iitEi)entorriaisn eIRONICLE

PAGE SIX

Vt;:zZtziyiMyiyfgttmtzt*kks , Uty''

YEE DETRorri kwisn (ARON IC LE

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Editor

JACOB H. SCHAKNE
JACOB MARGOLIS

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Nissan 13, 5687

April 15, 1927

Passover.

The feast of Passover falls on the fifteenth day of
Nissan, corresponding this year with Sunday, April 17.
The celebration begins on the evening of April 16 with
sundown. The manner of its observance was deter-
mined largely by the biblical ordinances concerning this
feast. It is to be observed for a period of seven days.
Those who cherish customs that orginated after Bible
times will keep the feast eight days.
The ceremonials are such as are calculated to bring
home the historical event which the feast commemo-
rates, namely, the new born freedom vouch-safed to
Israel after the long period of oppression endured
under Egyptian tyranny. The eating of unleavened
bread is enjoined a number of times in the biblical regu-
lations touching the observance of the Passover feast.
Unleavened bread is characterized as the "bread of
affliction," and is also referred to in the Bible as the
bread that was unleavened because of the enforced
hasty departure from Egypt. In post-biblical times the
earnest desire to keep the injunctions most scrupu-
lously led the teachers of Israel to enact laws, such as
the use of special dishes that had been guarded from
contact with leaven and reserved only for the Passover
season.
A charming and effective feature in the celebration
C
of the feast is the special seder service around the fes-
tive family board on the first evening of the feast, to
which the Orthodox add a second evening. At this
family service a special ritual known as the "Hagga-
dah" is read. This ritual contains the story of the re-
demption from servitude, certain reflections inspired
by the memories of old and certain psalms. This is
followed by the festal meal after which Grace is recited.
The service concludes with the reading of additional
psalms, the recitation of prayers and the singing of time-
honored hymns. To this home service stranger and
homeless are cordially invited. On the table in front
of him who presides over the meal are placed objects
reminiscent of the ancient service and servitude, such
as bitter herbs, reminder of the bitter lot of those who
y7; toiled in Egypt; a roast bone, calling to mind the
r ancient paschal lamb ; a roasted egg, memorial of the
free will offering that was brought in addition to the
paschal lamb ; parsley and the bowl of salt water,
symbolizing the hyssop and its use in the first Passover
observed in Egypt, and a confection of nuts and apples
to represent the clay which Israel worked into bricks.
The Passover falling at the beginning of spring, had
originally a pastoral and agricultural character, which
in time was over-shadowed by the historical event as-
ry
sociated later with the feast. Freedom and its oblige-
n. The Reform
tion is the keynote of the celebratio
synagogues hold special services only on the first and
seventh clays, while the Orthodox observe also the
▪
second day and an additional eighth day.
The Tract Commission.
&ft

