctor of the University of Paris, who has supplemented Weiner's work by a still more comprehensive study in French, entitles his monumental volume "Ilistoire de la Litterature Judeo-Allemande." The actual word "Yiddish" has, however, been adopted into French by M. Pierre Mille in' his translation of "Children of the G:ietta." On look- ing up the "Standard Dictionary of the English Language," published by Funk and Wagnall of New York, as early as 1903, I found to my surprise the word "Yiddish" included, though it is inaccurately explained as "a cor- rupt form of Hebrew, a polyglot jargon used for the intercommunication by Jews from different nations." Our r( i "Oxford Dictionary," which also includes it, is not much more ac- curate, for it defines it as "a mixture of Hebrew and other languages used by or to the Jews." M•kes Valuable Contribution To the study of this comparatively unknown tongue, whose real basis is, of course—despite its Hebrew letter- ing—mediaeval German, with only 20 per cent of Hebrew and 10 per cent of Slavic, etc.—Dr. Immanuel Olsvan- ger of Cape Town, has now made a valuable contribution under a title conceived in the true Hebraic spirit— "Raisins and Almonds" IRosinkeas Mit Mandlen). Unfortunately, he has written in German, so that the mak- Rabbi Spiro Attacked. ers of English dictionaries will not b e A second attack on Jews took place much enlightened. This is a pity, fo r at Bendzin Friday. Rabbi Spiro of Dr. Olsvanger has put together one of Czenstochova, who happened to be the most interesting and amusing at the railroad station at the time, books in any language, and the mem- was severely beaten, and only with bers of -the Swiss Commission for Jewish Folklore, under whose aus- difficulty saved from certain death. On the railroad line between Cra- pices it is published, are sincerely to cow and Ziumkovitch, Jews were be congratulated on their enterprise. thrown from an express train. Jew- It was in Switzerland, in fact, that ish passengers on the train were bad-: all these anecdotes, folk-songs, rid- dles and proverbs were originally 1y mutilated . Premier Witos announced that of- gathered. For Switzerland is a stage ficially the government had no knowl- on the road to America, as well as a edge of reported excesses that have place of study and business for Rus- taken place recently in the Lodz dis-j sian and Galician Jews. The students trict. In the same statement he de-. and business men settled in that dared that the negotiations for a country had therefore special facili- Polish-Jewish understanding would ties for collecting from their transient visitors the stories and sayings which begin soon. The condition of the Jews in Po-. make the book a rich feast of humor, land, especially of the homeless refu- as well as a valuable historical mir- gees from Soviet Russia and White ror of the Jewish life and the Jewish Russia, grows worse from day to day, soul in the Judengassen of Eastern due to the uninterrupted influx into Europe. It is comedy and the joy of the country of Ukrainian pogromist , Jewish life which are the dominant banks who cross the Polish border notes of this collection, and therefore without permission. Oskilko, the well it is the more tragic that the bulk of known Ukrainian Hetman, is at pres- it should have been taken down from ent in Rovno, where serious attacks the mouth of Jewish refugess from upon Jews have taken place within Jerusalem on their flight to America. Dr. Olsvanger, who has written out the last few days, some of them re-' suiting in killings. Representatives all the stories in the Roman alphabet, according to a careful phonetic sys- of the Jewish Kehillah, who appealed to the governor of Rovno for the de- tem, has provided elaborate explana- tory notes, an historical and gram- portation of Oskiko, were not given a matical introduction, and a full vo- satisfactory reply. cabulary of words differing consider. Call for Attacks on Jaw,. ably from the old German ground. In White Russia, proclamations work of this dialect. It is difficult have been discovered, issued by the to choose from such a rich bag of al- "Ukrainian Defense of Vaterland and monds and raisins. One can only dip Freedom" Committee, of which Gen- i one's hand in at random, certain of eral Savinkov is the spiritual leader, finding something toothsome. It was urging the counter - revolutionary in this book, to tell a secret, that I forces to make pogroms on Jews. The found the anecdote applied in my last proclamation ends with the words, speech to Sir Ilerbert Samuel and his "Beat the Jews and save