ki ai al t HE 3erRO nr/will fI RO1N1CLB l 51 .4 ern s "6-0'6-6 , ' ''6 '6 ' 1 ' FIEVEIROITIEWI v . RON IDLE Published Weekly by The Jaritth Ch maid. Publishing Co., Inc. Littered as Second.elam matter M i Lech 3, 1911, at the Post- office at Detroit, Mich.. under th e Act of Werth 3, 1575. General Offices and Publication Building 525 Woodward Avenue Telephone Cadillac 1040 Cable Address: Chronicle Leaden Office 14 Stratford Place, London, W. I, England moo Subscription, in Advance.. Per Year To Incur. publication, all correapondence and news matter must reach this office by Toted ty evening of each amk. When wading notices. kindly use one tilde of the paper only. The Detroit Jevish Chronicle In•I tee correspondence on sub- jects of Interest to the Jewish people, but disclaims responsi. kit), for an Indorsement of the flews exprimed or the writer. Sabbath Readings of the Torah. Pentateuchal portion—Dent. 1:1-3:22, Prophetical portion—Is. 1:1.27. Tisk& b'Ab Readings of the Law, Thursday, July 23. Pentateuchal portion—Morning, Deut. 4 :25-40; afternoon, Ex. 32:11.14; 34:1-10. Prophetical portion—Morning, Jer. 8:13-9:23; afternoon, Is. 65:6-56:8, July 17, 1931 Ab 3, 5691 ~~~~ Economic Possibilit ies in Palestine. Regardless of the o her results of the World Zionist Congres s, which just con- eluded its sessions in Basle, Switzerland, the decision to sponsor private and semi- private organizations f or the economic de- velopment of Palestine is of supreme inv- portance to the movem ent and to the cause of a rebuilt Jewish Nat ional Home. To be able fully to appreciate the im- portance of the step tak en by the Congress, one must read the highly interesting pamphlet, "A Progran for the Accelera- tion of the Absorptive Capacity of Pales- tine" by Israel Benjami n Brodie, New York attorney, who is the ch airman of the corn- mittee of the Zionis t Organization of America in charge of s chemes for the eco- nomic development of Palestine and who was the sponsor of the resolution adopted by the Congress. This article recently also appeared in the New Palestine as a pre- sentation of the econo rnic program of the American Zionist admi nistration. Mr. Brodie's plan, now serving as the basis for the internati anal Zionist scheme for the economic devel ipment of Palestine, is interesting and impo rtant from the point of view of the facts a id figures it reveals and for the proposals i t makes. The mere revelation that out of the $225,000,000 of Jewish capital sent to Palestine during the first decade following the war $192,000,- 000 was privately inve ited with only $33,- 000,000 subscribed by Zionist public funds, is an argument for th e encouragement of economic schemes thr ough private initia- tive. It was one of the . serious mistakes of the past few years th at such investments were not encouraged, particularly in view of the fact that the re urns on investments made have been profit able. It is impossible, in the space available for the purpose, to do justice to Mr. Brod- ie's views as contained in his brochure. His analyses of the vario us economic enter- prises now successfully ' functioning in Pal- estine are valuable co ntributions to Zion- ism. Certainly the a 'option of the plan as proposed by the A A merican delegation is one of the most im portant steps taken by the Zionist Congre. s3. The only questions t hat arise as a result of the adoption of thi I program are those with reference to the attitude of the mass of the Jewish people. What will be the response? Will Jews listen to reason and invest their money in Palestinian projects in view of the profits ble returns they are certain to brine 0 r will Jews ignore these appeals and will our people look sus- piciously on these proj ects? These questions mu tt not be minimized and unless they are to (en seriously the en- tire movement will su Ter. As a result of several failures, Jews have of late shown a lack of confidence i n Zionist headquar- ters. These suspicion 3 and lack of faith must be overcute in every possible man- ner. A spirit of con idence must be in- spired to encourage co -operation anti a re- newal of faith. Witho it these the adopted program will be morel y another resolution piled up on a scrap he ap of papers that is already too high. Red-Letter Day in Jewish History. Tisha b'Ab, to be co mmemorated again next Thursday, has be en a red-letter day in Jewish history, som e r of the greatest of Israel's tragedies havir ig occurred on this day. The First and Second Temples at Jerusalem were destroy ed on this day, rob- bing our people of horn eland and religious sanctuary. The expulsi on of the Jews from Spain occurred on th it day. Curiously enough, the World Wa r, which