action. Two million people declassed, living in a most
precarious state; facing actual starvation ; placed in
the most despised social and political categories. If
Zionism means saving the Jewish soul, Russian coloni-
zation means saving the Jewish body. Zionism has
By RABBI LEON FRAM
waited for its fulfillment since the Diaspora. Some ma:: ---
By Gershon Agronsky.
have become disheartened and impatient due to the
"What a powerful woman!" I ex- we had last seen him and we found
long delay. Of these the Zionist idealists and martyrs
ourselves at the edge of a great hole
That the temporary crisis in Pales-
claimed as I ascended the top deck of
tnc
aii t c h gmat ea h sas e a : sn egconic
erIsTa r. to
t. our
a n t u n(: ri ay e ratar :i ,
en ornaah
off !t so
.--
expect little and are not disappointed when they fall tine cannot he considered independent- t h h ata wa nt es(li c iitnea r( rr ea n liner i a end a s a ■ s t s il a ,- atfatra
of the general economic depression
away. Men who would achieve great things must be c ly
s.
u
i h, r n uu t tgill o a u nt d the a sw t ulru ld, particularly in gown
'
Le
rlopeg
rr
at
apwea
tugging
made of sterner stuff. But Russian colonization involves
European ant`O s
village. They came back on donkeys
us
"That's not a woman, son," a fellow-
camels with a little army of nit.
no age old ideals of the Jewish people. It does contain is the opinion . expressed by yGershonn ttrtaaaveLec,avoluntee bre d. "That's an Egyp.
Agronsky,.director of information of
ive
n
a
t
rer
i
within it the ideals of a class who believe in the dignity ,,, h ,,, ellI:uu n to e w stn i neou
"Your friend has fallen into the
Zr iunun a i l s is. Executive, a ti l i , d e party of them n ) has
j Zionist
the
jt
.sasitrrd e'
s
of human labor and who despise parasitism and exploi- t United States on a short visit from ship
to help in the unloading. You are passage by which the body cf King
originally lowered into the
Cheops.
tation of man by man. These latter are not essentially Palestine, in an interview with a rep- now in the land of the Arabian pyramid, was the
village leader explained
"
Nights.
Jewish ideals. Stripped of all idealistic accretions and r a t e as a ee n wai
.a.
to
us.
"It
is
15 feet deep. We ca n
tat ve of The New Palestine. In
r s ship A I le a a b r e a d a tb u ty h r abealhaanarakr i
b 0 Gradually
a aafd u a ly
only get to him by digging out another
i i g the situation in Palestine
noble motivations, the Russian land settlement scheme
now
Alexandria.
passage through the sand "
Mr. Agronsky said:
ts, darted, noc d cuapaie d d
4
1 i t , fl lia . ,b ,( i m ra
is a plan to save the lives of the Jews in Russia who
We all started di . gging—with our
circuitous rto aute ,.,:aiw n
hands. When I read, a year after-
have no other way out. This is not a figure, but is a traveling
lana w e f rdo m a
re
quTteeblack. turbaned,
we ed
' e nni , g'
some
of
th
ward
,
1 Floyd Collins
t
enaislexandria,
a
a
.
I
stopped
York.
stark, gruesome reality. How can anyone object to Athens,
in t l, Kentucky w , da g tr arreit) i r indi cil
Budapest, Vienna, Prague and e tering a new and a different world, n
;lan ‘dait a hnetan alliv g ices among us shuddered
vividly of how y
einatiadaodsvnantl
such a program? All sorts of fanciful objections have
After a halt hour's labor we reached
‘ a:
t
been raised by those who have failed to grasp the des - ile u r cii t n a ' resF t ra j TstB l t: c'lli
"Hold on to your money! Take good
him and pulled him out. He " as
from Bucharest to Paris via
peration and precariousness of the condition of the traveled
of your pockets! From now on
siderably dazed, buth %icall was "'in s .
H ungary, Austria and southern Ger- care
among a t thieves
w eavaes got
you u yes .. , :s i n fi
p 's
y h e wn
Jews of Russia. Can we honestly ask a man who is many.
r a l lay
uninjured.
i s ri a
mention t this
beggars ! " Som e bethat
t
"What an awful hole to leave open
of ot Europe
e
me reputation
to I thern
starving whether he will lose his religion, culture and trotter, but
