TituDerKorr,frwisit PAGE FOUR THE mltorriousit (ARON MAE 7t lLONICLE telligence. But as long as human beings are what they are, they must not be blamed for such characteristics. Dislike of the Jew, or anti-Semitism, is one of these preju- MICHIGAN'S JEWISH HOME PUBLICATION dices or weaknesses which has recently suffered a sudden growth. It is regrettable, for to say "I dislike Jews," it is a sign Published Weekly by The Jewish Chronicle Publishing Co., Inc. that one's intelligence has been mastered by one's prejudice. Joseph J. Cummins, President But it is not immoral. There are so many human weakness- %tared u second-class matter March 3,1916, at the Postoffice at Detroit, es, and all of us have such a goodly share of them, that we have Mich., under the Act of March 3, 1879. no right to be severe on any one who suffers from this particu- lar variety. General Offices and Publication Building But the wrong comes in when people permit this weakness 850 High Street West to master their sense of justice. And they can do this in two Cable Address: Telephone: Chronicle ways. Glendale 8326 One way is to slander the Jews as a whole. Instead of say- LONDON OFFICE ing "I dislike" Jews, which is natural, though absurd, a man 14 STRATFORD PLACE LONDON, W. 1, ENGLAND will say : "The Jews are disloyal, the Jews are swindlers, the Jews are money-hunters," which is unjust as well as absurd. $3.00 Per Year Subscription, in Advance That too is another human weakness. Men dislike a thing To Insure publication, all correspondence and news matter must reach for unanalysable causes, and then find reasons beyond his con- this office by Tuesday evening of each week. trol, and then, to justify his state of mind, attributes to the wom- Editorial Contributor an all sorts of virtues and graces which nobody else can see. IlLABIll LEO M. FRANKLIN In the same way when we desire to do something for obscure The Jewish Chronicle Invites correspondence on subjects of interest to reasons, we set about finding the most far-fetched justifications the Jewish people, but disclaims responsibility for an indorsement of the for it. view expressed by the writers. Now it does not matter, or it matters little, when you praise undeservedly, because you happen to like him. But it Ab 10, 5682 a is person August 4, 1922 a serious immorality to slander someone because you dislike him. During the absence from the city of our regular editorial contributor, So that, if you should happen to dislike a nation, the most Rabbi Leo M. Franklin, he will be responsible only for such occasional you have a right to say is: "I dislike that nation." Even that is articles in this column as beer his signature. wrong. But it is infinitely more wrong to let your dislike lead you into all sorts of extravagant and unprovable accusations. The second immoral way in which anti-Semitism finds The Six Greatest Jews. vent—and this is more vicious than the first, and bound up with In last month's American Magazine there appeared an it—is to attempt to penalize the Jews because they do not ap- article by Bruce Barton, based on an interview with II. G. peal to one's taste. Dislike the Jews, if you cannot help it. Say so, if you must. Wells. The author of "The Outline of History" was asked who, in But do not advocate measures against them. Do not assert to his opinion, were the six greatest men in history. all and sundry that they are an inferior people, or a superior He picked the following: Jesus, Buddha, Aristotle, Asoka, and cunning people, or a people with this and that unpleasant Roger Bacon and Abraham Lincoln. characteristic, and that therefore they must be deprived of this or that human privilege. • • • For to be obsessed by a prejudice is human and forgivable. Jews who read the Outline remember the scant considera- But to give vent to that prejudice in ways that will injure others tion that was given to Moses, and are not surprised at the omis- is criminal.—The Day. sion of his name from Mr. Wells' hand-picked list. Should II. G. Wells have included the name of Moses? And are other Jews entitled likewise to a place in this Hall of Super- The Basle Program Triumphs. fame? Twenty-five years ago, almost to a day, the Basle Program A list of the six greatest Jews in history may suggest the Was formulated at the first Zionist Congress ever held. That answer. program has been ratified by the nations of the world. In Who are your nominations? The present writer compiles his list with no claim to authoritative judgment. These are, to August, 1897, Dr. Theodor Herzl presided over the Zionist Con- gress which it had been sought to prevent convening. And at him, the most appealing, if not the greatest Jews in history. that gathering, the first Jewish Parliament, there were laid • • • • down certain principles which have become historic in their