brought so much misery to the Je wish people, broke out on Tisha b'Ab of 19 14. On this day the revolt led by Simon Bar Kochba broke out against Rome in the ye sr 130 of the pres- ent era. This Jewish red-lette r day was not al- together one of sorrow and mourning. For it was on Tisha b'Ab of 1882 that the Jews once more turned eastw and to their home- land, Palestine, with the . idea of rebuilding and re-establishing the it land. On that day a number of Russia 1-Jewish university students, under the lea lership of the late Israel Belkin, then a s udent at the Uni- versity of Charkow, ban led together in the society "Bilu," the nary le of which is de- rived from the Hebrew f ords "Beth Yaakov Lechu ve-Nelcho" ("Hot use of Jacob, let us , go forth"), for the purpose of Palestinian colonization. The result was the founding of the first Zionist colony, which has served as the foundation and stepping stone for more than 115 additional colonies estab- lished in the last 49 years. The new spirit is for reconstruction where ruin previously ruled the day. It is translated in the aspiration which calls for the upbuilding of Zion by the present gen- eration, and has appropriately been de- scribed in the following beautiful poem for Tisha b'Ab by the well-known poetess, Miss Jessie Sampter: We had a glorious temple, Where priests in shining white, Went up and down the marble stairs, And sang by clay and night; They sang the psalms together, And played on harps and lyres, And we stood round and answered them, And watched the altar fires. And that is why we always pray: "Rebuild it soon, and in our clay!" Our Temple walls are shattered. Our singing priests are dead— Their shining robes of holy white, Were stained a fearful red. Now their remembering people, Are driven far and wide; We chant the psalms without the lyres, Our hope has never died, And that is why we always pray: "Rebuild it soon and in our day!" "Oh speedily rebuild it!" 1 hear my father say: "We've prayed that prayer two thousand years, And still our children pray; Through every generation, In every land and clime ;" But if the day is sure to come, May this be not the time? And that is why we always pray: "Rebuild it soon, and in our day!" . Our Rabbis and Spiritual Hunger. Dr. Israel Herbert Levinthal, president fo the Rabbinical Assembly of America, in his presidential address read at the Con- servative Rabbis' convention in Long Branch, N. J., made the following signifi- cant statement to point to the spiritual de- pression being worse than the economic crisis: There is no gainsaying the fact that these are trying days in which we live. Not only is there a depression in the economic field, but what is even worse the depression has overtaken our spiritual interests in life. What the ancient sages tell us had happened in the (lays of Ruth, when, according to the Bible "there was a hunger in the land," "that it was a two-fold hunger—a hunger of bread and also a hunger in Torah" (Yalkut Shemoni), —is happening also in our day. But that is contrary to the regular trend in Jewish ex- perience. Even though they °Mimes faced the "Ra'a'ven Shel Lechem," the hunger in bread, they never permitted that hunger to touch their souls, and the Torah never knew depression in the life of Israel. From this assembly there must go forth the ringing chal- lenge to American Israel: Let not the spirit of depression overwhelm us in our spiritual life. When these years of leanness shall pass and the years of plenty shall be with us again, men and women will easily forget the pangs of today in the joys of the new day. But, if we experience a depression in our spiritual life, then, even if better days shall come, it will be too late to undo the evil, for the spiritual de- pression will already have done its deadly work. In spite of this solemn declaration, how- ever, we are informed in the Jewish Tele- graphic Agency report of this convention's proceedings that "the majority of the rab- bis expressed the opinion that a minimum of Jewish education must satisfy the av- erage Jewish child in America and that the emphasis must be on ethics and religion rather than on the Hebrew language." It is needless to say that such views, com- ing from that group which claims to be trodding the middle path between Reform and Orthodoxy, will arouse amazement and surprise. Having claimed a position of leadership in the circles of the Ilebraists, such an about-face in the attitude of Con- servative rabbis on the question of Hebrew education can't possibly meet with much encouragement in the ranks of Conserva- tive laymen. It is generally accepted as a rule that when a minimum of the thing desired is aspired for, a bit less