because it has some around. None of us knew with whom this way" I , remarked to the village
ideals if he should accept land given him by the irre - bearing on the Palestine situa. it started.
sheikh. "Has anybody else gore down
Americans Abroad.
that passage that you know of?"
ligious, or those with differing cultures and ideals. The tion. Everywhere, with the exeep-
"Oh, yes , "
tion
of
Germany,
I
found
people
talk-
I
had
always
been
under
the
im-
Jews are not asked to renounce anything before they ing of crisis. If the crisis wasn't due pression that the East was sleepy and
"Who?"
are given land. They are not asked to sell their religion, to lack of. stabilization, it was due to lazy. Kipling, I believe, conveyed that
IiingRC.h.rivo i r nsff !
" the Exodus.
gzaattbmana
notion to me. I was Completely dis-
a o are tb o over-stabilization.
ab
have
culture and ideals for a mess of pottage. So why all stabilization,
g aian a r d e a very
r
ra
T a hs a i md g..y e rpnes Egyptians
to
been
illusioned. Never have I seen such a
:
fears and doubts of dire catastrophe.
proud
and
there are only two countries in
flurry and hurry as we came upon
We do believe that the time has come for all Zion- sEturboiriaeathtabtaiha
not
when
we
landed
on
the
quay
at
Alex-
they
cannot
see
why
the sonso'f so
a
a
i a aa tm ae a proud a i in ancestry
e less
s, i t 7 ,1, -
Theyare
currency.
Adoz
eirr.
dozen
menAnother
iota to abandon the churlish attitude which some of
world affairs ,
France and Italy. Their failure to
offering to carry my
them took in this matter of Russian colonization. The do
caa l tea-
w i th a aptoleit a ita
dozen sought to supply me with rig European powers whose blood is not
bs anadoneed
l
u
arl
y
a
.a
aastil
,
s
l
e
as
thein i rr go s : I It viis sita edquz
C
t n i t a
1,Y,a even
a sa rai
eta tes anti candies. ri One
success of the movement will in no wise militate against sons which to
considering.
c
chewing
that have b ieetan a-
the upbuilding of a Jewish homeland and the renas - here. The countries
Before I
r
stabilized appear to be no better off gum—he charged a little
cence of the people, culture and language.
a . Guides and hack drivers with• synagogue in which Maimonides
th attndtr qg uitte
hehb onis e bw
i a nw,
which the
rr
a nn aLtinas
any usIehere was studied
as many
out number
e arftta upon
Zionists surely must have greater faith in their ideal doubt
of tm
nothing slow a
l t us say, Austria, know quite
e
than to believe Russian colonization can seriously affect side,
crisis ,, as they
"E gyp
gy pt," my dragoman (guide) said on which Maimonides is su mppose'd to
t la
,ti
s ,, o ,emuch
mt olanw
have breathed his ,,last.
a s crops.
train
crisis.
express
we
the attainment of their aims. They may be halted for
about
u he said,
down,
e .
to
to Cairo,
fl an " Egypt h as two
a while, there may be a diminuation of enthusiasm, How many people outside of nHungary,
'n',1itel'isde(alT
a moment.
ent " i o If you r
the cotton crop. One-half
The first
take anothe instance. are aware
e
t will cure you. If you hav no '
there may be temporay reactions and recessions. The t th
i
zalo
a
n
of
of
Egypt
lives
on
that.
The
second
is
b
li
s
a
s
tabia
of
r
t
ff
e
ct
t
h
e
e
t i:t
a t 1
will
any from
disease,
this
be,d
i
efa
I
a to
a half
thgetot lives crop.
on b The , other
men with high purposes, sublime vision and tough minds
Hun garian currenc y
refrained
lying
said,
Egypt
the earning of y the worker so
will go on until the goal is reached. The attainment of deflate
down.
The
bed
did
no
look
k
so c (an.
hs, w
. ere;
"your ancestors, the Pharaohs,
that a skilled laborer in Budapest
an ideal means the victory of the spirit over many hard
not
so
fooliah
in
expending
all
the
The
Shamrsh
was
urgent'
receives less pay per day than an un
"Hundreds of people are e cured this
wealth of Egypt upon the building of
skilled worker receives in the United
obstacles.
Pyramid-tombs. They were only mak- way," he insisted—"Jews and m' 41: rr '
States per hour. This bears out Dr.