Russia." handling of the Arab-Jewish question large masses of Jewish refugees are in Palestine—the anecdote of the wending their way through Ukraine Rabbi who says that both the liti- towards the Polish border. The con- gants are right, and when reminded fusion and congestion in the Russian, by his wife that this cannot be, re- frontier towns grows steadily worse, plies equally: "You are right." I can due to the recent Polish decree pro- cordially recommend other speakers hibiting Ukrainian refugees from en- to dip as I did. tering the country. The request of Stories Lacking Background. The only fault I have to find with the local Ukrainian committee that refugees from Ukraine be granted the compilation—or is this perhaps a asylum in Poland was refused by the merit?—is that there are many Minister of the Interior, who held out stories or jests which lack an old his- the hope, however, that the border torical background, and are too new might be opened within a short time. to have become already folk-lore. The Poish newspapers report a' Thus the joke involved in the story pogrom on Jews in Astrakhan. of "The Short Telegram" is obvious. The anti-Semitic organ Dwa Groshe ly not antique. A boy was born to printed an editorial denouncing the . a young wife and there was rejoicing Zionist Organization as an enemy to in the room. The happy husband Poland. "The Zionists," says the pa- wished to telegraph to his mother. He per, "carry Polish millions into Pales- took a piece of paper and wrote a tine, but fail to transfer the Jews to telegram: "Fanny happily delivered Palestine." of a boy." He showed it to his fath- er-in-law, who gave a glance at it and said: "You are certainly no busi- ELABORATE PROGRAM ness man. Fancy such a long tele- how many unnecessary FOR THEODOR HERZL gram. Look have put. First, 'Fanny.' words you YAHRZEIT PREPARED Do you suppose your mother will imagine you have telegraphed to her Detroit Rabbis Scheduled to Eulogize about a strange woman? Second, 'happily.' Could you possibly have Founder of Zionism. telegraphed 'unhappily?' Obviously Elaborate preparations are being your telegraphing at all means that made by the Zionist District of De- (Continued on Page 5) 'trod for the holding of the Herz! memorial meeting Sunday evening at the Shaarey Zedek, on the occasion CAMPAIGN FOR JEWISH RELIEF IN UKRAINE TO of the seventeenth Yahrzeit of the death of Dr. Theodor Herzl, the START SUNDAY, JULY 31 founder of political Zionism. Rabbi Harry Z. Gordon, chairman The Federation of Ukrainian Jews of the committee in charge, an- nounces that Rabbis Judah L. Levin announces that a general campaign for funds for the millions of suffer- and Ezekiel Aishishkin have been se- cured to address the meeting in Yid- ing Jews and the hundreds of thou- dish, while Rabbi Samuel Sachs will sands of shelterless orphans in the he the English speaker. Rabbi Gor- Ukraine will start Sunday, July 31. The Detroit committee hsa issued don will act as chairman. Cantor Minkowsky of Shaarey Zedek will an appeal to the Detroit Jews to re- ((pond on behalf of the Ukraine suf- make the Ilazkorah. Rabbi Gordon also announces that ferers and to assist in making this Rabbi Saul Silver, who is the most relief campaign a success. An appeal is also issued by the lo- prominent Yiddish speaker in the Middle West, has been invited as the cal committee to the Jewish youth, out-of-town speaker for the me- who are asked to come out and act f as volunteers for the canvassing o morial meeting. Announcement is made that the Jewish homes for funds. Volunteers executive committee of the Keren are requested to come to the Labor Hayesod will meet Monday evening Lyceum, on Livingstone near Antoine at the Shaarey Zedek, when arrange- street, at 8 a. m. Sunday, July 31. Contributions for the Ukrainian ments will be made to send out a corps of volunteer collectors to col- Jewish relief may be turned over to lect the funds pledged for the Keren A. H. Jaflin, acting chairman, 3011 Hastings street. J. D. C. WILL SPEND $1,000-,000 IN POLAND Adopts Reconstuction Plan De- veloped and Endorsed by Polish Jewry. NEW YORK.