than the minimum will be achieved, and that when a maxi- mum is asked for, the minimum is certain to be acquired. To be satisfied therefore at the outset with a minimum of Jewish ed- ucation means to encourage the state of spiritual depression from which the Amer- ican Jewish community suffers today. The Jewish Telegraphic Agency, through its special correspondent in War- saw, reveals that the Jews, who number 10 per cent of the population of Poland, pay 40 per cent of the direct Polish taxes and are receiving only 200,000 zlotys, instead of the 3,000,000 they are entitled to, from the government's religious budget. Here is a glaring example of taxation without rights and justified representation. Palestine now has 258 lawyers, Jerusa- lem leading with 83 and Tel Aviv following with 53. Anyway, too many lawyers are not nearly as dangerous as too many laws. 4.44:11M%TATA:.r-4Wc.-44:4WRIA:•>,. "' `e," " ' iyklymyisloyksmmtsViektftyfttlyktc(tin l• ' rwv BY•THE•WAY ish Personalities. MR. MENCKEN "ENJOYS" HIMSELF Our good Baltimore friend, Mr. Mencken, is having a good time. Ile has gotten out a card, which he is circulating widely among his friends. Mencken is the author of the card, but the card purports to be that of a Rev. I. Mandolowitz. A business card for the reverend gent. On it appears: "Rev. I. Man- dolowitz, Sanitary Mohel, Schad- ch•n and Schoechet—Day and Night Service. Sewing Machines Neatly Repaired." Beneath this inscription is: "Agent for the Celebrated Beth Boron Vineyards of Adummin, Palestine Ritual Wines and Liquors for All Occasions." Beneath this second line: "Rents Collected, Funerals Conducted. Low Wedding Fees." And so on—you get the general idea. STRANGERS MAY KISS It's a strange thing about this Mr. Mencken. He can say most anything about the Jews, and you simply can't get angry about it. One can no more get excited about these things from Mencken than if they had come from Ben Hecht. Just let us assume for a moment that some noieJew had said some of the things Mr. Hecht recently said in his opus: "Jews Without Love." I daresay, the American Jewish Congress would have issued a broadside against him. But Mr. Hecht says it—a Jew says it and there's not a mur- mur. Strangers may kiss, as the movie caption has it, but they can- not curse. But friends may curse all they want. And I suppose, the fact that we do not even get offended at this raillery of Mr. Mencken is that we know that down deep in his heart he is in- capable of prejudice. PUBLICITY PRINCE PASSES The king of the ballyhoo—Harry Reichenbach—is dead. Some may question the ethics of the profes- sion of publicity, of which craft Reichenbach was easily the fore- most practitioner. But this mon- arch of the realms of publicity certainly contributed to spice up life—and the keeper of the Celes- tial Gates, I am inclined to think, will wink his eyes at a lot of things when he sees a fellow like that coming along. I imagine that up there they have a longer list of virtues for which they give you credit than down here. If you have, say, pepped things up a bit, for a some- times boresome world, I shouldn't be surprised if the Celestian book- keeper properly credits you. There is a Stidrash, I am told, that up in the other world, some one asked Elijah who would inherit eternal life. And Elijah pointed to an undistinguished, obscure chap. "Ile cheered his neighbors." That was virtue enough. SINS OF PUBLICITY I know the sins of publicity. You recall the story of the pub- licity writer in the movies, who described the new movie as en- trancing. The director looked at the copy. "Entrancing? Is that all you can say for it. Why, that almost looks like a knock." That is one of the sins of the publicity man. Exaggeration— feeding the public on a diet of im- possible superlatives. Of this sin, Reichenbach was largely free. He sought not so much to impress, but to interest you. When he registered a lion at one of the hotels, along with a man, T. R. Zann, he knew quite well that in a (lay or two the truth would be out. There was no per- manent misrepresentation. He was there merely to excite the public interest. —4— SONS OF THE FATHERS When Hendrik Van Loon, the writer, learned that his son had gone in for professional interpre- tative dancing, he said: "If Otto Kahn can let his boy, Roger, direct an orchestra and cavort about in airplanes, why can't my son be- come a professional dancer? Young Kahn is not the only son of wealthy Jewish parents who apparently is not following in the financial paths of their fathers. One of Mr. Warburg's sons is, I believe, a 'cellist of considerable promise. Also one of the late Louis Marshall's sons is a forester and botanist. UNDERPAID CHECKER PLAYERS c rt ■■ Tidbits and News of Jew- By DAVID SCHWARTZ usiet st)ess‘t..