Thr.1)ErRonrinlisn
fiCLE
R0/
and THE LEGAL CHRONICLE
IEDLTR011; /EWIS/I
Bren, stated that he heartr•roig
Ll
KON ICLE Van
scenes which took place at Damascus h ad
and THE LEGAL CHRONICLE
- ,
Published Weekly by The Jewish Chronnle Publishing C•., Inc.
neneral Office and Publication Building
525 Woodward Avenue
Telephone: Cadillac 1040 Cable Address: Chronicle
I sondon mute.
14 Stratford Place, London, W. 1, England.
Subscit • • . t
Tenth Anniversary of First Graduating
Class of United Hebrew Schools
previously been brought to the notice of
the president by a communication from 1 , 111'
C0111, 111 at that place, in consequence there-
of. a letter of instruction was immediately
written to our consul at Alexandria, a ropy
of which is herewith transmitted for your
satisfaction."
Secretary of State Forsyth added in his
Vka: ic
J11
Dlscrtminatlon
1•0:111. ∎
I
'
'5
II
1933
,t'a I I
I
SI'r""I'Y "I
lyar 23, 5693
_ .lobo Gbddun Esq.,
-
Helen Keller Speaks Her Mind.
score,' a triumph, girl
The
Paul Joseph Goebbel,, Minister of Propa-
ganda, the wise man of the groat Ilitlor
regime, has handed down the decision that
"Jewish intellectualism is dead!" \Votan's
glory is enhanced!
It was left for Helen Keller, one of the
noblest women of all time, benefactress of
the blind and the deaf even though herself
blind and deaf, to give one of the severest
blows to German bigotry, in her statement
which she addressed as follows "tee the
student body of Germany :"
History has taught you nothing if you
I) I
"di." I '"v.
Aug I I
doll
1 ,'-
nil,
Similarly emphatic and impressive was
the attitude of Queen Victoria's govern- I
ment. The queen not only personally re-
ceived Sir Moses Montetiore to extend to
him her sympathies to the Jewish people,
but placed at his disposal the use of her
private yacht to cross the English Channel
on his mission to Syria.
In Parliament, on June 22, 1840, Rotert
Peel introduced the question of the Dam-
ascus libel by declaring "that it was merely
necessary to mention the matter in the
lower house, to reach the great ends of
justice and humanity." Lord Palmerston
replied to Peel with this statement:
We have hopes that Germany will yet
"I have already directed the English consul-
general, Hodges, to represent to Mehm•t Ali
, learn from history. But if Germany does
what effect the news of such atrocities must
not learn this lesson, then the world will
produce in Europe, and that it was in his own
teach it, in the course of time, what it
interest to inquire into the matter, and hand
over to punishment the guilty parties, if they
means to be decent and humane.
,
l,, ,
i ,,,, 1, , , ,..
r .
,. -
',ice of • tlai Jews to cony,' -di, •., z i
•
•
EMPEROR R I... ITRS MATTER
"Vripi ,. . , . . 1.'clolary.
Th e 1) .4
noncan. a i ,, ii,i, ...•-
,, ,. to burn the Talmud. They id , of
II
I I e •;1111elle be thrownOlt.
thrown
OW
Ile' elalle J ,
w 1,101 is supposedly a translation o:
- to differ with it in zairtain re-ino •
Iii , I!
TRIBUTE BY BARUCH
Th i odor i . Barueh's tribute is a
y of opinions of a number
grioluates. Mr. Baruch
w di,
"We who knew Nil-. Nlarkson
zip I lather -ay We kill,' +1 alllglll'
I!
not often that stu-
i al'Il to Iningh. the at-
, • and deference
II one of
Waif and 'hell !“11 -
',got-the-button - with
,1zing in a Man Ishii is
t minute to get into an
1:1 , • argument alaiut Neu
. I :11.• poetry.
AlwilyS that
• n interest, that live and rest-
, nz•rey manifests itself, cast-
of eharm that is part
ocin himself on his listen-
•,
tepic was too faysid fon
lite grasp of his versatile, ever-
prohing mind—a mind that seem-
, il to retain a great deal Milted,
t vet r recreated that which it
taintal in original and colorful
f, , e111.
ee
, op lain -lop :del friendly
gi,e•itridditke. Y, I sell was the
relationship that -1,1.ing tip be-
"Ile was remarkably fluent in
tween Mr. Ilarkson :did our se lves
1 , , III his speech and ,''tutor. For
through th e years 01 our associa-
Mall to whom English was not
tion together.
