Incprmonloomi(rittoNirLs
PAGE FOUR'
NS ne"
1
r-
-
n
r
r
-r
iwe
L. 1114, reir,1111.
se1141
-
5■ -•
—
■ 1
'1
ties they surely would be bad eugenists to cross as ran-
donmerely for the sake of proving their Americanism.
do
Eugenists have been clamoring for a long time fo
e..,,,,,,, II0V14.11.1.11,M1 R.I. WI .....
race improvement, and the assimilationist, too often,
Published Weekly by The Jewish Chronicle Publishing C•., Inc.
---- —.
flies in the face of good eugenics, for (let us be honest
Joseph J. Cummins, President and Editor
the Hebrew Union College T.
A
I .
with oursees)
Professor David Neuniark of Ile-
ourselves) the Jew who intermarries must too of-
Jacob H. Schakne, General Manager
ficult decision had to be made et .. • .
brew Union College, who died Dec.
ten contribute both physical and mental superiority to
Relativity.
ly.
Should
he,
k
num
who
li'
.
1
ilered m Second-clam matter !larch I. 11111, at the Postoffice at Detroit.
iu after an operation, was born Aug.
-
offset the fact of the numerical superiority of the other
3, 18(111, M a midi Galician town. voted his life to Jewish sehol, 1• I
Ilkh., under the Act of March 8. 1819.
A FTER engaging fur six months in
' •
--
Ilereceived his early education in the leave Berlin for Anit.rice 1.
partner. The religious reason today receives strong
-- --- -
experiments
by
whch
he
sought
n
General Offices and Publication Building
not the America then that i. , •
village chedt.r. He began the study
support from the eugenist in his insistence against as
test
the
correctness
of
the
Einstein
to
of modern Hebrew literature at an Though Dr. Neumark had ale 1 .•
850 High Street West
theory of relativity, Professor Albert
interested in America, he fo .
similation.
01.6.: Cable Addr•es: Chronicle
early age, and at the age of 20 left
Telephone: Glendale 9300
A. Michelson of the University of
self face to face with his 1, k•
for Lemberg to continue his studies.
Then
there
is
the
cultural
reason.
Is
the
Englishman,
Chicago, master physicist and Nobel
I, Ettalaad
km. He consulted m n o t,
Steatford
Place,
London,
W.
There
he
studied
for
three
years
14
-
Prize
winner,
announced
on
Jan.
8
cutc
hn
an,
German
or
Frenchman
required
to
give
up
A
prn,:enirli,cua,d ahnil,1 gtho ti: at:a: :: t, ,,
--
-
and a h alf, at the end of which (June
$3.00 Per Year .
that the inquiries made by a group of
depended Oil the reason
Subscription, in Advance
e
was
graduated
from
the
his European culture and background to prove his Am
22, 18 921 h
scientists and himself confirmed Kin-
To Insure publication. MI rorreepondenee end news matter must reach Oil.
obergymnasium.
ericanism? IN looks upon it as a precious heritage and
stein's contention. The declaration,
.,
replied that he wanted to ,o, .
ontre by Tuesday evening of each week,
In November of the same year,
In
cautiously worded and presented an-
he proves his
devote himself to Jewish le e
being
no
longer
of
the
inferior
groups
I
Neumark entered the University of
The Detroit Jewish Chronicle Invitre correspondence on subjects of nterest
der
the
auspices
of
the
University
of
of
the
and
they
advised
him
to
r,
indorsement
Berlin as well as the "Ilochschule fur
stalwtirt Americanism by referring to the robust and
to the Je•Ish people. but disclaims responsibility for aa
Chicago to a notable assembly of
they • •' I
Berlin. In America. the
expressed by the writer..
---
die Wiesenschaft des Judentums," the
sterling qualities of his forebears, their rich literature,
n, was qualified by a
scientific mean,
there would he no field 'fee
liberal rabbinical seminary. Here he
statement that the announcement was
brew writings; there would l.