*: 748).41 ,)rts, ss''''rsts 0 u 11 1(0 t4,4A) AGRONSKY FINDS SALONIKI JEWISH QUARTER AFTER POGROM LOOKS LIKE HEBRON FOLLOWING RIOTS Charles f. Joseph , rabbis are on record as favoring T HE birth Reform control in a modified way. The other day the Orthodox rabbis holding a convention in New York declared that birth control was contrary to the Jewish law and the natural law and the law of God; and went on to say that Judaism not only sanctions but sanctifies marriage. Now all this interests me very much because it is an example of Jewish fundamentalism, with all its narrow and intolerant and dogmatic implications. We find the same thing among the Orthodox Protestant and the Orthodox Catholic. They insist upon certain beliefs and certain attitudes toward life that are obnoxious to their own liberals and in high disfavor with those of other religious groups. So we have our Orthodox group with one grand sweeping ges- ture, making a statement like this, "Judaism not only sanctions marriage but sanctities it." that sort of vague generality apart N OW and let's see take what makes the wheels go around. I am given to understand that an imbecile should have children; I am given to understand that one afflicted with tuberculosis should have children; I am given to understand that if wives are so eco- nomically distressed and so physically weak that life is just one more long misery, that it is con- trary to the Jewish law, the law of man and the law of God, to do anything to prevent such wives from having many children. If, as we did find, in many large industrial groups, children born whose parents are unable to supply them with necessities of life and they are permitted to grow up handi- capped physically and mentally, that anything (lone to avoid such a situation is contrary to the law of God and of man and of Judaism. I could go on without limit citing thousands of cases where it is a CRIME AGAINST GOD and HUMANITY for chil- dren to be brought into the world and left INHU- MANLY to grope through life pitiful wrecks. But THAT is all right, gentlemen of the Jewish, and the Catholic and the Protestant religions. To me it merely indicated that we have a long way to go before we are able to INTELLIGENTLY INTER- PRET the LAW of God. READ the other (lay where the rich men don't I give so much. That is, many rich men. There are a handful who to nobly. But in the main most of them sacrifice nothing to enhance the welfare of society. They give apparently large sums during their lifetime and talk about how much they do, and then when they die it is discovered that their wills leave MILLIONS and MILLIONS untouched. I find statements that the wealthy will not dip into their capital funds to give to relief. That, of course, would mean some sacrifice, not enough to hurt. But the man who lives on a wage or a man ill the professions whose income depends SOLELY upon what he makes from DAY to DAY, he should take it out of WHAT? Out of earnings? But if he gets sick or loses his job, or for some reason or other he can't carry on, then his CAPITAL is gone. Of course that's labor, not capital. But by what- ever name we call it, it means that he is expected to give from what he HAS and WHAT HE EARNS until it HURTS. The writer in question said that he hasn't found men of great wealth who have ever even scratched themselves, let alone hurting them- selves by their giving. Judge Mack said the other day to the Zionist Congress that the rich American Jews have been badly hurt through stock crashes and bank failures. That's true enough, but the man in average circumstances is hurt nearly alt the time. AS A COLUMNIST I am very much interested in a letter which Rabbi Schanfarber of Chicago writes to the American Israelite. One of the lead- ing Jewish columnists is Rabbi Louis Newman. It seems that Rabbi Newman has been particularly severe on Reform Judaism and Reform rabbis. Rabbi Schanfarber takes the position that when the American Israelite publishes these attacks on Reform Judaism written by Dr. Newman, that it gives the impression of agreeing with his views. This opens a very interesting discussion. Should a newspaper permit a columnist to contribute articles that are directly opposed to the policy of the paper? For examle, I am not a Zionist. What should be the attitude of those newspapers that pub- lish Random Thoughts and which are in sympathy with the Zionist program? I AGREE with the editor o f the Israelite that he should not start a controversy in his paper with his regular contributors, but that he should con- tinue to advocate the principles for which the paper stands. But