.er Page twenty-eight DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE THE FUTURE OF JEWRY ABROAD can Jewry must not overlook the pres- will, a greater calamity will b efa ll us ent. It must not withhold its aid yet than if we had been left without An Interview With Israel Herbert Levinthal, Rabbi Brooklyn Jewish Center. for a while. Just as repeatedly as I breed!' heard expression of thanks to Amer- "The work of the Central R•ief is ica, so did I hear the pitiable plea: helping to keep alive the nil of the 'Urge American Jewry not to forsake Jew; and in this work, I kn•.i., • Amer- us now!' Let them not stop uphold. ican Jewry will gladly lend a helping shop 'Ohel' (Mausoleum) that covers ing our cultural institutions; if they hand.' it. I was anxious to see with niy own eyes that which I had heard ever since I was a child—how from this grave there grows a tree in the form of a human creature, with arms find legs and mouth and eyes. The Polish soldiers, during the recent war, have almost destroyed this tree, but enough of it yet remains to have evoked my SODA—CANDIES-110T LUNCHES wonder and amazement. Legend in ,Vilna has it that this tree grew of Home Made Candies—Ice Cream Soda and Fancy Sundaes itself—that no mortal hand had ever And Dandy Luncheon—Special Noonday luncheon 50, planted it—that the spirit of the great martyr has produced this tree over Fancy Box Candy at Reasonable Prices. his own grave as a living protest to the Poles who refused of allow the Where 'A'I.ere Jews to place a monument over it. Taste 120 EAST KEARSLEY STREET I sin "Ilowever you may accept or inter- Tells On Your Way to the Postoffic e 11111 pret the legend, to me that tree was a living interpretation of East Eu- ropean Jewry. The Jew in Poland and Russia may be burnt, tortured and massacred, yet, like this tree, he is unconquerable and indestructible. Though laid low, he rises again and, like this tree, draws sap even from his own grave." "This is the impression I received as a result of my visits to the Jewish communities of Warsaw and \Vilna 525 S. Saginaw during the past summer. Thanks to the generosity of their American Men's Wear and Luggage brothers, the people are gradually EXCLUSIVE AGENTS FOR coming to their own once more. Wher- ever I went I heard the heartiest ap- INDESTRUCTO TRUNKS—WHEARY-BURGE preciation expressed to American CUSHION TOP WARDROBES—LIKELY LUGGAGE Jewry for having helped to save the Jews of Poland from utter destruc- tion. "We shall never forget the American Jews!' "Thank our Amer- ican brothers!" "Give our blessing to America!" These were the sentiments EVERYTHING UNDER COVER that greeted me everywhere. "Yet, though they are gradually, and PHONE 348 by slow stages, coming to themselves, we dare not and must not forget them. The important fact is that it will take Co. them a great deal of time before they will be able to care entirely for their Retail and Wholesale Lumber spiritual needs. They may not need our loaves and shoes, but they do need Mill and Interior Finish Plant our help in the maintaining of the Torah. It is beyond their own slen- In Connection der abilities—financial abilities, I mean, to maintain their Yeshivath, E. SECOND AVE. AND P. M. TRACKS FLINT, MICHIGAN their schools as well as their students. They are making earnest efforts to help themselves. While at Wilna, I witnessed a town-wide "Tag-Day" for the benefit of the local school. They CLOSED WEDNESDAY OFFICE HOURS: make great efforts everywhere to meet AFTERNOONS 9 A. M. TO 5 P. M. their ow nbudgets. People make great EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT sacrifices for the cause of the young folks, but their means are as yet woe- fully scant and limited. By HAROLD BERMAN Life moves fast these days. Every day, and every hour, practically since the great world war brings its own budget of news, its own surprises and sensations. The din is practically endless and the strain upon our nerves continuous and almost interminable. Every day brings its own surprises; its own problems, its own difficulties and its own bitterness. We are "fed up" on news from abroad, especially the had and unpleasant species of news that we have been getting all along. And therein really lies the dif- ficulty. Man loves himself and hates to disturb his own well-being and comfort by an every-renewing stream of evil tidings. We have had a surfeit of misery and would like to get a well- earned rest after our several years of strenuous effort on behalf of our less- fortunate brothers abroad. Meanwhile, the fate of our com- munal and educational institutions abroad is left hanging in the balance, suspended by a tenuous thread that is apt to snap by the breath of every ill-wind that bloweth in those lands of many changes and unstable poli- cies. These institutions, one must not forget, have been built up, and mostly by American effort, since the great catastrophe that