import. These principles known as the Basle Program are: We nominate these as the six greatest Jews in history: "The aim of Zionism is to create for the Jewish people a Abraham. publicly legally assured home in Palestine. Moses. "In order to attain this the Congress adopts the following Solomon. means: Jesus. "(1) To promote the settlement in Palestine of Jewish ag- Spinoza. riculturists, handicraftsmen, industrialists and those following Herzl. professions. • • • • "(2) The centralization of the entire Jewish people by means of general institutions, agreeable to the laws of the land. We nominate Abraham because he founded a great faith; "(3) To strengthen Jewish sentiments and national self- because he alone was unblinded by the prevailing idolating of consciousness. the day ; because he was close to God: and, last but not least, "(4) To obtain the sanction of governments to the carrying because he became a father at 100. out of the objects of Zionism." A quarter of a century has elapsed before the work of the • • • • founders, who laid the corner-stone "truly and well," has been We nominate Moses because he solved the Jewish problem crowned with success. Our joy is tempered by the sorrow that of his day ; because he laid down laws that are still obeyed by Herzl, Wolfsohn, Tchlenow, Oscar Marmorek, Mandelstamm millions; because he knew how to tell a story in a few words; and others who stood so steadfastly together in those stormy and, last but not least, because he achieved fame in spite of days are no longer with us. Many attempts were made to deny, change and even destroy halting speech. the Basle Program, but these efforts failed, because the prin- • • • • ciples formulated in 1897 are based upon truth. Ilerzl and his We nominate Solomon because he proved his wisdom by cohorts and all Zionists, then and always, felt that the position praying for it; because he conceived great works and made of the Jew in the world must be legalized. At the annual con- them real; because he said many worth-while things; because ference of the Federation of English Zionists, of which he is the he is credited with being the father of Masonry ; and last, but president as well as being presiding officer of the World Zionist not least, because he married a thousand wives, without domes- Organization, Dr. Weizmann said that the ratification of the mandate means the adoption of the Basle Program by the na- tic dissension, so far as we are told. tions of the world. He spoke truly. • • • • Twenty-five years in the history of a people is a very brief We nominate Jesus because His name is worshipped and period of time indeed, but when a people has suffered as Jews have then every day during which the oppression is prolonged revered by untold millions; because he was a martyr to His like an age. It has been said that one can become inured to cause; because he preached a doctrine of humility, and lived is This is just merely a saying and nothing more. A it as well; and last, but not least, because He was one of the suffering. people with a great past, conscious of its contribution to civili- first pleaders for social justice. zation and realizing that it has still much to give to mankind • • • • does not willingly accept persecution. Such a people may suffer does not cease to protest against the conditions forced upon We nomintae Baruch Spinoza because he is regarded by but it. And so it was but natural that in every age and under all many as the greatest philosopher of all time; because he in- conditions, even the most adverse, there should arise men and terpreted Greek culture in the light of Jewish faith ; because he women who, holding aloft the Banner of the Jew, called upon faced scorn and violence for the things he held dear; and last, their people to reshape its corporate life and thus compel the but not least, because he showed all Jews the way to tolerance. nations to place a different and a higher value upon the life of the Jew. • • • • It is because of this insistence that the Basle Program has We nominate Theodor Herzl because he was the founder now been affirmed as the inherent Declaration of Rights of the of modern Zionism; because his great passion was for his peo- Jewish people. ple; because he used his potent pen to tell an old message in a After this is it necessary for us to tell conscious, living, pul- new way; because he reawakened a Jewish consciousness in the sating Jews what their duty is? The path is opened. Of course hearts of thousands; and, last, but not least, because he dis- much clearing has yet to be done. And the clearing of the ob- dained to commercialize his ideals and his popularity. structions on the road can only be the work of Jews them- selves. • • • • The regeneration of the Jewish people is the task of the Of these six great men all Jews may well be proud. whole people. The Jewish people are now to be tested. Up to M. M. A. yesterday it was a dream. It may still be a dream, a pleasant fairy tale. "But if you will it, it will be no fairy tale," Herzl said.