I wonder whether the Nation, a great liberal weekly that prides itself on its liberalism and its tolerance, would permit a reactionary col- umnist to find a place for his material in that journal? Conservative papers are expected to open their columns to liberal writers, but it is rare that a liberal paper will offer space regularly to a reactionary. That again is something to think about. Generally speaking, I believe that a colum- nist should express himself freely on the subjects he chooses to discuss, yet at the same time he should have some regard for the sensibilities of the mediums to which he contributes, whose poli- cies may be contrary to his. In other words, there is no need for vindictive attacks, but rather an effort to present fairly the issues. HERE'S something interesting. Mr. Alfred Segal, a Cincinnati Jewish journalist, makes an issue of the discharge of 20 women working in the offices of the Union of American Hebrew Congregations. He says, "If the Union of American Hebrew Con- gregations were a pants factory it might be said, 'Well, business is business. Making and selling pants is no philanthropy. Since there is no profit in pants we have to cut down the payroll.' " But the Union (says Mr. Segal) has to do with the essence of Judaism, with the righteousness of the prophets, with the ethics of the saints, with all the social experience that is of the long life of the Jew. So he feels that if the Union can't pay it individuals should raise a fund of $15,000, the total annual payroll of these workers, and keep their jobs for them. A novel form of picketing was to be sighted the other day at Coney Island. Near the board- walk appeared a man carrying a sign: "Strike. Please take notice on your honor to the checker play- ers behind the stands who want to make a living. You broke your agreement." Soon, if this keeps up, we shall have an Amalgamated Union of OW what shall we say concerning such a ques- Checker and Chess Players, ■ branch of the American Federa- tion? Should a religious organization depen- tion of Labor. And a very large dent upon its membership maintain a payroll that number of the laboring checkering it cannot meet? Is there a greater obligation rest- players will be Jews. ing upon a congregation to maintain, let us say, The professional checker and the salary of its rabbi, than for a business to main- chess player doesn't live off the tain its payroll level? I have read of congrega- cream of the land even in pros- tions that haven't paid their rabbis for months. perous times, and now in these While it is true that the Union of American Hebrew days of depression the only check Congregations is not • pants factory, yet we can- they get is on the board. not lose sight of the fact that in employing office —f— help it must deal PRACTICALLY with ECONOMIC CANNOT CAPITALIZE CHESS t. These checker players get 10 p on ons. If the big-hearted members who have lenty of money want to conduct the business of cents a game—that is, if they win from you. The chess player is a s he Union on the highest possible ethical basis they hould increase their contributions. Or a plan little higher priced—he gets 25 , hould be worked out whereby women should not cents, but actually the checker b s thrown out of employment. But in the present player often makes more money. c ircumstances big business and little business have for the chess battle manifestly hown themselves inefficient in stabilizing working takes more time. It is usually said that the reason o onditions. In other words, some of our captains f industry have turned out to be corporals. They that Jews have not made any no- h eve lacked vision and understanding in dealing table showing in baseball is that w ith social problems. The Union controlled by baseball does not offer the large b usiness men is no different. As in their own busi- financial opportunities such as n esses no in the Union's business. But Mr. Segal's entimental plea is praiseworthy and I hope the (Turn to Next Page.) .omen get their jobs back, N Editor's Note.—A situation strongly reminiscent of that in Hebron after the Palestine riots of 1929 is how Gershon Agronsky, resident correspondent in Palestine of the Jewish Telegraphic Agency, charac. terizes the plight of the Jews of Saloniki's poorest Jewish quarter as the aftermath of the pogrom of June 29. Mr. Agronsky, who has been in Basle covering the Zionist Congress, was hastily dispatch e d to Saloniki to make a first hand survey of conditions there. His graphic picture of what he saw and of the suffering of the Saloniki Jews is given below in a special cable to the Jewish Telegraphic Agency, By GERSON AGRONSKY SALONIKI, July 7.