-

-

Denials Will Not Help.

Had not the apology of Rabbi Niemerower of Rou-
mania been exploited by the officials of that country,
we would have been surprised, for it has always been
the practice of those engaged in shady things to take
n
advantage of every defense, particularly
when that de-
fense comes from one of the wronged.
The now suave and oleaginous Cretziano, Rouman-
ian Minister to Washington, who discovered that Rou-
manian Jews were persecuting Cuza's people and were
in league with Bolshevists to cause disturbances, now
makes use of the "protests" of Roumanian Jews to si-
lence criticism.
This attitude of outraged dignity and vindication of
Mr. Cretziano will fool nobody acquainted with the
facts. It may serve for a while as a smoke screen and
may even change the issue, but the indefensible conduct
of anti-Semites and hooligans cannot but bring the
whole affair before the court of public opinion where
even the testimony of a character witness will not free
the wrongdoers from guilt.
It seems incredible that the whole story of Rouman-
ia's inhumanity to her minorities is a fabrication. Have
all the responsible groups in Europe and America been
made the victims of a gigantic hoax? The Second Inter-
national is the last body to go on record protesting
against the discriminations and excesses in Roumania,
Hungary and Lithuania. This body is specially inter-
ested in political, economic and social problems and has
no national or racial ax to grind. Even Lurien Wolf,
who had on a previous occasion asked world Jewry to
refrain from criticizing Roumania, now realizes that
the point has been reached when silence is a disservice.
He knows Roumania and her dark and devious methods
of medieval anti-Semitism. The latest reports now
emanating from there tell of reprisals against Jews for
•
New Palestine and New Russia.
their refusal to deny the excesses committed against
Reuben Brainin speaking before the Jewish Open them. One of the subtle methods employed would
Forum in Detroit. stressed the value of Russian coloni- gladden any auto-intoxicated inquisitor. hundreds of
•Fil
zation in the solution of immediate problems of Russian Jewish soldiers who had surrendered to the Germans
▪
Jewry. He made it clear that the matter of coloniza- during the war are now being accused of doing so under
tion in Russia had no bearing upon Palestinian upbuild- conditions that did not warrant such action. They are
ing and those who placed them in opposition or even now being threatened with court-martial and depriva-
in juxtaposition were guilty of confounding two sepa- tion of citizenship. This, too, is no doubt being done to
rate and distinct movements. counteract the menace of bolshevism.
The movement to rebuild Palestine became concrete There may be some timid souls who are in such
and definite 30 years ago, with the rise of the modern mortal fear of the insidious propaganda of Sovietism
Zionist movement inaugurated by Ilerzl. All Zionists that they will believe any fantastic tale if the bogey is
were agreed on the basic need for reviving the Hebrew red. It should be borne in mind that the Roumanian
language; creating a spiritual renaissance; arousing pogroms have kept the country in a state of constant
nationalist aspiration ; establishing colonies and de- ferment practically since the end of the war. If Bol-
veloping industries, and although there were marked shevism had actually endangered the peace and security
differences of opinion as to the relative importance of of that country, some of the European newspaper corre-
these varied activities, yet nothing prevented a measure spondents and chancellories would have found some evi-
of united action on the main thesis of re-establishing dences of these sinister plots. If no special attention
the Jewish people as a national entity upon the soil was paid to this phase of bolshevist penetration in pre-
£
vious years, it surely should have become evident during
of Palestine.
Prior to the Balfour Declaration, there was no the last few months or since the anti-Semitic movement
immediacy to any of the problems. The intellectual became more intense and widespread. Can it be possi-
and spiritual aspects bulked much larger than did the ble that France and England have not been able to dis- -
cover any of the ramifications of Soviet plotting in Rou
political economic and industrial, but even with these mania? This is to us hardly conceivable. And is it
changed aspects no responsible Zionist has insisted that possible that the ablest and most astute correspond
the success of Zionism demanded immediate results. of European and American newspapers have not found
The renaissance of a people is an ideal which requires a scintilla of evidence of red propaganda, if indeed
patience, enthusiasm and perseverence. Despite the
there was any?
acute Polish situation that made Palestine a haven for
e are persuaded that the red herring of Bolshe -
desperate Polish Jews, yet it was always realized that
vism,
the apologies of a Niemerower, the "protests" of
m
whether conditions were acute or normal in all countries
reprisals
reprisa s will
' not
where the Jews lived, those with the nationalist ideal Roumanian Jews, or even inquisitional
-
exculpate
Roumania
for
her
mistreatment
of
her
minor
new
Jewish
a
looked upon Palestine as the place where
- Jewish
ities
and
especially
her
Jews.
An
aroused
non
life, rich, colorful, variegated would eventually come
sists
into being. Nobody is so fatuous as to believe that world will not be satisfied with these denials but in
-
Palestine can be rebuilt without colonists, industry and that the political, academic, and economic discrimina
money, but these alone without national aspirations. tions cease, and that the pogroms and excesses be
unshakable ideal devotion, love of Hebrew will only stopped by the government that seems to prefer turmoil
create colonies that would not be distinguishable from to tranquillity, graft to honesty, evasion to facing
the facts.
others.
Mr. Cretziano, your high and mighty attitude is ri -
Russia presents an altogether different problem.
Here everything calls for immediate, efficient, relief diculous and not at all convincing.