—At the last meeting of the Joint Distribution Committee, Col. Ilerbert 11. Lehman, chairman of the reconstruction committee, sub- mitted a detailed and comprehensive plan for the commencement of recon- structive work in Poland. This plan, developed by Sir. Landesco, the re- construction director of the Joint Dis- tribution Committee, after lengthy conferences with many of the leading Jews of Poland, has been carefully studied and discussed at numerous meetings of the committee on recon- struction held since his arrive in this country on June 4, and was finally adopted at the last session of the executive committee. It has been decided to net aside from the funds of the reconstruction committee the rum of $1,000,000 for general reconstruction purposes in Poland, out of which the sum of $230,000 has been assigned for im- mediate use with the primary end in Convention Report Reveals Remark- view of demonstrating the workabil- able Work Accomplished Here in ity of the entire scheme. Past Two Years. J. D. C. Enters New Era. With the adoption of this plan the The report received this week from activities of the Joint Distribution' Miss Blume Slomovitz, Detroit's rep- Commissee in Poland enter into an resentative at the Young Judaea Con- entirely new era; the emergency vention held recently at Lake Hopat- work of immediate relief brought cong, N. J., reveals that Detroit is about by the ravages of the war and ranking highest among the Young Ju- which found its expression in the dis- daea centers in the land, New York tribution of food, clothing and other City being the only district excepted. prime necessities of existence, will Miss Slomovitz, who sends her re- give way to a more permanent work port from Bayonne, N. J., where she of rehabilitation and upbuilding, of is spending the summer, writes that the economic life of the Jew in Po- her report for Detroit was most en- land. thusiastically received and the work The various institutions of mutual of Detroit Young Judaea was lauded aid and co-operative assistance which by the leaders in the movement. Miss already exist in Poland and are so Slomovitz presented the convention well adapted to the local needs will with a check for $150 as Detroit furnish the foundation upon which Young Judaea's initial contribution the work of reconstruction will be towards the support of the national built. organization. The material help of the Joint Dis- This convention, the delegate's re- tribution Committee will not only in- port states, was one of the most suc- sure these institutions greater means cessful ever held, in that it finally of existence but will also instill in decided on a definite policy of work them new life and strengthen them among the Jewish youth in the land, by uniting them into one great or- said work in the future to be con- ganization. ducted by Young Judaea as an inde- Plan Enthusiastically GI-e.t.d. pendent body, but co-operating with ' The Jews of Poland have greeted the Zionist Organization of America. Mr. I,andesco's plan with enthusiasm, This year's convention was the Bar- because it heralds their emancipation Mitzvah convention and marked the from the humiliation of the daily completion of 13 years of Young Ju- bread line and aims at the establish- daea work. The Detroit delegate's report states ment of a condition which will enable them ultimatey to work out their own that the concensus of opinion at the economic salvation. convention was against the collection This economic rehabilitation will of funds among the Young Judaeans be worked out through two channels: or by Young Judaeans for the upkeep the Hebrew Loan and Credit Socie- of the organization's educational ties and the Co-operative Associations work. A decision was reached where- already in existence among the Jews by the funds to finance the work of Young Judaea are to be gotten from in Poland. For the last few years the so- a graduate and adult membership in called Loan and Credit Societies have Young Judaea. Responding to an appeal made to spread all over that country as well as over the former Russian provinces, the delegates, Miss Slomovitz pledged partly with the support of the ICA, for Detroit to secure the minimum but largely with their own meager number of 30 adult members at $5 resources, and have been of great a year, in addition to the graduate assistance to the workingman, the Young Judaeans who may join the ranks. small merchant and middle class. Miss Slomovitz's lengthy report will Types of Co-operatives. The war has destroyed most of be read at the next meeting of the these institutions or has reduced the Young Judaea Council to be held assets of those that remained to such Wednesday evening at the Shaarey Zedek. Miss Slomovitz will return (Continued On Page 5.) to Detroit the latter part of August. DETROIT YOUNG JUDAEA RANKING HIGHEST IN U. S. MISS BLANCHE CONE DIES BICUR CHOLEM EXPECTS FROM HEART AFFLICTION BIG MOONLIGHT CROWD The death of Miss Blanche ('one occurred on Saturday, July 23, at her residence, 645 Bethune avenue west. Miss Cone had but recently