—What my eyes have seen in the devastated Campbell section (poorest Jewish quarter razed by fire on June 29), where .soldiers have been busy in the last few days clearing away wreckage and nailing up doors and windows of deserted homes, was powerfully reminiscent of Hebron in 1929. Even approach to the Jewish quarter, as forbidding as Hebron after the riots, and permission to inspect the ruins, was refused me until I armed myself with a pass from the governor himself. Of the spacious synagogue only a charred brick frame remains, and miraculously, too, the vast wooden Aron Kodesh, which sustained no damage greater than discoloration from flames and smoke. But the Aron Kodesh itself is empty, van- dals having removed and dese- crated the Serer Torahs whose shredded and defined remains are deposited with the chief rabbi. Here and there, clambering over the burned floors, I found, and showed to two armed officers who constituted my escort, bottles which contained kerosene and benzine with which the fire was started when 2,000 rioters swooped down on 200 defenseless Jewish families whom they surrounded and imprisoned. How it happened that none of the Jews were burned alive is a mystery explanable perhaps by the fact that many of the residents of the Campbell quarters are war vet- erans, and although possessing no weapons more potent than sticks, knew how to beat off the well- armed enemy threatening the lives of their wives and children. Destruction Thorough, The Bicur Cholim clinic might easily have been the Hadassah clinic in Hebron. So thorough was the destruction that it is not sur- prising that after a night of ter- ror the pharmacist in charge be- came almost deranged. Like the Iladassah clinic in llebron, this Bikur Cholim clinic ministered to the entire suburban neighborhood, including the Calamaria quarter, whence the attackers came and where thus far only five have been arrested. Complete thoroughness marked the destruction of the school house on the walls of which election pla- cards in Judea-Spanish remain with a photograph of a Venizelist candidate, for the Saloniki Jews are good Venizelists. It is true that only 11 barracks were burned but it is equally true that not one house remains intact for what the flames did not encompass the hooligans managed to smash. Within 50 yards of the burned synagogue is a bakery belonging to two Christians. The only one in the Jewish quarter to whom I spoke was the partner of Leonides Papas, one of the owners of the bakery, who was fatally wounded by a bullet. Papas' partner was puzzled, for the Jews of the Camp- bell quarter were his and his late partner's friends. Why, then, was the quarter invaded and why should Papas have lost his life, he wanted to know. The answer is because he refused to join the in- vaders against his customers and friends. Pogrom Unleashed. From what I have seen in the Campbell quarter, I am forced to the conclusion that there was a pogrom with all the passions and fury unleashed behind it. But if mercifully the Greek hooligans did not achieve a wholesale carnage it is not because the spirit was not there but because the flesh was weaker, for, alter all, Greeks are not Arabs and Saloniki Jews are not Hebron rabbinical students. Beds on the pulpit of the Beth Shaul Synagogue—the only Jew- ish sanctuary surviving the June 29 fire—beds instead of pews, which were removed; cooking utensils instead of praying shawls and phylacteries, the wail of the homeless and of children instead of the orderly Sephardic chanting —these are the sights and sounds that greet the,visitor to the house of prayer where 50 families from the Campbell quarter fled, and where perhaps for the first time since the synagogue was built in 1896 no services were held Sat- urday because of the refugees. But the privations of congestion pale when the refugees one after another begin unfolding the fright. ful story of the night of terror of last Monday. Bullets lodged in chairs. Bullets riddled the oil- cloth on tables. The owner of one such chair gave the police 27 empty cartridges. Simeon Revah and his terror- stricken wife describe the death of their 2-year-old child, flung on the floor by the hooligans, Moshe Alwo shows where a bullet struck him and tells how he was stunned by a blow from a club. A war veteran, one of 5,000 Jewish re- servists in Saloniki, recounts how he hurled himself on the ground with his wife and children crouch- ing beside him to avoid the hail of bullets as he watched his house go up in flames. ;7- No Work Available. Dozens of men speaking simul- taneously say no work is to be had since the trouble began. Another declares the police took sticks from the Jews when the military were unable to