Tebeth
20,
5685
splendid art, science and philosophy. The I rsh and
devoted himself to the study of phi-
January 16, 1925
provisional, not final.
quote library for his Snort,. it., •
ei tely in -
losophy and Semitic languages and
Jews are still in the making. are no t
_
Not a little interest attaches to
• ..
Yet he overlooked their x4: .
literatures. Ile then resumed his
tegrated on account of their recent migration and are
Professor Michelson's statement in
decided to take the chance
literary work which had been inter-
Reason and Light.
view of the fact that, like Professor
noted
by
his
"Lehr
and
Wander-
cepted
the
call
and,
a-
tl.
r
sensitive
when
their
Americanism
is
questioned.
%Try
Einstein himself, he is a Jew, by ac-
proved, his counsellors wet. le.,
juhre." His fast literary production
The Irish and Jews have cultures which will enrich
cident of birth if not by conscious
F.very movement which purposes to capture the
mistaken. Dr. Neuniark returk., .ri••
of that period was the Ilalachic essay
and
elevate
America.
The
poetry,
humor,
profound
cultural affiliation with Jewish active
salary (which in Europe is ■ .,, .1 •,
"Die Verschollenheit eines Ehegatten
imagination of large numbers and which has an emanci-
Ilence
we
should
not
be
amazed,
advance) to the treasurer of the I
ty.
,
religiosity, enthusiasm and philosophy of these people
innRabbinischen Rechte." This mer.
puling goal must of necessity have a background of
ranstalt, visited his mother to hi.,
but, on the other hand once niece
sled distinction; it was awarded the
Shall
become
distinctive
contributions
in
the
making
amused
if
one
of
the
by
no
means
good-bye and set sail with his
idealism. Without this idealism few sacrifices would
Mendelssohn prize of the llochschule
few scientists who are loath to see
of an American culture. To abandon these cultures for
for America Nov. 16, 1907. i•
for
1894.
The
next
article
was
in
be made, little suffering endured and, incidentally,
the
Newton
theorY
considerably
on Thanksgiving Dav, Nov. 2 , , It,,7
a raw, formless thing would be the height of folly. Dr.
Ilebrew — an analysis of the philos -
very little would be accomplished. On the other hand.
l •■ i:,
brought into question by Einstein's
that he arrived in New York.
-
ophy
of
Friedrich
Nktzsche,
pub
Charles Ehot recognizes these facts all too well and his
law :mikes the discovery that Michel -
Dec 1, ihmeolitt,tkri oto1,koei on ,ini ,t iI. tIll .:
a trial business man summarizes his business and
'idled in the Vienna pe - iodical East
the pic
SOWS assertions are biased. Quite a
utterance
was
not
in
dispraise,
but
was
a
compliment
l balance every month. Ile watches every
and West.
takes act
quota of intellectual truculence has
Ilelboreitv901ninorn .
On March 26, 1896, David Neu -
to our people and to the Irish. :
been heaped on the Swiss-Jewish
detail, insists that every department produces its share
CNnel u
h n'gi'lit' rk lector., in
mark took his doctor's examination
is
con-
ested
protested
s.ientisee head. Certain learned men
the Hebrew Institute, "Tarboth," is
The fact that many of our peopl e
-
of the business and keeps within the expense budget.
the.
University
of
Berlin.
Ills
ma
at
have found
it
painful
to
admit
that
verities may remain such jor was philosophy, and his first and New York. Ile delivered a course of
vincing proof that our culture ha a validity and should
does not follow, however, that idealism is wasteful,
10 lectures, in Hebrew, on Greek
scientific
second minors were Semitic Ian -
not be bartered away for something that in our day has . even though they are established by
unrealistic, or that it has no regard for the practical
Jews. Only after "heat" is con- guages and literature (Ilebrevc, Ara- philosophy. This course was In:lowed
up by a series of four lectuto s oe
only the raucous and strident-voiced millions who cry
and
Syriael
and
Polish
literature,
problems with which it is constantly confronted.
bin
quered by "light" will these men ad.
respectively. On July 11 of the same Jewish philosophy, during the mid.
its greatness. May it be well borne in mind that a gar -
In our day the Zionist MOVement has become the
winter vacation lir 1923. In 1921
just themselves to scientific facts
year he received title Doctor of Phi-
den is not less charming because of a variety of many
brought to the world's attention by
the American Jewish Academy was
most absorbing and persuasive activity of Jewry. Some
I0 , ophy after a public disputation in
founded in New York and he became
Jewish
savants.