"I can still see him now, mile- ' native, he sensed the felicitous
use of idiom emit the correct turn
ing with enthusiastic alacrity
of a phrase exceedingly well, far
about the classroom, explaining
Letter, in fact, than many born
a passage in the Gomorrah, wrap-
in this country. Ile read yorite-
ping himself and the class in a
idusly, constantly exchanging
sort of intellectual warmth . • .
Looks with his students, compar-
His lirown, good natured face
ing, criticizing, analyzing. His
fairly bean's with the jey of a
,lasses became literary study-
scholar in the millet of a problem.
I
and disoussion-groups al-
Its radiance is contagious. The
most unconsciously.
The cold
sparkhng stride and naughty
formality
of pedagogic routine is
gleam in his eye betokened
something I shall never associate
the approach of some juicy mor-
with 3Iarkson's classes.
sel of humor of which the man
had infinite store. Forth it flowed
"Above all—and this, to my
from his lips, Gild with gesture
mind stands out—he shared in
rind cadence, unfolding itself with
the triuniph and tribulations of
all the delicate artistry that a
his students with utter self-aban-
connoisstiur in humor can impart
don, as if they were his own, yea,
to the most trivial tale. The story
more. I shall never fidget his
reminds him of another, per-
pride at the fact that one of our
chance of a third, and he is glee-
number graduated with distinc-
fully off on a tangent, making
tion from high school, the spa-
holiday with the students. Soon
pathetic, unassuming way in
we are running the gamut of
which he entered into our lives.
Elizabethan literature, dipping
It was hard to look upon him
eagerly into Keats and Macaul-
merely as a teacher—he had be-
ay, skirting the trail of Brander
(Turn to Next Page)
Matthews, the great American
e,,,,
II -
I ,, b ,,,
Th ,
, ,, ,,,.,
1,,,•,,,.
tee be a true account of how one German Jew corresponded with
American relatives.
After the Nazi outbreak, this German Jew, whose first name is
Sigmund, wrote to his uncle in the States, something to this effect:
"Everything is tine here. There are no troubles 'The Nazis
are very decent. In fact, they came into our house and treated us
like the good German gentlemen they are. There was no interference
with the business of Uncle Fritz. And our cousin, Professor Samuels,
I has not been interfered with at all. Signed: Sigmund Osser."
were discovered, whilst the innocent victims
STRESS ON NATIONALISM
A MISSIONARY'S LETTER
Louis Lipsky, Dr, Julius Morgan-i 1
Foe the benefit of some, it should be said that the ward "otter" -
should tie indemnified, if this were still possible.
'There is enough material in Mr. kern, and Bernard Richards. There is a Hebrew idiom conveying something of the meaning of "Oh,
From London to the Sentinel of
I have also sent instructions to her majesty's
Chicago comes a letter written b y Hoffman 's statement for many 1 is only one correction I wish to I yeah" except that it is a little more violent,
•
•
•
consul in Damascus to make a thorough in-
Conrad Hoffman, Jr., general sec- sermons from Jewish pulpits, to say make in the statement and that is,i
Most disappointing in the present Ger-
retary of the International }lit- nothing of editorials in the Jewish Mr. Hoffman is in error when he 'GUIDO JUNG
vestigation into all that has taken place, and
man-Jewish situation is the failure of the
part
felt
in
home
an
exact
report
as
to
the
some
respects
says
that
Jews
are
urged
to
pa-1
to send
Italy has sent a Jewish emissary to confer with Roosevelt.
sionary Council, of which John It. lin'''. I have
which the European consuls had taken in
United States Government to act in behalf
Mott is chairman, commenting on Rs Mr. Hoffman does. There has tronize Jewish shops. In all MY England has sent MacDonald, France sent Ilerriot, and Italy sent
the matter."
elY too much stress experience I cannot recall even the Jew, Johuda or Guid o Jung, th e son, by the way, of German
certain statements appearing in , bee" entirely
of oppressed and persecuted Jews. As a
Much good may be said to have resulted this column. I believe Mr. Hoff.' placed upon the NA TIONAL1S51 z the suggestion of such a policy in I parents.
matter of fact, there is a powerful prece-
the Jet, I 'ay this, that there the Jewish press.
Some Jewish newspapers on the Continent r•marked on the
from the sufferings caused by the Damas- man is sincere in his desire to be of
I
—::—
between Juda-i
dent in favor of such action.
1 fact that when llithir's lieutenant, Goering, flew to sec Mussolini,
service to the Jews in this is no inconsistency bet
cus affair. It cemented friendship between of
Jew . LEWISOHN'S VIEWS
ism and Americanism, if
And :hey read in
:
that
Nlussi,lini turned him over to Guido Jung.
the
prestige
of
the
country
and
Turning back the pages of history to the
Jews and Christians in enlightened coun- organization which h e represents. interprets his Judaism religious'.