4

"In the Land of the Pharaohs"

Palestine

medana and Christians come and
' raiii
i -
ing a great investment from which
Weizmann's reference to Palestine as
health from the Holy Spirit of M u se s
you, their children, are profiting.
a sounding board. It is in fact a
sounding board placed in a hall of Those weird and futile pyramids are ben Maimon." Which proved tome s.
there is nothing new in Christian Set.
drawing all the world to your shores."
a thousand mirrors. Things are not
en•e.
"You talk just like an American,"
merely said in Palestine but are nec•
From Cairo the train takes you
answered my guide.
essarily amplified by the most power-
"Now," I continued, "if my fore- through the land of Goshen, the delta
ful instrument known to man, by re-
of
the Nile, in which the brethren of
fathers in Palestine had only thought
pealed unceasing hearsay. If a thing
of building some such eternal mom'. Joseph had settled, on to the Suez
is seen once it is mirrored everywhere
Canal,
the life-line of the British Em-
meats, Palestine, too, might he en-
and the same thing may be en-
England by a Jew-
pire, procured
ed for Englan
riched by tourist traffic. The trouble
countered at the turn of every cor er.
banker
and a Jewish prime
with Palestine is that all its monu-
The amplifiers and magnifiers appear
minister. You look at the waters of
ments
are
in
books
which
can
be
as
to be always at work. A hysterical
Suez and you know why Britain wants
easily read in America as in Pales-
woman becomes impatient with wait-
a friendly Jewish community living
tine, and in institutions and ideals,
ing in line before the Immigrants'
nearby.
netirIi y the
which are as prevalent over the whole
Relief Station and a cable informs a
,
he other side of the tonal
a
On
tf
extent of this planet as they are in
tense Jewish world that there has
sleeping car awaits you. You climb
Palestine
itself."
been a demonstration of unemployed.
""
into your bed and go to sleep. While
"I
see,"
he
said,
"you
are
a
Jew."
There is unquestionably an atmos-
"Yes, tell me, how do Jews and Mo- you sleep, the train crosses the desert
phere out of which a crisis might
of Sinai. You wake up in Jerusalem
hammedans get along?"
easily evolve. How much of a crisis
"In the new Egypt," this was —a rather comfortable way of reacars-
there is I leave to the economists to
ing the Exodus from Egypt.
solemnity, "Mohammedans, Christians
ascertain. It is also unquestionably
and Jews live like brothers. You will
true that there is no much din about
TRUE CULTURE
find the magnificent Jewish Temple
crisis that the thin small voice of
close to the hotel, and I'll get some
contentment is never heard. It is
one to take you to the Synagogue of
I am pleased to quote so distin-
not surprising but the fact cannot be
guished a writer as Sir Philip Gibbs
Maimonides."
over-stressed that there are compara-
Egypt is a wealthy country. When
in support of what I have long slain.
tively vast areas in Palestine which
I exchanged my British pounds for
tained, when he said recently: "I
have not been touched by the present
Egyptian coin, I found that the Egyp-
think most people do read too many ut4t ,
slump, where great contentment is
tian money had a higher exchange
novels, and I think that girls and }aar
evident, contentment which is natur-
value than the British. Yet the tourist
women of today are mentally and 'aas
ally made bitter by the unhappiness
is constantly beset by beggars and
spiritually damaged by the enormous
and distress in other quarters. The
grafters. Americans are very much
amount of indiscriminate fiction
Jew on the land, whether the old type
irritated by this continued demand for
which they devour from the public
colonist or the new type pioneer settler
"Bakhshoesh"—"a little gift." Not
libraries."
is contented. The former prospers as
that it costs them very much, it is
I have long insisted that people
he never prospered before, the latter
rather the pettiness of the thing that
generally
and women particularly
is unmistakably on the way to stabili-