-
beautiful flowers.
which he had to defend certain theses
of its articulate defenders have exhausted the vocabu
a charter member. In 1921 the first
In the meanwhile, a ray of hope is
on the systems of Spinoza and Kant.
lary of superlatives in their descriptions of the chalut -
rew edition et' the
held out to the bitter-enders in Pro-
(his was one of the very last fivers- volume of the Hebrew
was
fl.,:,:otirmiNintigcnetf,00rn•;,,ildlebeehi ■ rtastuio,ntainthinagt disputations at the Berlin Universe "History of Jewish
zim without any regard whatsoever for the facts. To
published; now the third volume of
The
Monday
Opera
Club.
ity.1 His thesis. 'Die Freiheitslehre
these, faith, hope, love and burning idealism were all
\
character, are still not irrevocably
Kant and Sehopenhauer " was the German is going through th••
be ! 1
press, and the second of the 1 e ken
thal were needed to change Palestine into a garden
final.
The creation of an American aristocracy based up -
bought from the author by the Voss
anti
Publishing Company of Hamburg and has just been completed and i= ready
-
country teeming with millions of happy, cultured an
on social and financial prestige is not a new phenome
This work, in both
r are 1 . •t • ti in for publication. thorough
'
L ei p z i g.
prosperous Jews. Beautiful and alluring pictures, in-
non in American lifevery
community has its self -
masterpiece,
Internal.
. E
languages, is a
to be bestowed upon a docto r' s
os
-
the
culmination
of
all the years' re-
deed, but despite all the fancifully woven stories of
selected socially superior group, where wealth and
thesis, and was due to the high recom-
A N individual's career nay be de-
mendation given it by the famous search of this unique scholar. When
ulean
accomplishment
depicted
by
the
ro-
-
tentation are requirements far outweighing culture, re
super-herc
rl scribed as the interval between
the set of 11 volumes is finishe d it
Kantian, Professor liens Vaihinger
necromancers,
there are some practically
h
the coming of full awareness of one's
ne
finement or learning. This should not profoundly dis -
chief of the Kant. will probably supplant everyting
mancers
Halle,, editor.in -
-
-
albeit
un
s
in
life
and
the
shadowy
en
y far been written o n
subject of
',lace
idealist Zionists who Would prefer the hard,
turb anybody, for the milieu in which we move and
studien and president of the Kant- that has ab l
h
croachment of death. What should
attractive facts were known. The building of homes i
geeellschaft.
have our being must of necessity give rise to such con -
we do with that interval? As Jews
In 1897 Dr. Neumark finished his phil In January of 1924 Dr. Neu-
-
not the task of miracle workers and those who furnish
what may we say on tills subject?
But
the
Monday
Opera
Club
presents
a
con
ditions.
course at the llochechule and was
Strictly speaking, this theme has
graduated and ordained on the mark's fifteenth miniversary a: pro-
hat
the
at democracy
dition fraught with serious menace to t h
the capital for these projects must be convinced by facts
711E,V ET -ROIT EWISR
ef RON ICLE
Career Of Professor Neumark
e
1
been thought on, written on, sung on
ground of a German outline of the fessor of philosophv at the Hebrew
for which we fought with such enthusiasm and at so
and not rosy promises.
by every one of the seven
Union College was fittingly celebrettel
work, "History of Dogmas in Jude.
by faculty c and students of the col.
Louis Lipsky, the president of the American Zion -
arts sin
in e the beginning of time. Let
great
a cost.
ism."
us take any one of noted Jews who
Pal- -
lege.
ist Organization, returned recently from a visit to Pal
The first and only position as rabbi
ia l prestige
preg e and conspicu-
w and
If those whose lineage, social
recently have flitted across the hori -
Ile is survived by his widow
estine. He went there to see what is actually going on.
zoo. There is no need to mention which Dr. Neumark held was in the
Bohemian town of Rakonitz, near three children, one of his daughters
ous waste give them the right to form a chosen corpora-
names.