Right in line with the ideas at thi s Mussolini attempting indirectly to teach the German Fascist
year 18 ,10, American Jews will find great
y expressed, I wish t o ca
call
at-
lender
ador
a
little
lesson
in
tolerance.
asking
ed-
Zionism
m
is
SO
great
that
I
a
am
tries. It aroused Jews to efforts in behalf
• I tension of my led, ers to I it. posi-
. .-
• - • but I h •
satisfaction in the knowledge that this
d ors of the papers in which Rini-the.
of their people. It was as a result of the • dont
Thoughts appear to publish ways Wondered whether it has not i Don taken by Ludwig Lewisohn in A HIDDEN MOTIVE?
country's tradition in defending the rights
e
to
the
disservice
rendered
a
grave
,
n article in the Nation which is
Damascus affair that M. Adolphe Cre- this open letter to
This may or may not be true. The Reed plausible interpretation
of the religiously persecuted is one of the
si ssime
Jew by Cr
is rat la am exactly what Mr. Hoffman opposes is, of course, that Nlussolini was not endeavoring to preach any
mieux, noted French Jew who co-operated
Y JEWISH FRIENDS
national characteristics. I call the , as a menace to the welfare of ' tolerance, but it just happens that Guido Jung is Mu--el'.'' , Nlinister
most honored and consistent in all history.
IN AMERICA
with Sir Moses Monte ht in behalf of the
s t i t c au t i i . a nr ienattst ;:n ft i l'11 n r. 1,1 if ilti , n n i , a r n e t r u e-pt.,.
Par - Jewry.
NIr. Lewisohn takes the , of Finance, and consequent ly Goering would have t-- -. , '''lei.
Today we hear the echo of a noble Amer-
'I am rather troubled by ,i,
position that the Jews in Germany. anywN
Damascus vtctims, organized the Alliance
ay yer.theles , , it must base , been a lesson in tide ', - t : Goering
much noise and propaganda in the ' mulling different schools of Jewish became more German than Jewish.:
ican tradition dating back 9:1 years, to the
And how the German Fascist must have she..-! I'. }late to
Israelite Universelle. Above everything ' American press, and notably in thought with reference to the is-
days of the Damascus affair.
Quoting the Centralvtirtiin: "'With ileal with an Italian Jew of Germanarentage.
Nor e:1, • :, lIglerist
p
always remember the good the Jewish press which is urging sues raised in the letter. Fur ex- ignity and courage we' s hall know I government derive much plea-ure from the fact that ItnI.. :z ,,,, MI A
The disappearance on Feb. 5, 1840, of else, Jews will
Jews to be slew's. 1 thought that amid,. -itch men as Rabbi Stephen ho w
, • , the
ur
to
bear
upon
the
soil
of
our'
Hitler
took
his
lessons
in
Ford-ii,
sent
a
Je
as
its i -
the Capuchin monk Tomas° :Intl his servant services of the English and American gov- you were Americans, first, last s, W, , , Dr. Da id Phillipson,
v Dr., homeland the intiasurtis inflicted United States.
ernments in behalf of our people during and always, but seemingly you Cyrii- Adler, Rabbi Samuel II.
by
Germans
upon
Germans,"
:Gr.
Hal
e
was picked up by enemies of the Jews as
d- ha, been damning the Communists hocazio
any dign
want to be Jews in any circum- Goldin-oil, Rabbi A. IL Silver,. hail
Lewisohn
says, "If thes e peopleMarv, was a Jew. And how it must gall him When i e. 'j
a means of pressing the ritual murder lie those trying times 90 years ago.
stances, as well as Americans. Is
ty or courage, if they land of i Fascism regards a Jew as an outstanding 1 , H' '•
In the present German-Jewish tragedy, it really possible to be both. se , -
against them. The French were then the
I al.
permitted then
themselves to
That is, it would gall hint, if there were logic in !, .,. Ilitir,d',
Great Britain has already spoken nobly. ing that Judaism implies not I I 1 II :, "A LAYMAN'S LIBRARY" i lac ie ever
the mush' of reality, there but I fear me they are not troubled with an OVVI'llJee -I 'feat CPI,
protectors of the Roman Catholics in the
FOR BOOK WEEK
But in the face of the above-quoted his- religion, but race and nation W-
would have been Jewish gymnas- imillity. They are much better at marching with ,!,, , 1 tetiii,I=.