annoys. I overheard sonic American
who have more leisure, read not only
zation.
tourists condemn Egypt as a country
too
much
but
too indiscriminately.
The amazing thing about the pres-
ruled completely by graft, and I heard
II47
They do not know that too much
ent situation is perhaps that there has
them jump to the conclusion that the
reading
conduces
to mental indiges-
been no panic, that in all liklihood
dark-skinned races cannot possibly
lion instead of to cultural cultiva- saT
panic will be averted. This should
govern themselves. I reminded them
tion. They need to learn that a few
speak volumes for the self-control
gently that it would probably take the
truly good books thoroughly compre-
and for the endurance of the thou-
Egyptians with their petty "Ilakh-
hended and absorbed are far more
sands, and there are now several
sheesh" 100 years to gather the
beneficial educationally than a mul-
thousand of them, who have been af-
amount of graft which is passed about
titude read with hectic haste largely
fected by the slump which began
in New York or Chicago in one year.
to keep up with people generally.
with the stoppage in the building trade
I called it to their attention that the
People generally do not furnish a cri-
in Tel Aviv. It speaks also for the
only difference between (lark men's
terion of good taste. A Sir Philip
great loyalty and unsurpassed Zion-
graft and white men's graft is that
Gibbs does. Popularity in reading
ism of the actual sufferers. This
the white nian operates in a more re-
often spells perniciousness. I know
strengthens the conviction that the
fined manner and on a larger scale.
that it takes courage to remain out
present situation will pass. I cannot
You do not need to know Arabic to
of touch with what "everybody is
conceive of people enduring hardships
get along in the Eastern World. Most
reading," but true culture implies
the workers and persons of the lower
of the Egyptians you meet talk a fair
the will to avoid ignorant superficial-
middle class are enduring if they did
English. The donkey-boys and the
ity in interest of intelligent thorough-
aka
not see any prospects of an early re-
camel-men who take you across the
ness.—Alexander Lyons in the Sup-
turn to a normal state of affairs. This
short desert between Cairo and the
plement.
hopefulness is not merely helping the
Pyramids are not only acquainted with
people to tide over the greatest diffi-
the American language. They also
t4 4 T
culties, but has also been helpful in
CHURCH AND STAGE
know American foibles.
another direction. It has kept the
"Here, take my donkey," one boy
demagogue away. The labor dema-
The church, in some of its organis-
pleaded with me. "Him good donkey.
gogue who receives guidance from
ations, is antagonistic to the stage. k i
Strong! You know him name? Him
quarters anxious to witness our fail-
It is prejudiced by an ignorant and
(' _
name—Jack
Dempsey!"
ure, who would capitalize the present
obsolete conception of the theater, its
4
What American would resist such
discount, receives very little en-
actors and sponsors. This lack of
an
appeal?
l?
couragement in face of the deter-
knowledge is caused by an effete the-
aas
On the way, my donkey-boy found
mined men and women who make up
"-la
nlogy that mistakes paleness for
,.,
a half-dozen different ways of getting
the organized ranks of labor.
piety,
dancing
for
deviltry
and
cheer-r
a ii
small coins out of nie. I began to
But we must not forget that large
lessness for character.
enjoy
observing
the
ingenuity
with
share of the burden, perhaps the
Church
people
are
sometimes
if-
which he did this. Now he gathered
bulkiest share, is borne by the few
whom the last Congress has con- some dates for me, now he told my norant in things dramatic because fa'
men
(,ea
they seldom or never attend the bet-
fortune (it hasn't come true), now hehey
as
the
Palestine
Zionist
Execu-
tinted
gave me some pointers on managing ter and stronger plays. The cost is
tive. Short of means they are, and
prohibitive. If such people became
a donkey, now he begged far some