They
enter
upon
the
scene
being
a
student
at
the
Ilebrt.w
I'llilill
Man cannot speak eloquently and convincingly about
Prague. Ile remained there from
tion of the socially elect, and if they incidentially sere-
as sons or daughters of Jews, seem -
College.
March 7, 1897, to Feb. 2 3, 1904. t
purely fictitious things. The springs of enthusiasm
gate unto themselves the right of proscription, that is a
lowly destined to play a part not only
----
In 1903 Dr. Neurear k was about t o
must be refreshed and so Mr. Lipsky visited Palestine
in furthering the general welfare but
prerogative which only the slighted ones may resent.
Maggiore of
be appointed Rabbit
in advancing the vital cauees of the
to assure himself so that he could reassure others.
OUNG JUDAEA
YOUNG
Rome, where he delivered an address
Jewish people. But gradually, as
He tells a story which differs so radically from some However, when they undertake to embroil us with Eu-
in Italian (which language he had
AND THE YOUTH
they make their mark in this sphere
of the things we have heard that we could scarcely be- ropean countries and attempt to foist upon America
lt
of activity or that, they shed their studied in his student days) after
—
less than a week's practice of the
lieve that both people were speaking of the same place, every legitimist emigre, then it really becomes the con-
Jewish interests, ignore their Jewish
language of the
eand.
land. Everything
By DAVID DE SOLA POOL.
cern of all.
ulses forget the an cestral rock
.
c.,
Instead of the Fool's Paradise where love and wishes
had be e aiiia‘,tifot;(to aonl it
wilfully
cria;essno,,:.ttineto,tittis.e:to oofroax11
It wiisii,o.o.
f rom which they were hewn, w
There is ready a comical aspect in the spectacle of
ssume the mesh.
nat
s stood Thal
to erase themselves, as it were
f h
iod
built houses he goes on in this wise: "The labor organi -
e ,Greeks,
toholi
tt ,
tth,iti.„ o fo't iltIreogoio, f o rRoloi 1,iib i f t i ni
,o
f
ssiettas
t
ygn
cai
t
.
,
n
:r
c
,
l
,
.
o
the leader of the Colonial Dames as sponsor for the seek
(
w
ittish
rom the hook of history in order t '
f rom
zation discharges one of the functions of the Zionist
Would that this wist'..(nnirthof living." '. ■
the better the work iii . n
Romanoffs, Bourbons and the other royal morons of
i f 4,7, , to, seat, to Rome,
.'t
F
executive. It maintains the labor army, trains unskill -
dwell in the tents of Silent!
they
have set for themselves. which
would how
Europe. If the embattled soldiers of Valle : Forge,
.osetnt aaitlie4 tIheeadopr.
Jewish
-
few ,,f the
conies
the
pause
in
life's
ed men for new crafts, seeks new avenues of employ
Aumal fthen
occ
from
their
co
position of the
America are
unker Hill and Lexington would arise frO
e generation
ment and puts the army into acion.
( C. uorna, tm;tuu re , Prato, a member of th
trained to lead a life of elia.anr. Jewish
oportnicnRhee:snonil'oTchtTieohoceutratekaninsi begins to am
graves, those with a sense of humor would hlvena merry
mwo,),fathsetoc000lIctonritfar,ocohilefly be.
it is pre -
aso our young are
back
stone cutters, road builders, house b uildel:s;
It has educated
i;ofli,rw
the
m'intdo
u
ri
,
,I
ysto
kg
puortpo
'l(fla o doubt
cause hie
pared to undertake the most difficult work and does time, those who were of a serious mind wou
eat searching
ti i
r
to the begi nnin g. A great
.t.
onintnt 1 '
ri i e 4eh may
.11. argulies, the late Rabh'ino fM lit)ir
The
ttitt..1,oe rw
ever, it is a c:astnil, alniiinsitnli7. 1el w
disinherit their renegade offspring.