returned from Atlantic City, where she spent the spring months following a winter in Florida. Since the death in February, 1917, of her sister, Carrie, from whom she was inseparable, Miss Cone had grieved constantly until her heart be- came affected, from which affliction she suffered during the past year. She traveled extensively in an effort to assuage her grief, but to no avail. She was the daughter of the late Hannah and John Cone, pioneer Jew- ish residents of Detroit, and is Bur- vier(' by her sister, Mrs. Rose Ilersch; three nephews, Alvin D. Ilersch, RUA- sell Cone and John Cone, and her aunt, Mrs. A. Engga.ss. She was- a member of the Jewish Woman's Club, the Woman's Auxiliary of Temple Beth LI and other organizations. Funeral services were held at the residence on Monday, Rabbi Henry J. Berkowitz officiating. — The twentfth annual moonlight committee of the Incur Cholem, Jrs., is preparing for a record attendance at their annual moonlight dance to be held Tuesday evening, Aug. 16. The steamer Put-in-Bay has been chartered for the event, which marks one of the last Jewish excursions of the season. The boat leaves at the foot of First street at 8:30 p. m. The proceeds of the moonlight will go to the nedey sick. The Bicur Cholem, Srs., are work- ing in collaboration with the Junior society. RELIEF BOAT SINKS CONSTANTINOPLE—(J. T. A.)— The steamer Mermen of the Interns- one' Transit Company, carrying $125,000 worth of clothes and medi- caments from America to the Jewish population of Kishineff in the Uk- raine, struck a floating mine off the coast of Bulgaria in the Black Sea and sunk immediately. None of the crew were saved. H l VOORSANGER HEADS WAR ORPHAN BUREAU Services of Well Known War Chap- lain Secured by B'nai B'rith. CHICAGO.—The Independent Or- der of B'nai B'rith has secured the services of Capt. Elkin C. Yoorun- ger to take charge of its recently or- ganized War Orphans Bureau. Cap- tain Voorsanger will also manage the order's National Lyceum Bureau, which will supply lecturers to lodges and Jewish organizations generaly, and, in co-operation with the Anti- Defamation League, will establish courses of lectures on Jewish subjects in schools and colleges. lie will also co-operate with Sidney G. Krusworm, the director of Americanization, in extending the scope of the American- ization department. Captain Voorsanger, who is a graduate of the Hebrew Union Col- lege and who, prior to the war, oc- cupied pulpits in ((rand Rapids and St. Louis, has had a most varied and interesting career. During the war he was chaplain for New York's fam- ous fighting division—the Seventy- seventh. After the armistice, as di- rector of the Jewish Welfare Board work in France, he established most of the J. W. B. branches overseas. Subsequently he organized the over- seas units of the Joint Distribution Committee and was director of per- sonnel for the J. D. C. in Europe. ANNEX NEW BUILDING TO OLD FOLKS' HOME Appropriate Exercises to Mark Dedication Ceremonies of Jewish Institution. BIALIK OUTLINES JEWISH CONDITIONS Sent Felicitations by B'nai B'rith on Occasion of Silver IN SOVIET RUSSIA Franklins Receive Lodges Greetings Pisgah Lodge No. 34, I. 0. B. B., at the last meeting, held Monday evening, adopted a resolution convey- ing the order's felicitations to Rabbi and Mrs. Leo M. Franklin on the oc- casion of their silver wedding anni- versary. The resolution, as forward- ed by the secretary, William B. Isen- berg, to Rabbi and Mrs. Leo M. Franklin, who are spending the sum- mer at Kennebunkport, Me., follows: "Upon learning that Rabbi and Mrs. Leo M. Franklin have recently completed 25 years of married life, the members of Pisgah Lodge No. 34, I. 0. B. B., deem it a pleasure to convey to the esteemed couple their felicitations, which, though somewhat belated, yet are most hearty and sincere. The successful efforts of our reverend brother in the domain of our religion, and in the dissemination of many benefits to the human family, impel our frater- nal acknowledgment and make it par- ticularly opportune on this auspicious occasion. We express the fervent hope that the good Rabbi will be per- mitted to labor with the same mental and physical vigor, for the welfare and betterment of all the people, for many years in the future, as he has in the past, and may his dear wife, ever a true help-meet to him, con- tinue to share the pleasures and honors of his achievements." Pisgah Lodge at the last meeting also responded to the appeal issued by the Pueblo, Colo., Jewish com- munity on behalf of those who suf- fered a sa result of the recent