so mercilessly de- stroyed all that the native genius and the devotion of the people had built up during centuries. And they are yet too weak to stand up unaided, and by their own effort. Yet, if the advices regarding them be but fragmentary and sometime even conflicting; if the news we get is of the most meage^ sert and contain so little of real information to us, how then can we he guided in action towards them, know whether to give or not to give, or whether the condi- tions abroad still call for the great renunciation and sacrifice on our part, or whether the giving of the mere crumbs off our table will not do? The best course to follow is, I thought, to meet the person—or persons—who has seen the actual conditions with his own eyes; has come in contact with the Jewish leaders on the spot; has seen the various institutions in action and has studied their needs and their problems. Rabbi Levinthal Optimistic. Israel Herbert Levinthal is the Rabbi of the Brooklyn Jewish Center, one of the most influential and most active Jewish centers, situated in one of the finest Jewish residential sec- tions in the greatest Jewish city in the world. Rabbi Levinthal has re- cently returned from abroad where he attended the Zionist Congress at Karlsbad, and visited the more im- portant Jewish centers of population in Germany, Poland and Lithuania. His experiences and observations, I correctly surmised, ought to prove a valuable source to the one who is seeking light on a much-mooted sub- ject and I, accordingly, sought him out and put my questions to him. To my first question—regarding his impressions of Jewish education in the countries that are even now re- covering from the effects of the great war, Rabbi Levinthal surprised me greatly by replying in a thoroughly optimistic vein. I naturally pressed the Rabbi for more specific informa- tion, desirous as I was of learning the result of his observations in certain specific lands and individual towns and regions And his study of the edu- cational institutions, old and new. I was agreeably surprised to learn that the Rabbi clung tenaciously to his previously expressed opinion regard- ing most of the educational institu- tions that have been founded since the war, with the sole exception, perhaps, of the few Yeshivahs of the old type. These schools, I gathered from the Rabbi's talk, did not impress him as a real earnest and broad-minded at- tempt to stem the tide of ignorance and assimilation, or to form a con- nective link between the old and new generations. However, he admitted that he saw but few of these—not enough to form an honest opinion by, or to serve as a standard of compari- son for the rest. At the Grave of Ger Zedek. "In the old cemetery of Wilna, I saw," said Rabbi Levinthal, "among the graves of the Gaon and other il- lustrious leaders of a former day, the grieve of Ger Zedek and the bullet DIANA TEA ROOM Baldwin's RANDALL LUMBER & COAL B. M. FUREY, D. S. C. U. S. Jewry Saved the Torah. If we will but give them a little more time, then they may never again need our help, and will be eternally grateful to us. And I can hear testimony not only to the excellent work that these schools are doing, but also to the ab- solute necessity—for the time being, at least—of American help. The ven- erable Wilna Rabbi, Chaim Ezer Grod- zinsky, said to me: "American Jewry has not only saved the body of Polish Jewry but it has saved the Torah in our land!" "At Warsaw I had the rare privilege of examining the Tach- kemoni school, a real high school in every modern sense, containing 500 pupils. At Byalistok, I saw even a larger school, with a greater number of pupils and equally as modern. The Yahneh schools for girls cover practi- cally the entire Poland and Lithuania, with their network of beneficent influ- ence and achievement. They even have women Teachers Training Schools—something previously un- heard of—for the proper training of teachers for girls' schools of the fu- ture. At Berlin, I visited Dr. Heller's Beth Sepher Govooh' (High School) and was deeply imnressed by what I saw there. f beheld a new type of Jewish student; young men with a university education, polished and gentlemanly in their bearing and some of them in possession of 'Semi- chah' (a rabbinical certificate) at- tending the lectures. I saw in one class-room a professor of the Berlin University delivering a lecture on Lessing and in the other, Dr. Heller teaching the 'Yerushalmi.' "Let me Add, in conclusion, that while the sights that it was my privi- lege to see during my visit to the old world were encouraging in the ex- treme as reitarde the future, Ameri. Chiropodist and Foot Specialist 126 Pederson Bldg. PHONE—OFFICE 4639 Capeling Steam Carpet Cleaning Works SEWING AND SIZING ORIENTAL RUGS A SPECIALTY Twenty Years Experience in Flint 1305 S. Saginaw St. Phone 566 ABRAHAM - FOSS CO. 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