America Apish Periodeal Cotter CLIFTON AMOS • CINCINNATI 30, OHIO — A 9 Ttl r 1 frotiltlislirs of the fPrasou THE ONLY ANGLO-JEWISH NEWSPAPER PRINTED IN MICHIGAN DETROIT, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1929. nnamunMEIMMOninrAipmq- q - em Hebrew Union College Museu ► PLEA FOR' Acquires Valuable Heirloom REVIVAL OF HEBRFW 6rrrtitto nubsent rFltiilti r -STIRRING Menorah Is Product of Eighteenth Century Jewish Art. The Union Museum of the Ile- teenth century, the hand-work of brew Union College recently Sc- this description must have been quired a valuable heirloom. Some very costly time in the eighteenth century, The Feast of Lights. Samuel Ilirsch, a wealthy Jew liv- The imagination is stirred by ing in Germany, perhaps a mem- this large and impressive Menorah. bar of a branch of the late Baron It takes one back to the days when Maurice de Hirsch family, had in Jews could not make a public spec.: his home a unique and beautiful tacle of their worship of God, when hand-wrought silver Chanukah they dared not openly display their Menorah. Later the descendants treasures for fear of confiscation. i! 1 ... - 7.--- Z7 7--- - 1- EbETROVEWISR .1fRONICL- Nagano (611atutkall to Euergour v.- ownweeawswanseessewassemaw. 4 iCARD LUMBER CO. ROBERT W. CARD 1 T 1 Visiting Lecturer Feels it Will Give New Content to Western Ideals. II el lenism, who knelt before \1;y ,.,*Vo, :1,,,.M :y11 4,115ti, 100,73:4, 1,4,.. 0w4w iz Apollo and preached the virtues of j,'s ' sword and physical beauty, there are now words strange in his mouth: "The holy burden of divine presence.' In his, as in the rest p p of theprophetic voices of the age, a • we find a prophecy of the future. Palestine Provides Prophecy j SEASON'S GREETINGS "Would we discover other signs of the days that are to come, then "4' most we turn to Palestine. We , find them in the life of the youth 7 of Palestine. There in Palestine there is an advanced front of Jew- ' ish life. There we find a self-ini- pelling, autonomous Judaism, an ' authentic Jewish life. In Eretz Israel, we behold a strange phe- nomenon in the deep religiosity of §7 , the child. The l'alestinian child forces his parents and teachers, Who have rationalized religion out of their lives, to observe religious rites and ceremonies. The language itself of I'alestine is a religious organ. There are no secular He- brew. There is no creediess He- brew. The whole substance of expression, the spirit of the lan- guage, the figures of spech, are h - all permeated with religious con- tent Far off generations of Israel , speak through the syllables of Ile-' b rew. In Palestine emergent and n the lives of Israel's greatest and °blest men , we apprehend what' he morrow to be. • "What is there for you to do who are Westerners by birth? Future in Lives of Great. "One may find the hints of what What is your specific task? It is the morrow may be in a searching to Judaize the Western Jew and to study of the great men of the era give Jewish content to Western —to be sure, not in the vulgarians values. I understand how difficult of the popular taste, but in the it is to transmit Jewish values to lives of the seemingly lonely great students within the course of four 1233 Griswold St. Randolph 4300 ones of every age. In art, there years. But we possess the West- were, for instance, Van Gogh and ern virtue of method, which should ! Cezanne. They were failures in compensate for the limites of time. _ their generation. Yet in their One key will open the treasures, of work, there may have been discov- the Jewish spirit to you. That key 'il'!"1:4KiIRAKM4:4:4: I ered an inkling of what the art is Hebrew. No translation can' of the future would be. Consider give you the burden of spirit of the Ilebrew word. Hebrew itself Zionism, it is easy to be a Zionist today. I3ut in 1896, to discover is a creative force. Not only does that Rent was not a madman, but it teach you by its content, not a prophet of his age, to dare to only does it inform you, but it pre- enlist as a young rabbi under his pares you, it forms you for the banner required both courage and task. Whoever knows Ilebrew, the was t e spaces of his soul become vision, "In the lives and works of Her- fruitful. "It cannot be diffic i mann Cohen, Achad Ila-am, Martin for you to Ruben, Berditchewsky, A. I). Gor- l earn Hebrew for t is in your don, Bialik, yes, Ludwig and even Lewisohn, Tcherni- kowsky and blood you carry' its law, its rhythms within yourselves. Know there are some tokens of the emer- Ilebrew and you possess the knowl- genie edge • of a new religious passion. edge of four thousand years. You Distributor of These men began with a revolt may be a clever writer, and epi- against their ancestral heritage. grammatist in any other language, Berditchewsky,who could see noth- but in Hebrew, you