Inan(l oTroes tident of
now in a most satisfactory manner." There is nothing
Through parental neglect, the
my y -
ill the dying man comes lat,$)t
no g t‘trio co..,
have its culmination a few years hence if En .
o
if
owing
to
be
Jews
by
in-
tear
ar
of the miraculous here, the same training process is
vague
)
ruettth,oprfatto,hvie);
is
f,a.pc:,,,,,egi.;iteihntenrti(no
,,,,
the demand
matter to
thFmi
ally should abdicate. Then the Colonial Dames
ii,i.oteht eOro iotwni , bacon
heir or out
iterit ietlari'lre u
necessary in Palestine as in Detroit and mere devotion
was made upon Dr . Neumark that he
i
m haseth on
e
r
repentance for the rude manners of the. irasf(a)rn
lobsjtiMit(te
Jews by
declare
elernekohlinisfelf in favor of refusing
or idealism will not make a man proficient in any art
position, Jews by instinct. ga m li'i'stt °,;:i
the "man" and the lack eof n .
wmuld invite the offspring of George III. as guests
functions to . uncireuni.
h . a
'4 it-ii.
.
thought
t)
them, lacking Jewish knowledge,
or craft unless he receives competent and adequate act A:sm re
the "Jew." Finally, th(
on
-
a
e
x
cised
Jews.
This
he
declined
to
do,
ine
ri
c
ct ' i n
not grow to be J.t. . by
of America's aristocracy. Decayed andpenniless
i If fades into the engulfing mys-
conceding only that he would call a
inen' h n.
rin:rl
training.
but
inoen
(1)Y.
telligent choice,
tars. And the dust of the erstwhile
royalty of Europe finds not only arefu i in America
rabbinical
conference
to
take
some
Mr. Lipsky is not unmindful of the difficulties to be
'
siasm, by passionate deeire be ! ret .
man is laid in a Jewieh grave
.. A
is accepted in the highest social circlesg. ' And yet if the
.
. • ' .
.
ii
The
interval?
The
employment
of
action
in
favor
of
circumcision
soned conviction The ..w
be overcome in the reconstruction of a new life in a new
new offer however ., influenced him to
r sleiwn1
matter ended there it would be of little consequence.
to Jews leading 'an utixaniini-eir.
1. tht t problem, a problem
the interval te
his candidacy for the posi-
environment by men and women who have grown to
'
withdraw
,
and
therefore
one
not
worth
a just be-
ish lif
whi
o,t h unfortunately gets little attire-
adulthood in a different milieu. We shall let him speak The Monday Opera Club augurs ill for America
li on before the formal election took
living. They will not know and us.
ti . Jews are fast forgetting that
place, and the argument t was thus set-
cause it is expressive of a definite cleavage in our life.
vhich explains their
e most impressive events in their
iolt,.. ,r:toannt (l ot,h,re .p,ai,liti tt to
th
for himself:
tied.
It is one more bit of evidence in that vast accumula -
bar mitzvah and a
lt
e
c
When we speak of reconstructing Jewish life, it is
usually in a figurative way. But a new life is just like a
new garment. It has to be mails. piece by piece and every
little detail is of importance because the whole is made up
of many details. What we see in Pakstine is Cu. weaving
of a new garment, which is not only a new economic life
for the Jewish people, but a new national life. The threads
are being gathered together. Every new industry involves
going into the roots of life, finding where the industry
begins, how the material is to be gathered, where the ma-
•hinery is to he secured, how to find the markets, how to
adjust the prices, where to get the capital, from the
smallest thing to the largest, from the making tit . food
W the making of cement, clothing, shoes, hats, details of
machinery, export of oranges, alnionds, olives, the making
of oil, the resources of the Dead Sea, securing light, mak-
ing roads, sewers, building houses--the whole complex of
the wirtechaft of life is being remade and every Jew who
conies to Palestine becomee a party to that restless energy
which is seeking as rapidly as possible to transform every
feature of Jewish life to conform to the new conditions.