East, and French officials aimed in every
Are you not in danger !if
eed!?
inns, a Jewish university, the
toric precedent. why is the United States creating
a serious conflict of dual
In view of the fact that ".1 etc- formation of a Jewish party, at
way possible to strengthen their govern-
,
silent?
loyalties in the Jew•, and making ish Book Weew" is being observed tea,a. ', in
ment's position in the Orient.
,p • • .
him, as it were, an 'island within?' throughout the country from fity IliFY i f I n the t' i '' t ' Y''''' "Y ak . . The y
that' '
'
With this politically selfish motive in
it
is
interesting
to
note
th
11-21
"You demand complete equality
not even that. 'They have not
ago the 1 man of
view, Ratti Menton, French consul in Dam-
in all things, and America has as- R short time
protested against the brutal for-
Congregations
By ALBERTO GERCHUNOFF
eminent novelist, discussed I sured you of that, but simultane- Ara' Henn Ilebrek
bidding
of Scheehitah everywhere.
ascus, turned prosecutor of the Jewish
esh
publiAcd . "A Layman's Jwi
iiusly you are demanding to he
whine they are Germane.
people and WIIS responsible for a series of the problem of education before the Pan- different, in a sense remain spat.. Library," by Rabbis Israel Rattan, They
Translated
from
th e Mundo Israelita of Buenos Aire. by
Germans.
Their
ancestors
went
I. Egelsan and Jacob R. :Mar-
oppressions of aged Jew's as Nvell as women hellenic educational conference, and in the I.s nut tih . i ) s t hin ci.;:t ina s , i ,s(ti ehn ia t ,? , tlh',,:rli,.,tn,, Louis
Philip L. Rosenthal.
forth in other ages like men and
cus, all of Cincinnati, a tract listing
and children, in an effort to extract from course of her remarks pointed to the faults t itn noit.t
herpes
and
died
with
the
SIIIIA
II
number of good available hooks
R
"Wi. also question
the WiSilone
ISRAEL on their lips." That all
"No one will say Kaddish let
thought also that Leine a Jew
advertising
you
which
should
be
in
the
library
of
them an admission that Jews actually are in our present educational sY stem • and of the cotemlive
nia• he true. yet Le•isohn ones
my grave." Thus speaks Hein-
there was no greater siirrow for
t every Jewish home.
required to use the blood of Christians in urged adult educational efforts, Said Miss iii., giving i„ the .1 0 ,,..kh mu , uni
rich Heine and he says it in his
his soul than that of !id leav-
The I- won's department of Syna- exactly what ice are, in my judg-
women who have become promo-
saddest and
most touching
ing anyone behind to pay him
in gogue and School F.xtension has re. ment, being justly criticized for,
their Passover matzos. Evidence to prove II urst :
ent in one way or another
poetry. While his body was
The
day of the alibi of the tired business
hooks published, In addition to the namely, pleading for a .1h;WISII
the tribute of saying that
that a Turkish mule driver threatened the
American life. It is a displaying
on the list of the PARTY, for a JEWISH UNIVER-
lying helpless in an armchair
mournful homage, the pryer
and 'peavocking.' of their achieve- woks
contained
SITY,
for
a
'further
driving-us.in-
monk's life was suppressed. A young Jew
new
books
for
Jew-
and
the
stifT
eyelids
7, n I i s "'hini t a ‘,' IZeli,t t t t!ti. in tw ni a liti ■h m t•al r
tract, several
rigidly cov-
for the dead, the said , had'
.
ments; nn ale will deny that t ,u ish
ered the pupils of his eyes in
status at low average. Ills alibi -no time for
dish, which is lift , after death.
I children and adults. It was sag. ; upon-ourselves and separatinu' as
who ventured to offer information that
have
many
achievements.
but
fo
e
gested
to
all
rabbis
that
in
view
of
I
still
further
from
the
life
and
which
per-i•ted the memory of
cultural aspects of life- is ahout to he snatched
Then it was that he !...eiposed
would lead to the discovery of the guilty
you to be cu brazen about these ' .., Itwish }look Week," these publi- people about us. It seems to elle
ancient visions--the Rhine, on
from him. The sooner our schools seed
the sorrowful lament, -Nabody,
tends
to
a
certain
nausea
and
do,
that
the
time
is
coming
very
near,
ciitions
should
be
brought
to
the
party uas beaten to (heath. The aged Jos -
silvery nights, lined with lin-
leg, come to regard adult education as not
will say Kaddish at icy grave.
not help the creation of good ace!- at tention of Temple members.