overpower the riot- ers. Yet another tells of how the fire-fighting apparatus was delayed an hour because of a torn-up road. Three Jews, arrested during the conflagration and released only today, assert thew were led man- acled past a menacing crowd that pelted them with stones. A deaf and dumb girl patheti- cally shows a broken mirror. Wo- men nursing infants point to a solitary garment with no other clothing for change. A Russian woman, a Seventh Day Adventist, married to a Caucasian Jew, says she never knew a pogrom in Rus- sia and now wants to return there. Another woman complains her husband is under arrest be- cause three knives were found near him, left there, she has no doubt, by the invaders. A horror- stricken mother recalls that her baby was placed in a trunk with the intention of abandoning it to the flames, but happily it was dis- covered in time. Everywhere in the synagogue and the school of the Alliance Is- raelite there are subdued voices and lowered eyes over the viola- tion of four or five women whose men folks were beaten senseless, facts with which mercifully only the rabbinate is entrusted. "No Campbell" was the chorus of replies to my question whether the refugees would return whence they came. "You see, it is the front where the enemy was more brutal than I have ever seen," a Jewish veteran of the Greek No- tionalist army explains. ;4- LESSONS IN HEBREW By MAX BROD Full SO years had passed ere I began 'fo learn the ancient language of my people. It seemed, for SO years I had been dam!. And now. so luny restrained, three mighty Pounds Shattered tny ear, as lightning shatters clouds. Sounda which might once have been -) DO' And blessed the growing boy and his first love. And given hope and courage tn the man. Too late the lullaby—now strident and harsh. No. m though angered by the long deltas'. It was like lightning and the echoing thunder. M•king • huge confusion. Yet I bowed My head with pleasure, ri one listens oft an ass re mother. Out of all this wrath Wide deserts rose, and throng. of fugi- tives, And 'pies, and long•forgotten blare of trumpets, And the •nclent call of God on Sinai —Translated from the German by C. W. These, In the American Hebrew. The mile is long to him who is tired. Never follow on the heels of a sorrow or it may turn back. Doing nothing is doing VIEWS OF LEADING JEWS 1 RABBI is anxiou s FERDINAND M. ISSERMAN, St. Louis: "The mother who to do justice to her child will make herself the master of the knowledge available, in order to encourage the development of the most wholesome character traits. The mother who fails to do this is one who is not doing justice to her children and who may sible for the perpetuation of undesirable character traits.' be respon- DR. JUDAH L. MAGNES, Chancellor of Hebrew University in Jerusalem: "There are very few opportunities in Jerusalem for a stu- dent to pay his way through the university. We have no dormitories where students can clean rooms, serve as waiters, etc., as in America. The need for scholarships is very acute in Palestine, probably more so than anywhere else. The university endeavors to employ students wherever possible, even as unskilled laborers on buildings in the course of erection, but such work interferes with their studies and, moreover, is scarce. Prizes and scholarships are one of the greatest needs of the university, since so many students of considerable ability lack even the study minimum needs for necessities and suffer serious hardship in order to at all." ssr t.1 kt• ,1 3 • • • DR. ISRAEL Ii. LEVINTHAL, Rabbi .4+ and President of Rabbinical Assembl of Brooklyn Jwish e Center y of merica: A "Wit the severe financial depression that came upon the people of this land, h there was a let-up in the organization of new congregations. Many an existing congregation suddenly found itself within the meshes of financial diffi- 5 .19 culties which it had not anticipated, and the burden of hardship and suffering fell upon the rabbi. The rabbi, too, 11 alas, is to be found amongst the great army of America's unemployed. With seminaries and theological schools graduating large claws, and with the cessation in the organization of new congre gations challenges our immediate attention." ions, a problem is created that • • • ELIAS TOBENKIN, Journalist:"In fighting ie i in Soviet Russia, the Jew has • strong ally in the factory anti-Semitism en ;. s the Soviet government succeeds in imbuing the great mass When of Slav tt workmen with industrial discipline, which it is trying to do, the differ- :f- ences between the Slav workman and Jewish workman will disappear and the friction between them will be minimized accordingly," '' '' ' ' :MMnatIturszr,A4TA