This is Palestine as it is ; realistic, unadorned, free
from fable or magic. Palestine is no place for those
who are seeking easy solutions. or
courage. faith and idealism or for those unfortunates
who have not been trained in the useful arts and crafts
of industrial and agricultural life.
Dr. Eliot On Assimilation.
The president-emeritus
of Harvard University has
surely stirred up the hornets. The super-Americans
among the Jews and Irish have been offended because
their Americanism has been challenged. not by Dr.
Charles W. Eliot, but in their ow 0 minds. The doctor
vommended both the Jews and Irish upon the fact that
hail charged
they have nut been IISSi milat ed . If he'
had contributed
them with parasitism. or that they
nothing to the cultural total as integrated groups, there
would 10. some cause for uomplaint.
a matter of religion, assimilation is certatinly tit-
As
boo, but aside from religious reasons which may not
trilo. all as potent. others can assuredly be urged,
ii,..ong them biologic and cultural. Mendel, a monk
working in the mori: my garden. discovered that
•s gave
crossing two forms wiih market! c haracteristi ,
rise to a form with even more marked characteristics
people
than the parent NrrY s. Take two •Jews, or two
of an:'rol.iji which has been able to breed closely. that
in their own groups. Certain characteristics w ill
is.
appear and. if w orth while, will be accentuated in the
those who shoW these marked and distin -
"fr`ltring (ti
WitUld
guishing characters. No breeder of race horses
cross his fine-strung, sensitive animals with a draft
the
breed : for it would be ruinous. If the Jews of
Irish have any outstanding nervous or Ifhysical quail-
LS7011"<a4 2*-' 2 er,"'
s
which denotes a disintegration of the democratic
creetl. The spirit of inequality is rampant. It mani -
:
i on legislation in the Ku
fasts itself in the imm i grat
KIPS Klan. in the theory of Nordic superiority', in the
scholastic exclusions and its latest efflorescence is a
m..tiright, unambiguous catering to decadent royalty
(%Lth
over -
whi ch has been shown the door by an outraged,
patient and overburdened Europe.
\‘'e are not afraid that we shall substitute a Czar
or an Emperor for our President. but vet . we can recall
quite clearly when the ideas of immigration and K K
K. were pooh-poohed and scant consideration gi 'ven.
to those who raised their voice.); in protest when they
elected the first traces of such undemocratic ideas. it.
lion
lichr
tit.t..itoiesioti,no,:ilh
fun'eralrebuntotthae
they engage duri anK h
which these two occasions are te
boundary lines.
Constant ion•l.
reasonably minded person es-
AT
4 IN peeled anything less than con-
timation by the Supreme Court of
the United States of the New York
low which requires persons selling
meat or meat nroducte advertised as
Kosher to conform with the require-
mints of the Jewish dietary laws as
authority. The
defined by rabbinical au
fact that the law of the land holds no
brief for religion as such was dis-
toned by unscupulous dealers into
u sit TH I N ridicule the Opera Club and pass it by as a
the idea that fraud was not fraud if
.re. aberration which will correct itself. This form of
committed against "religion." The
validation of the renal law of New
illusion is responsible for some of the the worst forms
York state regulating the sale of
of autocracy and reaction. These royalist forms work
Kosher meat should give impetus to
the efforts of the authorities in end-
insidiously
and with
unintermittently
for
those
little an d only an aroused
Inc the practice of selling fonds
people. who have faith in democratic ideals, can pre-
claimed to be Kosher but actually
vent the further spread of such poisonous growths.
•
not so.
That the whole co ntroversy con-
The protagonists of Albert Johnson and the Nordic
evened. in the main, only Jews, that
creed have come out in the open and brazenly told
laws were needed to combat fraud in
the selling of moat to Jews and that
America that they prefer moribund royalty to stalwart
the highest court in the land was in-
democracy. l'his is a logical outcome (if the. tendencies
Yoked to justify the distortion of the
c urrent o f
meaning of "Kto‘her" shows how
which an y observer could discern in the
recklessly a matter inettlying moral-
the armistice. The only answer we have
t N t IltA since
We are not ad-
.
ity was dealt with.