—The Jewish Daily News. • Anti-Semitism, Common Sense and Justice. When a man says: "I dislike the English," or "I dislike the French," or, "I dislike the Germans," he is saying something which is ridiculous in the first place, and next to meaningless in the second. For there is no such thing as disliking a whole nation. You may dislike some of the most of its institutions; you may fight against its army. But when you say "I dislike that nation" you are saying something incomprehensible. For a nation is composed of millions of individuals. Within those millions there is infinite variety. And unless you have met every member of that nation, and taken a dislike to him or her, it is ridiculous to say: "I hate that nation." It is ridiculous, but not immoral. It is a human weakness which you ought to combat, but for which you may not be re- sponsible. It is a prejudice, and a prejudice is something with- out logic, something that you can seldom control. What is the explanation of such a prejudice? Why do peo- ple make that statement: "I hate this and that nation or peo- ple?" There are numerous explanations. Perhaps that individual happened to run up against some bad specimens of that nation. Perhaps he happened to have an unfortunate experience with some of them. They say that Ford became an anti-Semite be- cause he believes that Jews fooled him on his famous peace trip. But it is clear that to hate a people because of an incident in which a few of its members were Involved is ridiculous. Or perhaps the dislike is an artificially instilled one. Per- haps the person in question has heard repeated so often: "This nation is a nation of thieves." "That nation is a nation of nig- gards," that the mere repitition of the senseless remark took effect:—just as repitition in advertising takes effect without proof. Or perhaps the dislike is quite unanalysable, like many of our human motives. However that be, such a dislike is human and forgivable. one's in- It should be combatted, as a weakness, as a threat to International Hymn O'er continent and ocean, From city, field and wood, Still speak, 0 Lord, thy messengers Of peace and brotherhood. In Athens and Benares, In Rome and Galilee, They fronted kings and conquerers, And taught mankind of thee. We hear, 0 Lord, these voices, And hail them as thine own, They speak as speak the seraphim Who guard thy silent throne— One God, the heavenly Father; One king, the Lord above; One Kingdom and Humanity; One holy Law of Love! The tribes and nations falter In rivalries of fear, The fires of hate to ashes turn, To dust, the sword and spear. Thy word alone remaineth; That word we speak again; O'er sea and shore and continent, To all the sons of men. JOHN HAYNES HOLMES. ligcstintl ZI!v 1.11velt's Nctus Zi!c Q:1!ilbrvn'5 &tiler 1 c By PHILIP SLOMOVITZ At about the same time that the news of the ratification of the Pales- tine mandate was flashed througout images. One day he is •nt out and let the world, we learned of the murder his son Abraham in the studio. A cus of Djemal Pasha, former Turkish Na- loner came and asked for an image val minister and governor of Palestine selecting one which had just been con: during the war. It is a remarkable co-incidence that the very moment pleted. "How old art thou?" asked Abra that marks the realization of a Jewish ham. "Sixty years," was the reply two-thousand-year-old dream should "And a man of sixty will worship a also mark the end of one of the worst god scarcely one (lay old!" The mat oppressors of our people in Palestine. During the war, Djemal tortured left covered with shame. Another day a woman brought at many Jews in Jerusalem and other offering of flour for the idols. Abra cities in the Holy Land. The mere ham received it, and when she has suspicion of a Jewish resident's sym- gone took up a hammer and destroyei pathy with the Zionist movement was them all except one, in whose hand h enough to jail him. Under his regime Miss Aaronson, the sister of the fam- put the hammer. When the fathe came home and found all his idol ous agriculturist of l'alestine and of broken to pieces he became very angry Capt. Aaronson, was tortured to death and demanded to know who had des in a Turkish dungeon for refusing to troyed the images. "No one," replied divulge secrets of the Allied armies. Abraham. "A woman brought a !ilea From Liberal to Tyrant. offering, and when I handed it to th idols they began to quarrel and die Djemal Pasha was a liberal before pute as to who should have the firs the war, but with the outbreak of the portion. The largest, however, then world conflict, he turned into a tyrant