short handed too, but they have re-
more intimately acquainted with the
money with which to buy feed for poor
mained at the helm steering the fuel-
activities of the stage, they would
'''','''''
less ship through our shallow financial
grow in fondness of it, and where
An Adventure at the Pyr•mids.
waters with the waves of criticism, for
they found good ground to criticize
grew
larger
Meantime,
the
pyramids
the most part, unjustified criticism,
izont,untirlaat
they
would speedily correct it —The
t
cat
la arglesoa
rtaupont
a the horizon,
a a‘nad a ig
breaking against the small craft. The
Supplement.
of
be
the
Zionist Executive understands its
l'yramid of Cheops, overawed by :ts
duty to the loyal adherents to a pro-
KINGDOM COME
immensity. I recalled that the build-
gram net before it by the congress.
ing of this tomb took the strength and
We must have religiousness. There
They are not the makers of this
a
m
pan
and
scoanostauamasao.
whether
which,
expression
as i on oit f a religion
ra e gai ton a w
program and some of them may even
m
lifuecha`wseaalmtha,"tyhamt s
know
n or
perso ally disapprove of the policy in
Egypt was exhausted as though it had
it or not, is part of our make-up.
this or that respect; but although they
been overrun by an invader. The life
?
NI hat our piety, or expression of our
are of different mentalities and affili-
' a r ligion becomes, depends largely
ations, they regard themselves as a of a whole nation drained t e o build
HOW
e
palace
for
a
dead
man!
mpty
upon
our
environment
and
our
cul-
carrying
out
an
body
homogenous
'
Egypt! '1.21.3
li
ture. If each and every one of us
,,
Is. ' o a n s d the
h doubt it anyw ere M
Iorgangica"plsicy iata
'p t this,
a •. e-
i
cols v eis ,za oli t s o enrvo i n`g
made up our minds to safe and our
in the world there
is more real coll.
solved
to
found
A
religion
whoae th!ef
religious life with reverenc e
ati orati • on and coalition between men
just!,
concern it would be to
pathy for the equal rights of otnrem r;
than there is between the members of
me n .
we should soon have a better
the Palestine
Zionist Executive. The • and happiness for living me
le
established
,7
responsibility,
however,
wonder
emancipated
Israel
rulers
e
happier world. We should not need
of
th
brunt
ng carried by the member in a Day of Rest to prevent all ' I ' le of to pray for Kingdom Come, It would
"
i s being
4,1
be here. — The Supplement.
charge of labor and by the member the future from workin g men to death
ts, Ci
in charge of the treasury, who has by uninterrupted labor
7 -
We
waited
till
the
moon
rose,
for
acting chairman.
recen tly ° been made
A DYNAMO
f adedness that is extra- these sentinels of the . centuries are
r1;cii7
The church itself must be religion- V,
posse,.
‘4 • magic b
eauty
in
the
said
tn
d
as
remaine
'
a : . .frh . esprinza. k h
ordinary`,
ra•
ized. It is too extensively devoted to
moonlight. We walked along in the
within the executive the fearless cham•
pion of labor and of labor's rights moonlight—a large party of us—look• theology or sectarianism. It needs
and the zealous protagonist of Zion- ing now at the dark piles of the pyra- to become a dynamo of that spiritual
Col Kithwaist- mids and now at the enchanting moon Power which will unfailingly conduce
tam am g I b
ed by Mr. Rawly, has succeeded in of Egypt. A Dr. M — was • few to moral and ethical realization. The
maintaining the financial credit and paces ahead of the rest of the party. ministry of the church is too much of a aa.
• concession to public interest instead 74.
Every few minutes he would stout
prettier
estige of the Zionist Organization.
of • compulsion to public character.
some information back to us and
much this means to us in this
period of money shortage will readily beckon us on. Suddenly he distils- There is too much sensationalism and
peared—ss if the earth had swallowed too little spirituality.—The Supple-
him up. We hastened to the spot where ment.
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Q9

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