in fact it is here, the time that I
Nobody? For many winters
dens
and
in
the
shadow
thereof
merely
an
accessory
privilege
but
as
a
vital
eph Laniado died as a result of tortures by
Mg. for which we are so keen. and
Among these arc, for children: predicted years ago, when we shall
the snow: has been falling over
the vanished silhouette of the
ntle
the inquisitors. Moses Abulatia embraced
which we are so anxious to ire'-
"The Great March;' !iv Rose G. have to HAVE A SHOW-DOWN
Lorelei—he recalled his life
the tombstone of the g e
u l ta, t It?ine
• f VI l ' 'rt h e i n As=ri:nni Z.. Aarini:i r l'iacr: .;irsc
serve. Finally, we are rather con- Lurie, a series of stories of post- and decide whether we are to be
Islam to escape minis and indignities.
poet of "The Songs" and his
I
spent in anxiety, in a sort of
,..,ner we are going to bridge fine of the Twist
assimilationists
tin
the
proper
corned
that
you,
as
Americans.
biblical
Jewish
history
written
for
beautiful
melancholy
image
still
tune.
Never
before
tumultuous
and
confusing
soli-
needs
of
our
fundamental
The civilized world was aroused. The
,
h
ldi a n nn acr stmple and c one,. meaning) in separatists.
tude, full of heroic hopes and
lives in the memor• of nun as,
, T r I et,n,; ;,i t iiii;.::.y,,.,iler t ti,:hau2 , , r ,I■1 have generations I should urge your compatriot-
he-,
consuls of Austria. Prussia. Russia, England
—::—
also Americans—to cater to Jew- rational manner.
magnificent dreams. What had
if he were yet reclining In
-
"Peace Stories for .Jewish ('hit- OPPOSE INTERFERENCE
become of those hopes of the
arm-chair next to the window
and the United States exerted their efforts The trouble with such warnings is that ish shop., primarily. Why urge
Rabbi Jonah Wise comes hack
such preference, and is it really ore n," by Dr. Abraham Cr o nhkek, a
time of the drummer Legrand
w atching
pa ne
in behalf of the innocent Jewish victims they SO often come too late, that it is in fair play' Above all, in A Mericit selected number o f Jewish and non- from Europe and tells us that and
;
v
te t l h t,:,
of the hopes aroused by
a.A
tre
fla kes
who were tortured by Ratti Menton's in- time of tragedy that they are expounded where we are trying to create and Jewish stories, related tie the ideal while the German-Jews want to
re-echoes
the love affair with the inef-
of me n
maintain contacts with their fel-
fable and simple Carlota?
h eart.
in
quisitors. But to the two English-speaking for the benefit of the business man. Of make permanent a spirit and prim- of peace.
"The Burning Bush," by Joseph lows in other countries and that
IS
of absolute impartiality. More
of grief. It is winter and It
When the poet succeeded in
countries goes the credit for 11:1Ving been course, in the prosperous days the tired tic,.
things
t han that, is it not exceedingly Gaetaa collection of stories taken relief is urgently needed, yet
I think on the
cold.
raising
an
eyelid
with
his
tremb-
will
Jewish folk-lore.
THEY WISH TO WORK OUT
most emphatic in defense of the Jews and business man refused to listen to such ad- dangerous? Sooner or later you, from "The
that were, on dreams that
Unconquered," by Joseph THEIR OWN SOLUTION OF
I,,nc
ling hand, emaciated by illness,
not come true, on hopes
in repudiation of those who aimed to keep vice. He u as the all-powerful, the all- will create by such procedure.
Gaer , stories charmingly told from THEIR OWN PROBLEMS WITH
1 -•
h e saw the snow: falling in the
whether y ou wi ll
faded away, And on walling
alive a stupid medieval lie. Meetings of ! knowing, Now he emerges the goat, and State within the body ' politic of apocryphal Rad rabbinical legrnds. THE CERMANT GOVERNMENT. streets of l'aris and he recalled
the solitary, profound life Of
For adults:
In other worids they
!, would thank
Christians as Iv( II as Jews were held our- the ignorant one at that.
.‘ineries, and the American pubb;
that man whose word- bl!isscal
the distant epoch when the
'
"A History of the Jews in the us or
the.
not interfering too each
us
mere
miraculous city first appeared
in our hearts like roses in
ing July and August of 1840 in London and
Let those who have learned the lessons will never tolerate such any
nited tSates," by Ile It•..1, Io. and possibly making a bad situa-
1
than a German, or a British, or a
before
his
fascinated
gaze.