.' .
is n ore and better den - ocracy.
dieted to the thought that "there
ought to be a law" to regulate this,
that and the other thing. But it car-
t airily is Wit hin reason to expect Oat
not only dealers in meats and man s
products should observe the exactions
of t', dietary laws (if they claim to
sell Kocher productel but that all
Above the altar where the rabbi stands
otr
he Per'ons ennaged in businesses
night•
employing the term "Kosher" should
There sw ings a lamp that's burning (lay and
e imitlications of the
live up to the
Ile rolls the Torah with his strong whit,.. hand s -
w o rd as ,•voounded bv recognized
laws
to
guide
our
souls
aright.
,
c
ancient
.1 - h(o,
rabbinical o .i•li..rities adhering to th.
:i etll Ill' Iii'.` •
• :),., - , • : Je may be said that
The cantor 1.11s the air with melody,
.. the contempt for t' e
Th:. tutored panes are bright With burning sun :
- -,, .wn by dealer= in food
:
the
balcony
,
I
-
;
,
,,,;1.
1 1, Ra ab :(8 , ,, , ,, h ■, ..c f -,n, a . :;' ,,I ,,,,, :
,
,
i,.
.,,i,:,,
.
:
%
Ile lois bowed. the women grace
tt
"I'lle I,igllt Eternal
■
Downstairs the. men revere the Holy One.
When all hay,: gone that light will still burn on.
Syndiol of God, who fills the world with light.
The darkness falls. but like the glowing sun.
The light eternal burns all through the night.•
I I know.
My unbelief can't blow it mit.
glow l
S, high above my head its s
ANNE CA MITA:AA.
.. The new itfir was a call to the po-
t rlit.
the future to illumine nann‘;le iraul',11'..i''
en,, ,t ycei,,ift,,,r - ian -f ehier of the Ile. Jewish eteps. Without a past, with
or
the
sections
of
tp•di
I,f,
n
.
l
'r
ttnw
'b
out a fUture---can such a Jewish
Jewish Philosophy" and "Talmud."
be worth living•
On Feb. 23, 1904, therefore, he
Hundreds of thousand. of Jews
theill.
'Moved to Berlin, where the Hebrew
within the last century, finding
,
literary society, "Achiasaf," of War•
selves in this position of merinintel.
saw, established for him a branch bu-
t'my
Jewishness, said to themselves,
reau. For a while he also taught in
Jewish past and present are a handl
the Lehrerinnen Seminar of the Cen-
cap to mt., a Jewish future will in•
teal Jewish Congregation of Berlin.
handicap to my children." Th.-.
In 1906 Dr, Noumark was strongly
therefore, baptised their children •
considered as rabbi for the pulpit of
save them from a Judaism whit.), ie
Central Jewish Congregation of
theft
Ileine's gibe, was not a religi.e. 1•::'
Berin. The supporters of a rival
a misfortune. Rut the great mass et
candidate, a home product, succeed-
alio: ,
the Jewish people with a ,:oul
ed, however, in defeating the for-
this utilitarian baseness struggle.I I.
A
better
position
awaited
eigner.
keep themselves and their childr. -
him in the very next year. In July,
loyal to a vision of purpose in Jewi.h.
191)7, he was elected successor to Dr.
life.
Nloritz Steinechneider for the chair
We have to make this choke ic, ,
of Jewish philosophy In the Veitel-
in each generation--to be or not to !,,.