may be a cre- ing in the past but a cemetery be- ator. The institute tries to pre- gan with the aim to break the pare you for this golden chance of tables of the law, and ended by youth. Take it, and bring of what finding himself, to his own sur- you receive from your teachers and prise, an integral link of the Ion g of what you are yourselves to chain of treasured tradition. Bia- American Israel, that it may live a lik who followed the secular trend ric h er,a more creative Jewish of modern Hebrew letters, to the life' Office and Warehouse: exc'usion of everything else, en- tered at maturity on what may be Samuel Einsaft, historian of the ST. ANTOINE AT ATWATER ST. called the way to the mothers of Jewish labor movement, died in Jewish life, to the sources of ear- Moscow following a long illness. Randolph 1824 Detroit Mich. tier mediaeval religious poetry. Ile was the author of several Even in Tchernikowsky, this bard books. I)r. 8holom Spiegel, isiting lec- turer for this year at the Jewish Institute of Religion, West 68th street, New York, was the princi- pal speaker at a luncheon, given in his honor by the students of the institute. I)r. Spiegel, who comes to the institute from Palestine, where he has been living and teach- ing for a number of years, moved the students by his appeal for a love of Hebrew and its use in bring- ing Jewish content to Western ideals. Youth Has the Golden Chance. "To American youth," said I)r. Spiegel, "conies the golden chance to make of America a worthy cen- ter of Jewish life. The question arises, Is it possible to train youth to meet the future? Can one know what the morrow is to be? I be- lieve that one can. If a little of Jewish history is known, it is not dificult to pdenct what Jewish life is to be. There are prophetic in- dications in every age. Men who are not hampered by too much bookishness may learn the signs. 7,4, Iv Walnut 0407 krr l nivnnnTEMUMMMuoisqw,yR,Nwg ........., .. ,a ■ ir sip Fa" tr, Pi IV eta Wag sot vao ,z ) O` as i a ., t ta li, Sit III .r Ma. w , • me us ,•-• _.;.=. _. Vil I'S II ma t ,......3%. 5 1 Chanukah Greetings and Best Wishes Peter J. Platte Motor Sales FORD LINCOLN 14801 E. Jefferson Ave. Lenox 1717 3799 E. Jefferson Ave. Edgewood 4800 Office Lenox 0230 Parts Dept. Lenox 0278 Service Lenox 0279 Used Car Dept. Lenox 0285 Season's Greetings The STYLER PRESS C. C. BERGIIOEFER, Prop . Stylers of Good Printing • 67 West Fort Phone Randolph 6617 It eason's 'Warmest Greetings I I ' att.,,"11, MA, .0 . illf ...... 2,i_ AM .4""a' ' ". ' HARDWARE SPORTING GOODS — RADIOS PAINTS — OILS — VARNISHES )10:11N114. ... LEGE MUSEUM of the owner became impoverished; heirloom passed into the hands of the collectors and ultimately was purchased by Adolph S. Rico, li- brarian of the Hebrew Union Col- , lege. The lamp is unique for one thing, that it is the largest known of its kind, being 27's inches high, 22 inches wide, and 5'S inches in depth. It is a creation of marve- lous workmanship and interesting details, wrought in solid silver, and some parts are gilded. Pictures Magnificent Palace. C01.., ' This Samuel Hirsch was obvious. ly a man of great wealth. We might almost picture him, seated with hois wife and family in the great hall of his palace. The cur- tains drawn for every friend was an enemy in those days of suspic- ion and hatred. It is the season of Chanukah—the Feast of Lights. One light is to be lit the first night and an additional light each suc- cessive night until all eight are burning as a symbol of Judaism's belief in the gradual but constant increase of intellectual light. The little groups of celebrants have been recalling to mind how centuries before, Judah Maccabeus had conquered the Syrians, and re- claimed the Temple of Jerusalem. At the purification of the Temple, the altar was sanctified and dedi- cated anew. Lamps and torches were kindled and a celebration of eight days was ordained, to be re- peated annually. This was to com- memorate the little cruse of oil that seemed hardly enough for one night, but which burned brightly for eight days until a new supply of sacred oil could be obtained. At first glance, the lamp resem- bled an Ark of the Law. Large lanterns adorn the sides. These are typical of the German Archi- tecture of the day, as is the foun- dation Near the apex is engraved the family crest, supported on each ' man for deer.) A Ilebrew inscrip- side by a deer. (Hirsch is the Ger- tion near the top similar to a verse in the bible, plays on the owner's name: "And Samuel took the cruse of oil and poured it on the Menor- ah." (Samuel Ch. 10, V. 1) In the central portion of this in- teresting art object are the eight oil lamps which are lighted in con- Many Unique Lamps. nection with the Ilanukkah cele- Jewish artists have always given bration. In the background is a much