He
Jews in the
Manchester, England. and in New York. of the present-day failures take Miss Chinese State within the country. :niter, the story • an of d i the
P:ehts.
tints
than We do.
l
ee
'
' .
believed at that time that ha
i .i e n ae. INriagyhttingtah
"0 burins
a presentation
these 1 oiled States
the
to
attention
- I
call
was mounted on Don Quixote's
Philadelphia and Richmond. Va.. in the Hurst's warnings tee heart. • Jews particu-
fled from the branches J.f
thoughts out of !sincere friendship of Jewish life in America in the GOEBBELS' MISSION
sublim• steed and with bold
German lindens to nr,s in th e
its historical development.
United States. The expressions of sym- larl• have much to learn from the manner for you. I should hate to see the
re
I note where Hitler, with his
anger and intrepidity he began
wire-spreading chestnut
elf Judaism," by
alnwg
pathy on the part of the English-speaking in which they ignored learning and schol- development of anything like the P •• The Ceremonies
usual reckless disregard of public
to attack the windmills, to res-
that cast their shadow.
ro fessor A. Z. Idelsohn, a pupa-
Germany rrofessor
op
in
ion,
has
asked
Goebbels,
the
present
anti-Semiti;tu
in
cue
captive princesses and to
countries led to the honorable release of arship. Back to the book, to study and to
.
the avenues of Paris!
•: tar, profusely illustrated desalt,-
e
of Enlightenment (Unen.
avenge miscarried justice. Dis-
could you believe that no on
I fear fir Jewry in America if lion of the Jewish religious core- Mini
the innocent victims, following the interces- knowledge, should he one of the first ef- but
z i
k pe r y e o rtie
lightenment would be more nor-
it persists in this propaganda to moni Is.
tant days, days submerged in
g . r e d t tender r you in
u
would
sion of a mission to Syria by leading Euro- , forts in the return to normalcy.
mike Jews more Jewish, and there.
the hoary past! Now his quix-
• . T e Jewish Peace Book," by ter. test I to represent Germany at the
t h e ed ge
tribute
by lees American. I should like . & ' bra am Cronbach, which conta ns World's Fair in Chicago. That is
1.
otic steed Was that bent-armed
pean Jews, headed by Sir Moses Monte- .
to see you foster and promote the besides the stories for children, es- merely a malicious gesture and I
those who have tasted pain and
and high-backed chair, and out-
flore.
Shaarey Zedek's donor dinner last Sun- 'religious side of Jewry, but ter-
question
whether
Germany
cant
side the window snow-flakes
net the racial and rational says on war and peace, pithy say-
bitterness., and in yell!. honor.
It was in response to resolutions adopted day was such a demonstration of loyalty tainly
wor e slowly falling. On such
ings Of ear sages upon this subject. get away with it. They can't if
•1111 an orphan's banality and
r
s
which eems to prayers, responsive readings and the men in charge of the "Century
an afternoon, when Matilde
"'Ines, I recite the praTe
protest meeting in New York on Aug. ' for the congregation that it gave the lie to self-Consciousness
ue.
tone,o
be the case in the pr e ,ent definite ret.itatiens available for use in as- of Progress have any regard for
was
iombing
her
dog,
he
which in the harmoni..us
16, 1840. signeii by J. B. Kursheedt as the charge that there is total indifference of cultivation within Jewry. it
public sentiment in this country.
,,, m idy
thought of the snow- which was
of the prophets of I n ns
chairman and Theodore J. S('ixas as secre- a to Jewish matters. There are still many lieve me ah , olutelY sincere and
is per. • falling on th e narrow lanes of
"Whitt We .It %vs Relieve," by I If the loud-voiced
with the memorable
begins
. Goebbeis
,
that Secretary of State John Forsyth, I who take their synagogue and their Jew- !concerned lest discrimination of Rabbi Sam ut I Cyhen, a look pro. 1 ntitterl to come it wll merely in- the cemetery. the cemetery , words 'Yisgadal Veviskadash - i;
I the Jew should develop in Amer• senting the salient facts about Jud- l vile a lot of trouble for every-I where Jews rest under the be-
''May ye be ennobled and
writing in the name of President Martin ishness seriously.
' body concerned.
ica."
I aim in its various phase!.
nign French soil. And he
sanctified . • • "
RANDOM THOUGHTS
•
arks
"h
II. Joseph
KADDISH
i'Lfa't. un:11
h■
I
I
■i
a
at a
tart',
61,
vay
': a
s.ha■■:Il
Need for Adult Education.
Fannie Hurst,
0
,, . y. „
'I'' ' " "l' "aid! I l l'l
will
I'lla l s , l ' I ' tal " t..I , I
eratiloyment, but now?
1 ..iiiiiii Ileuchlin."