grew passionate. He took the hamme and enemy of everything that was for- and demolished all the rest." eign to Turkey. Before the British "My son," said Abraham's father occupation of Palestine, he initiated a "thou art jesting with nie; are inani pogrom policy against the Jews of mate stones able to commit such Palestine. He threatened to wipe out acts?" every trace of Jewish life and to de- "Well," said Abraham, "may thine stroy the Jewish colonies that were ears harken to what thy mouth the result of 40 years of Jewish effort speaks." and sacrifice. With the British occu- The father, who well perceived that pation of Palestine, Bjenial's activi- Abraham's life would be in danger if ties against the .lews came to an end, his attack on the idols were known, and the tyrant turned his attention to nevertheless took him before Nimrod, the Armenians. "Sof Ganev Litliyo," the mighty ruler of the land. (a thief's end is on the gallows) runs When the king heard the accusation a Hebrew saying, and Djemal got his he said to Abraham: "Thou despisest due two weeks ago. The two Armen- my idols; well, then let us worship the ians who murdered him were caught, fire." but they were successful in wreaking "Why not rather the water which their revenge on an enemy of their extinguishes the tire?" asked Abra- people. Our own people is also aveng- ham. ed and the Orient sees the end of a "Well, then, we will worship the terrible tyrant. water." "But why not rather the clouds Barber Shop Gossip. which bear the water?" The barber shop is to the man what "Well, we will worship the clouds." "But why not rather," Abraham the grocery and hutcher stores are to persisted, "the wind which disperses the women. It is their place for gos- sip. There we discussed the Leonard- the clouds?" "Well, then, let us worship the Tendler bout on the day of the big fight in Jersey City, until the main is- wind." "But why not rather man, who un- sue of the argument turned to a dis- derstands how to shelter himself from cussion of proverbial prowess and fearlessness of the expressman and the wind?" At last Nimrod lost patience, and he the butcher of the Lithuanian and ordered Abraham to be thrown into a Russian Jewish village and town. Our Jewish barber told the story of Gedal- fiery furnace. But the flames did not touch him, ya, the butcher of his own home town and he emerged unscathed. This won in Russia, about whose strength stor- him many followers, and thereafter k's without number were told and re- the cause of the God of Heaven and told by the Moujhiks (peasants) of a dozen counties. There was not a more Earth was firmly established. feared man in that part of the land. M Dear Boys and Girls: Beginning with this issue of The Detroit Jewish Chronicle, the complex. ion of this column will be somewhat different from what it was. Appear- ing under a different title, we want the column to become what it ought to be by right. We are anxious to have this column become your column in every sense of the word, and, for this reason, we urge the readers of the "Children's Corner," as the column will be known from now on, to make contributions of a Jewish nature to it. Poems, essays and short stories of worth, having Jewish angles to them, will be accepted for publication. The reason for the change of the na- ture of this department of our paper is that we feel that there are hundreds of our young readers who are capable of producing something of their own of a literary character and we owe it to them to supply a means for them of making use of their talents. At the same time, we believe that the Jewish youth ought to have the means of expressing an opinion on matters Jewish which affect them. We refer particularly to the problems of educa- tion, the Hebrew and Sabbath school, and we believe that when the opinions of the boys and the girls are read, their elders will he able to act more wisely in supplying those needs. Every boy and girl reader of this column is, therefore, encouraged to write an occasional contribution to the editor of this column. Give him your opinions and tell him of your ex- periences. Your voice will find a place in this column. The editor of this corner hopes, with your aid. to make this department the mouthpiece of the Jewish youth of your city. TILE EDITOR. Jewish History. S. M. Dubnow is the greatest living Jewish historian. This "History of the Jews in Russia and Poland" has been translated into many languages, in- cluding the English language. It is interesting to read Mr. Dubnow's opinion on the duties of the Jews to their people as dictated to them by their great history. Says Mr. Dub- now: Jewish history arouses in the Jew the desire to work unceasingly at the task of perfecting himself. To direct his attention to his glorious past, to the resplendent intellectual feats of his