flood there. The sum of $50 was donated towards the fund. Tribute was paid by the order at the same meeting to the memory of Joshua Grabowsky, who was killed in action at Verdun on Oct. 30, 1918, and whose body was brought to De- troit a week ago Thursday. Joshua Grabowsky and his father were both members of Pisgah Lodge. Hebrew National Poet Charges Communists With Destroy- ing Jewish Life. CHALUTZIM MOVEMENT SUPPRESSED, BUT GROWS By M. ROSENZWEIG. (Copyright, 1921, by Jewish Cor- respondence Bureau.) CONSTANTINOPLE. — After vir- tual, if not actual, imprisonment for six years in Soviet Russia, Chaim Na- hum Bialik, the great Hebrew na- tional poet, has arrived in this city. Bialik, once so erect and stately, is now bent with care and marked with the sorrows of war and the persecu- tions of a troubled regime. The long period of distress, however, seems not to have cooled his enthusiasm nor checked his desire for activity, nor yet made his poetic fire burn any the lower. Though his original in- tention had been to go from Constan- tinople immediately to Jerusalem, he informed me that his plans were now changed and that, instead, he would visit the important Jewish centers in Europe with a view of obtaining the financial means necessary for the es- tablishment of one immense Hebrew publication house in Jerusalem in which he would endeavor to concen- trate the production of Hebrew writ- ings and from which publications in the Hebrew tongue would be dis- tributed the word over. How He Loft Russia . Asked how he had been granted the exceptional privilege of leaving So- viet Russia at this time, Malik ex- The Jewish Old Folks' Home, 318 plained in these words: Edmund place, will dedicate a new "Of late, the conditions of a group building to house an additional num- of authors including myself and nine ber of inmates, on a Sunday during others resident in Odessa, had the latter part of August, by annex. reached an almost impossibly dis- ing the building next to the main tressing climax. In our despair we home, at 296 Edmund place, corner addressed ourselves to Maxim Gorky, Brush street. An appropriate pro- the famous Russian author, who, we gram will mark the day's exercises. SIR SAMUEL PLACED knew, had considerable influence with The day of the dedication will be an- the powers that be in Moscow. We IN DIFFICULTY BY nounced next week. explained that since we had been The Old Folks' Home was founded in the 'non-useful' category by JEWISH OPPOSITION placed in 1907, with Jacob Levin as presi- the Soviet authorities there ought to dent. Mr. Levin has been president be no objection to our leaving the of the institution ever since its in- LONDON.—(J. T. A.)—The pro- country. A letter to this effect, and ception and is credited with most of test of the Waad- Ha-Leumi against giving all the details of our case, was the accomplishments on its behalf. the proposed parliament in Palestine dispatched through a certain Mr. Se- The home is an offspring of the places Sir Herbert Samuel in a very , doy, a well known journalist. Two Chevra Kadisha Society, which was difficult position. We have it from a months later, the same' Sedoy re- organized for the purpose of taking reliable source that the High Com- ! turned to Odessa from Moscow bring- care of the Jewish dead, rich or poor, missioner is much put out by the ; ing us the happy news that Gorky the society providing the expenses for continued opposition of Palestine had interviewed Lenin on our behalf burial. Jews to his policies. The Arabs have and that Russia's rulers had consent- long demanded his resignation, and , ed to our departure. I was fearful, Compiles History of Home. H. Buchhalter, financial and re- if the Jews of the country, through I however, that the permission would cording secretary of the institution, their official representatives, will en- not be forthcoming for a long period compiled a history of the two bodies, ter the arena in an open fight against because of the maze of official red the Chevra Kadisha and Old Folk,' him, he is of the opinion that there tape through which our papers would Home, and told a number of interest- will be no other alternative for him have to pass, and none too certain that our lives would be safe till the ing facts about the creation of a but to give up his office. According to the information we end of that period I hastened to Mos- home for the old in Detroit. "At a meeting of the Chevra Ka- have received, there are two factions cow together with my colleague, disha in 1907," Mr. Buchhalter ex- among the Palestinian Jews: one Kleinman. Treated