••lizt you know that here many
•
•
Jew ish merchants, doctors, law-
).
. 1. 11,,,,,, have
. ,,,.,1 1„:.,:
.t n ,::.,
FL h,A, ._
, M .,,1 E ,,i1S ,,,,,,,y t. ii ..t.ip,,,,,a,..,..,,,i,
L I LC„filLs1 , 1. 01NsI
glad PUBLIC
-, rs and young students are
the pi ollioizi to burn
o i-,
o! work, even though n mual. the ill his- „;
to Ind
ill a factory for 40 cents a day? spread 011 11 10
Europe, The latest development j, el,,,, i b ,,o,d , a,
,
“ 'Hatter , how
had it is trill
N
.,.
l you, to whom the 1:1111,1.1,/,' refer, I'd the matter o f horning the Talmud
i.mp:deo ,h with for derfdon, has ad, istal against it.
yet your lif
ilt',
e, as co
Ile suggested ins/owl that courses
th e life
re ..f.. a" EusI :„Ear "I' vaa 'hi "' in Ilehrziw be in-titateil in all of the German universities.
is quite d iff erent. A O so ItinS ;ego.
"The Ihnilinleans are choking with rage at 11euchlin's decision,
'.v1.
and they have published a most scandalous pamphlet attaok
,ng the
'I'll' ';'lh' ' a r'il lar mhi "Til l' ":w ';;.:Icil:I'm'ist noble and scholarly Reuchlin. Pamphlets pro amt 1 , 11 hare t5
dlowed
i gr: .:,,.„,,,„1\fr„
alortew rl i,fltii. i isn wt- iiti‘h tinisi.aelnialcut lht iunivai, ix:it; ' In
tiffewsakt •tn:, LA :s ot ,h, :: result, the Church as a who', Ins-,.„,,,,
i
of those joining in the a-aunt :dam':
the Church is a fiery young churchman named Nlartin Luther, tbhat
til iei 'ilis. :::; Yth e i u ZI,..-,.,,tt n ation against h e
hasn't said against the church isn't much."
•
•
-•
Germany and against the murder- '
.
ers and rut-throats who take thnsi- CHURCH IS SPLIT
selves for Germans, is \airy strong.
"Frankfort, April.—l'he fight against the Church, ,'Lich origin-
menu
-
no
o
‘ ated as
the result f the proposal for the burning of 'Talmu
d
ha, split
\e
fa_ctubrutY.d iiri t liti:t Ie .' '
which
l i'‘ " I r'll lY u ll . all l'hrk4endom in two camps; f i at hidics and Protestants or Luth eran ,.
We visit nu Ger - The flames which were intended for the Talmud hav e
German mark.
burned an
man films, and anything which is irreparable hole in the Church
Churchinstead."
•
•
•
in the slightest degree German
has no worth to us.
' IT'S Such tire'
strange item: which I read. But I must admit that
battle. i' .-\i'll iti li":iv ,l 'et•wlsifei'n af nh'tii itt lattihe 1 I was mistaken in saying that I read them in a German paper. I was
countries, as also in England, mistaken, fur to be sure there was no newspaper published in Frank-
France, Belgium, Poland, andonly' i fort at that date. Nevertheless the facts stated are authentic and you
a Part of America (which is , or - may read them in any good history of the Middle Age'. AMI if you
rowfolf have taken up this battle want to read a rather good account of the matter, t urn to eerlieIZ'S
:against the barbarian beast which Hi,i 0i . y of th e. et,,,, v„t e,,,,„ IV,
•
•
a
calls itself Germany. All that you',
read in the papers is true. Many ' GAVE BIRTH TO PROTESTANTISM
homeless Jews have fled here from •
Nothing less than the Protestant Reform:dies came about
Germany, and the stories they tell through the proposed burning of Jewish book- in 15111
make the hair rise all on the head.
.5, we survey the scene today, we art. apt tii -.1y: "Oh, nothing
The actuality
actuality is 1,01 more than will Miele out of this burning of Jewish book, today but
the journals • write. This is not a speeches by Herr Gotibbels and some smoke."
battle with half a ntillion Jews,
But the Jews in 1510—at the beginning of the burning project—
but with six to eight million, and then probably thought the sante thing.
more.
I
We shall probably not know what will come of all this until, say,
"I ask of you, as the emboli- about 50 years hence.
;tent
;mint of the American youth, to
Fur the mills of the gods grind slowly, but they grind exceedingly
take up and help with all the means; fine.
in your power, this battle of Euro- I
•
•
.
pean Jewry in its fierce struggle, OSSER
against the German cut-throats,1
.Apropos if the difficulties Jews in Germany are having in inform-
' until the very find."
ing their friends of true conditions there, I heard what purported
A Precedent for U. S. Action.