ancestors, to their masterly skill in thinking and suffering, does not lull him to sleep, does not awaken a dullard's complacency or hollow self- conceit. Jewish history admonishes the Jews: Noblesse oblige. The priv- ilege of belonging to a people to whom the honorable title of the "vet- eran of history" has been conceded, puts serious responsibilities on your shoulder. You must demonstrate that you are worthy of your heroic past. The descendants of teachers of relig- ion and martyrs of the faith dare not to he insignificant, not to say wicked. If the long centuries of wandering and misery have inoculated you with faults extirpate them in the name of the ex- alted moral ideals whose bearers you were commissioned to be. If, in the course of time, elements out of har- mony with your essential being have fastened upon your mind, cast them out, purify yourselves. In all places and at all times, in joy and in sorrow, you must aim to live for the higher, the spiritual interests. But never may you deem yourselves perfect. If you become faithless to these sacred principles, you sever the bonds that unite you with the vital elements of your past, with the first cause of your national existence. The Right Arm. The Persian poet Sadi relates that the famous King Jamshyd was the first to introduce the wearing of rings on the finger. He said that the rings and other ornaments should be worn on the left arm. "Why only the left," the people ask- ed him, "and not on the right?" "The right arm has ornament enough," he replied, "simply in being right." Abraham and the Idols. Abraham's father, according to tradition, was a maker of graven t A at" Yiddish Proverbs. Obtain advice from another, but keep your own counsel. A hole makes a thief, and a thief makes a hole. When fortune conies offer it a chair. The Shammas knows the whole town. Better a fool that has traveled than a wise man who has remained at home. JACOB MOSES EDITOR OF NEW PEN MAGAZINE Perhaps it is a coincidence and per- haps it isn't, but his name is Moses, and he leads his followers t othe prom- ised land of literary success, through the medium of the New Pen, a month ly magazine with its office a 216 East 14th st., New York, and "devoted to the publishing of new writers' work and criticism of it.' The magazine owes its existence to Jacob Moses, a literary aspirant from he New York East Side, who has realized what han- dicaps are put in the way of tyro-writ- ers and has conceived this idea of helping them on the road to achieve- ment. Not only does the New Pen print the works of young authors but, what is more important, each issue contains a competent, constructive criticism of the stories and poems published in the preceding number. Edwin Harris is the fiction and drama critic, while El- bert Aidline-Trommer, the well known poe atnd journalist, conducts a review of the New I'en verse. Recently no less a personage than Morris Rosen- feld, the veteran Jewish poet, poined the editorial staff of the New Pen, and its last issue contains an English poem from his pen, intended as an en- couragement to his young colleagues. WOODYARD AVENUE Power Under Control. Gedalya had occasion to show his power when his little girl rubbed against a moujhik's load of hay. In his rage, the butcher turned over the load of hay, wagon, horses and all, then tore the whip from the peasant's hand. But the giant butcher knew enough to control himself. Ile knew that a Jew must not hurt a non-Jew, no matter how much in the right he and how huch in the wrong the Gen- tile. He was in dark Russia and there the Jew was always in the wrong. Furthermore, he knew that once he lay his hands on the moujhik, the latter won't conic out entirely safe. So, in his rage, he began to chew on the whip to appease his anger. Those who saw him at the time had revealed to them a great power under self-con. trol. A Strike—to Kill the Jews. Our barber continued his narrative by relating how a neighboring peasant once told him that there was going to be a "zabastovka"—a strike. Asked what a strike was, the moujhik ex- plained that as soon as the sign "Zab- astovka" was given, all the peasants would proceed to the market-place and kill all the Jews. Sure enough, some one gave the sign, and close to a hun- dred peasants proceeded to the market place. They found only one Jew there, Gedalya the butcher, and his only wea- pon was the thill of a wagon. In five minutes, the "strike" was over. Jewish Self-Defense. These incidents are interesting at this time, when hundreds of Jewish young men and occasionally also Jew- A ) ere (Turn to last page.) 51= To Celebrate the Opening of Heyn's New Fur Department We announce our first AUGUST FUR SALE! NOW IN PROGRESS Coats, Wraps, Capes and Neck Pieces Savings of to 14 on gar- ments and pieces of assured qual- ity. Hoyn's Filth Floor Shop