time and talent to the fash- magnificent palace, which may have ioning of these Chanukah candel- been the owner's own home. Doves bra. This one, now in the Union are flying above it. In the fore- Museum, is especially interesting; ground flows a majestic river. it is important as an object of Dates to Napoleonic Era. - Jewish art, showing Jewish motifs On a rod near the base, attached in theAartistic style of the period, to seven silver chains, hang the and the relation of the culture of implements used for filling and' the Jews to that of their neighbors, trimming the lamps, among them thus giving both the Jewish, and are two cruses for the oil, a pair the non-Jewish aspects of the age of tongs, a small shovel, and a fun- in which it was fashioned. nel. Inscriptions engraved in Ile- This ceremonial lamp is by no brew on the lamp tell of the vir- means the only one in the collect- tut s of the owner and his wife, in- ion of the Union Museum. There dicating the possibility of this hav- are one hundred others, gathered ing been a gift. from all parts of the world, and This lamp is especially interest- some of them dating back to the ing because it dates back to a time fifteenth century. The Museum during the Napoleonic era when the also contains priceless ceremonial Jews in Germany were particularly' objects—some 10,000 items in gold, wretched a n d poverty-stricken. silver, miniatures, engravings and Flow did this one Jew have enough manuscripts illustrating the cultu- money to acquire such an elaborate ral life of the Jews in many climes ornament? For, even in the eigh- and ages. JEWS SERVED U. S . sti lieved l bel in ieve IN GREAT FASHION > 1 4e 71.t. Chanukah Greetings to All My Jewish Friends ..... CHANUKAH MEMORIAL ACQUIRED BY HEBREW UNION 14. The RAYL Co. Sn 5152 Lawton S In the spirit of Chanukah we ex- tend to all our Jewish friends, patrons and neighbors best wishes for a joyous Chanukah. nidh aeternal t fate 1'2,2r should the Jews to be the most essential instrument I for civilizing the na- tions. If were an atheist of the other sect, who believe or pretend to believe that all is ordered b • chance, I should believe that chance h ad ordered the Jews to preserve and propagate to all mankind the doctrine of a supreme, intelligent, wise, almighty sovereign of the Universe, which I believe to be the great essential principle of all mor- ality and consequently of all civi- zation." Much has been achieved for lib- eral Judaism, Rabbi Feuerlicht said, but "it requires no flight of fancy to picture what would have been accomplished by now had we had, one century earlier, Isaac Mayer Wise, the Union of Ameri- can Hebrew Congregations, the De. partment of Synagogues and School Extension and the National Fed- erations of Temple Brotherhoods and Sisterhoods" CINCINNATI, 0.— Spiritually and materially, in peace and in war, the Jews have served America in distinguished fashion, Rabbi Mor- ris M. Feuerlicht of Indianapolis Hebrew Congregation, Indianapo- lis, Ind., said Dec. 8, in Cincinnati, Ohio. He spoke in Wise Center of Plum Street Temple on "The Jew- ish Contributions to Vivilization," in an exchange of pulpits which is a feature of the annual November Tour now being conducted by the ' Union of American Hebrew Con- gregations. Rabbi James G. Hel- ler, of Plum Street Temple, occu- pied Rabbi Feuerlicht's pulpit for the November Tour Friday eve- ning. Rabbi Feuerlicht is a past presi- dent of the Hebrew Union College Alumni Association, whose mem- bers are co-operating with laymen COMPANY FORMED FOR in the tour. David A. Brown is DEAD SEA CONCESSION chairman of the tour. --- Jews and the Old Testament were LONDON.—(J. T. A.)— Pales- of great influence in the days of tine Potash, Ltd., is the name of the founding of the United States, the new company which was for- Rabbi Feuerlicht pointed out. For ' mally registered in London with a example, he cited the fact that the capital of $2,000,000 to exploit the Liberty Bell inscription, "Proclaim chemical resources of the Dead Sea Liberty Throughout the Land un- on the concession granted to Engi- to All the Inhabitants Thereof," neer Moses Novomejaski and Major is a translation from Leviticus Tulloch. ire 10, The Earl of Lytton will be chair- de quoted this tribute from John man of the new company. sham Adams, the second president of the, have already been subscribed by United States: the British and American directors, 'If I were an atheist, and be- I it was announced. California Fruits, Preserves Direct to Consumer Wr tiurerrtu Wish the Nrutisll People of ;Detroit Ctppg uub Prosperous New Dear 1' - Rochester Sand ,{4 Brick Co. Shippers of Builders, Payers, Founders Supplies Manufacturers of Sandlime Brick Capacity: Fifty Million per-Annum Phone Hogarth 1247 SPECIFY ROCIIESTER BRICK There's a Difference Ik