0
,VeZtis
SCH WARTZ
„ r, , y ,
, . i,1,111 el the Talmud wh at' ll 1- 11 ae, ., .. •-
d.,hi e
J J
ti ;oda r and
II iider, th ∎ late Aaron U. 'Alltrk-
• All'.
I.1 - I II -
tri-y
, public feeling ard
fully fiao.i i,
‘pens., ing,
rui .
cannot rid 1:1,11 1,
and pain, that ilz thp advancol age sac:: z: -
natural practices should 1,• ascribed
portion Of the religious world, and suet I
humus measure be resorted to, in ordet
compel the fvftissitin of imputed gull,
offenses with which these unfortunate r ,
are charged resemble tee MIR+ the, wheel:,
less enlightened times, were made th e nir
•
of fanatical persecution or mercenary
'•
tion, to permit a doubt that they are rdiz ia.,-
unfounded.
"The president has witnessed the protesta-
tions of the Christian governments of Europe
to suppress or mitigate these horrors, and he
has learned with no CO1111001 gratification their
partial success. Ile is moreover anxious that
the active sympathy and generous interposition
of the governnwint of the United States should
not be withheld from so benevolent an object,
and he has accordingly directed me to instruct
you to employ, should the occasion arise, all
those good offices and efforts which are com-
patilde with discretion and your official char-
acter, to the end that justice and humanity
may be extended to these persecuted people,
whose cry of distress has readied our shores."
DAVID
ljt ■ I !led ,Ind haVI• petitioned Ole e.1 . .:
.. .,..,
!
i- Il i•
n 11,4. Emperor has referred the iiial
I .
H id I . a C enIndIeee of scholars liwaded by the ,,
-ei, -•
1,,.1,
I,
think you can kill ideas. Tyrants have
tried to do that often before, and the
ideas have risen up in their might and
destroyed them.
You can burn my books and the books
of the best minds in Europe, but the
ideas in them have seeped through a mil-
lion channels and will continue to quick-
en other minds. I gave all the royalties
of my books for all time to the German
soldiers blinded in the World War with
no thought in my heart but love and
compassion for the German people.
I acknowledge the grievous complica-
tions that have led to your intolerance,
all the more do I deplore the injustice
and unwisdom of passing on to unborn
generations the stigma of your deeds.
Do not imagine your barbarities to the
Jews are unknown here. God sleepeth
not; and He will visit His judgment upon
• you. Better were it for you to have a
millstone hung around your neck and
sink into the sea than to be hated and
despised of all men.
:Ind:lit:1n
or pr party is
, i 'I Germany. Still.
oats: work giies•
' ,•t• we have taut
Got idle Gi•ntili,
11
.1 , • , t<
B y
(CoVeriyht. 11 , 32,inahh Lein:ravine Aenne,.
I
May 19,
T ibits
d and
Katzin of 11,11, , i ,
Maxwtili
last week received a letter fl dm LOOKING BACKWARD
Former Pupils of Late Aaron D. Markson Pay Tribute
a cousin in Riga, in which ale
1 picked up an old German newspaper the other day- city' obi
,
deSel devil ,01111' Of the tragedies of gioillg hack to the 11 iddle Ages. To he exact, the Tape,
to Educator on Occasion of Celebration
nag= dated
This let- 1.5i11.
the
Jewish
population.
For a while, despite' the fact that the paper semi
Planned by Alumni.
''
ti•r, dated April 14, reads in part: mouldy and crumbling away, I thought it was
modern n ,. e ,
•I I
IS nut England, France In fad. for a while I couldn't escap e the impression tha t
, - Pica.
You du gut know j:00hachtur or one of the zither Nazi newspapers, Vol it h.,,'
. hatred or anti-Semitism, about burning Jewish hooks.
look
apa
it
God give that You Ile''' .
But
, Ion
BURNING THE TALMUD
\ toy
.-I nine.
, - the
•
I
•
us , ry.—TIlf.re
nil 1.I itgitittiiin in •Iiii eirint re
I! II II 10
iii ,
tit
,
• 1,
.filth' ugh it 1 „; I ,
; I . II l• :.• . !II the
• .
lead of the ito , vement.
lia- i i , • din.
. in pass that for
,s, ., , s, ho
: 1 1,
••!
:,• z I i'•• oil efintain• many lilaspliiiiiiii - asiiiin-i f
To
Yoe,
y_ the-Wal,
A Description of :Ja