With Respect. plained, "it was decided, at Mr. Le- claiming that the resignation of "We arrived there at a most un- vin's suggestion, that it was not Samuel must by all means be avoid- enough to care for the dead, but that ed, because the world might interpret fortunate hour. All of Russia's en- it was just as necessary to provide a it as the collapse of the attempt to ergy and the attention of all its many home for the old before they die. realize the Zionist dream, and the commissares and commissariats were With only $87 in the treasury, a com- Arabs would certainly celebrate it as concentrated on beating down the mittee was appointed to look for a a signal victory; the other faction Kronstadt insurrection then threat. , suitable building for a home, and contends that if the Jews will not ening Petrograd. We nervously bided without delay the building at 121 put up a fight against the situation our time, but when the revolution Winder street was purchased for that has been created by the immi= collapsed and quiet was restored, $10,000. The sum of $2,000 was to gration restrictions as well as the pro- Gorky informed me that all the de- be paid in 60 days and a mortgage posed parliament, there will be no partments concerned had received in- possibility for the further Jewish de- structions to facilitate our passage assumed for the balance. "Through the efforts of Mr. Levin, velopment in Palestine. They empha- through and out of the country. On size the fact that the initiative for the all sides officials treated us with the the president, and a number of mem- bers formed into committees and or- establishment of a general parliament greatest sympathy and respect. comes, not from the English govern. "But it is characteristic of Jewish Continued on Page 5) ment, but from Sir Herbert himself. affairs in Russia today that whatever difficulty arose was created by the Jewish communists known as Jefaek (from the two Russia words Jefraiske Sekatie, the Jewish 'section). These gentlemen exerted themselves to the utmost to hinder our plans. Lunat- charsky, commissare of education, and many other Russian intellectuals Known As The Saturday Oil-Pressers had intended giving us a great fare- well dinner in the Presse Home in Moscow, but the 'Jefaek' interfered and the banquet did not take place. The 'Jefaek' wrote to the Central Communist executive accusing Lunat- charsky of hobnobbing with counter- revolutionary authors and aiding in the overthrow of the Soviets. Pri- vately and personally Lunatcharsky and Gorky and many others harbor intense bitterness toward these gen- tlemen of the Jewish section. But Native Jews of India (Continued on Page 5) CONSISTENCY OF REFORM JUDAISM AND ZIONISM TO BE DISCUSSED BY I. Z. A. The study circle of the Detroit chapter of the intercollegiate Zionist Association last Tuesday evening, at the Shaarey Zedek, conducted a dis- cussion on the relative difference in the strength of anti-Semitic move- ments that vary between the larger and smaller Jewihs settlements. The discussion on the subject was based on the statement in the Juden- stoat of Dr. Theodor lierzl where the :founder of political Zionism gays that Jews will flock to a place where anti- Semitism does not exist, but that by populating that place with a large number of Jews they bring anti- Semitism with them. As a result of the discussion, vari- ous phases of anti-Semitism were brought out by the 25 members of the study circle, those taking a lead- ing part in the discussion being Paul Goldstein, Edward Reuben Rabino- witz, Miss Esther Rosenstein, Joseph Erman, Sam Zellman and Sam Hey- man. By a decision of the circle, a chair- GROUP OF BENI-ISRAEL IN ANCIENT COSTUME. man will be elected for every session of the study circle to lead in the suc- The Beni-Israel, the native Jews of India, dwell mainly in the presi- dency, of Bombay. They were formerly known by the name of "Shanvar ceeding discussions and to sum up the arguments brought out in every Telis, " or the "Saturday Oil-Pressers," in allusion to the chief occupation discussion. and their Sabbath day. The Beni-Israel avoided the use of the name Miss Zelda Medvedov was elected "Jew," probably in deference to the prejudice of their Mohammedan neigh- , to lead in the discussion next Toes- bors, and preferred the name Beni-Israel in reference to the favorable use ' day evening at the Shaarey Zedek on of the term in the Koran. The Beni-Israel retained from the earliest times the question: 'Is Reform Judaism practically all of the Jewish festivals and feat days. Com pat i b l e W ith 41.1.1.111111