Ilt.ine.Ephraim'sche Lehranstalt in
Jews. lAtt life but roll on by it..1
Berlin. (During his first year in ere
and the answer will be "not to I ,
tied
fin, 1904. he finished his work, "Ilis•
But synagogue, religious school
hey of Dogmas in Judaisni," and in
organizations like young Judae , • 1 "
19117 completed the first volume of
liwer with a proud challenge of d. -• '
.
the German edition of "The History
mination "to be Jews." The oto. le
of Jewieh Philosophy.") Meanwhile
whom there still burns 0 spark
■
......
t
negotiations were begun with the Ile-
Judaism will not lightly barter
.1.•r-
brew Union college. The first offer
the noblest history, the loftiest s 7-
came through the late Dr. Emil G.
and
the
most
le
t
i
itual traditon
Hirsch. Upon appotntment he visited
hope in the world's story, h• -
ing h
hr. Neumark on June 15, 1907, and
Mutely he must work to breath , .1 '
made him the offer in the name .1
ish purpoites into the lives of hi= .•.1
Dr. Kohler and the board of govern.
a 11' 1 11 li r:' • ::''
ors of the Ilebrew Union College.
ttencrn
.luredna.ismWtehactanwiilnl'iniorte I
tune hut a religious inspiration. V. •
1 W hilt• partaking of a Shabbos lunch
.le" -l i
Dr. Hirsch assured Mrs. Neuniark that
can train them for examined Jo
- l•
she would be permitted to keep bosh-
lives which shall spring harnionioo
er house in Cincinnati.) Later the
organically from the great ept• . •
negotiations were carried on through
our past and which shall face . •
Berkowitz and Ro:enau. 1'1.0 in
,oh,t,.gpiroo,nitoi,....to....of ..
tte.i,,otsi,y,f,;ettuoirkorbl,1....t
Berlin. At that time Dr. Neumark
found himself in a peculiar prettiest- J ing together with eynagorie - . i
meat. The first check for his salary
religious schools, has consecrabel
, • '
it in
ti
from the firs-menoned
t
instuto
h supreme die:
self to this, the
had arrived, an d at nearly th e sa me
Jewish life---that of bringing I . .
time an advance cheek for expenses
.
ytmth Jewish knowledge and .I.•` .1
from the Hebrew Union College
reached him. II s choice was further
wish ... r .:
to anUd-e7;thaanna
JeWill% Self-respect.
'el
itnh'1.' (1'1:%!'"et ni ''''n Je i:: f
,
ih ee If V7 1
10i a \ t ' " el IblY e et117C11fU n I'll that t die
' 111'17 of
and Jewish purpose. It is the p ■
seiochaft des .1mkntume sent a dele•
of the Jewish future, the e ,
(eonsieting or Prof 1,,11.1fll
Cation
Don of the eternal people t.
vice of man and the glory of (....1
t N.1, 7. 1ubnial4 1.1:f attho ,tiorElt;., t,t i r etnoItht)tot t„,11.ti.ot;utrha,..
7:;;:: :
request not t, let Dr. Neumark go to
merle s , but that they should rather
retain him as the r teacher of .rather
-
candal
is
itn
,
\
,hing
lees
than
,
ht -
This recommendation
phill,o1. , y.
Idled m t he prinentatiol hef.re t'n
State= Sorrows. Court of thywa. made in spite of the strong oppo-
I'llt,.1
titian of Hermann Cohen, who held
" Ka sh ' of the defamation of ele
that chair later himself. This was on
"Kashruth - idea by Jew.. The Dolt'
the eV" of the Day of Atonement.
hopeful thtng about the proceeding is
which fell that year on Sept. 17. Just
that the final validation of the New
one week later, before the curatinium
York law will teach our rabbis great-
met. on the 24th, the cable brought
er effectiveness and instill in the Jew-
the news of Dr. Neumark's formal
IA public a more fitting sense of
election by the board of governors of
pride and duty.
• .
oeinion among Jews and a lack
among the Orthod ix rah.
• • ott
l a:31
-
. .
Under the auspi-e: ef the Ill ,..
•.lascha
a:
gave a benefit performance
Manhattan Oitura Iltifis • rt'oet ,,, i ,
in Itccati.
physicians w!, fled Rua-
their opoo=ition to Bolshevism . 1.
whk, unable to practice in other coo:
irk , . are now. destitute in vari-o
■
parts of Europe. The house wag ,
out and, with donations pledged b
,
many in the audience, the receipts c
corded
sio.000.
--,->nit42:2-:"14:
,71:70n-k57.