7,0)tiltorriptisifffilmat

and THE LEGAL (i1110 ICLE

1 .4•0444.„,.

7ii[Ic I orr;Al ∎ tsit(rtRoNic1,c

proof if the fact that .le‘vry is doomed to
degradation in (lermany.

and THE LEGAL CHRONICLE

Put if Professor Koehler's statement is
actually true to facts, then it brings to light
the serious (flinger to Jew's of newly-
One speaks
he iream: percentages, and per-
s
s
i :lin ,11;(1t:vs

lahshed Weekly by lhe Jew..h ehron,ue 1 1 ,11,1411mo l o.. In<

general Office and Publication Building
525 Woodward Avenue

Telephone: Cedillas 1040 Cattle Address.: Chronicle

14 Stratford Place, London, W. 1, England.

siiile,•rintidr.„1,

Per Year

tai

: - .•

•

..•1,

It.-.elo ••. ..f the l-aw

411

tit 1

t , 1

Rra441410

tit

the

I .

I

Tammuz 13, 5693

July 7, 1933

A

Commendable Merger.

I.ocid lead;
;
rm. m;;I
hilving
her hot i„
h
merges II

n invited for

• Went

W'hiCli

it Op , Holt-.

.-4 beller.

pt

Not

11111%

another at

1 .'

till, •

1‘ . 11.11()111

ll'irk anion; I'•

' 11

I

the
of casing I r It, I

This merger
prise. It pre% en"i
x•(inien ;Ind

le , liould

vided for in their homes. Tim Plittlo
'l -
ing of such needy had a demoralizing
feet, :ind its elimination is one of the Li,.
ings of this neii !newer.

The Zionist Convention.

It is difficult to believe that the many
thousands of J1111 kit in and women who
were in Chicago the early part of the week
were drawn to the midwestern capitol
merely for the purpose of witnessing a
pageant. That spectacle in itself W as 11
great 1 1 1 . 1 1 111 in that it 111'M such a record
audience of Jews.
Put it is safe to state
that tin outstanding reason for the vast nut
pouring
chwa r o was due to the

that "s1"11 instilled in the move
m•nt for (he uphuilding of Palestine, and
to the revived hope for the strengthening
of the one haven it refuge that is today
open for Israel.

"P"'

The Zionist convention in Chicago, it

Its resolution will be carried out, promises
to mark a turning point in Jewish recoil-

structive work. Observers agree that Pal-
estine has unlimited possibilities, that it is
possible to settle hundreds of thousands of
Jews in Eretz Israel and that given the

means it is Within the

to absorb the masses of
provided with a home.

power of this land

JVWS 11110 11111h1

he

This is the time to strengthen the hands
of the builders of Zion, and the most ef

fective ‘vay of doing that is to provide the

iyivans which A 111,1•1catt Jewry is

asked for in t

h e

n ow being

resolutions o f th e conven ,

tits in t'llictigo.

r

ti,dlion.

Jews

I 1 1 1

have

1

'i.I 41 ,

f‘.

1

I,,

L.

lo

-

f, ondt
I
ul I

11

id,

11u1.1e,

valuable."

There is food for

st•Tioll , thought for
Jews in this statement At the outset it
will be recognized Om! Professor Koehler
is reading something
the racial enunci.
ations of Nazi-ruled Germany, llitlerism
quite evidently does not intend to permit
any sort of balance between Jew and non-

Jew. The latest discriminating !awes otter

in behalf of their destitute families after
their death is hardly to the credit of the
ono ni l nit y.

A Story With a Moral.

Jew ish \aloes and aspirations se•v•s
to recall the story that is told about the
Negro who refused to fraternize with his
own kind. explaining that he had resigned
from the Negro people. \\*hereupon an-

t on.

to .

,

I.:it k1,11 . 41-

.44-111g

,

t

I

II

t

1

i4 .r.I

••

'

rf

aunt

o .if t I. 4I 111 ,
o 41Ig, I

touva r,1
of

i

.10111,11

" tti , Ilt1141I -

/

1

IA. - 7 , 111 , 141

\ .ei

,i'uk .1

1

.t .

1, ,

1,44,11

4 11 , 1 , 1311,
.1,111,1

. , f IL, moi,no III. it I,
- 1, 1111101 - 11 44 1 '111i
114
Herat,
-.11, and . , 11 settling 111 1!:11).:1:11111

o

Ile found

himself in opposition to

• tilt, , ,.•1.

Ill. IA111411.

.4
n luerinp Ito
I , iy IllYt 11 , 3
Tans foe ' 1

4-

I

1.il

1 , 111110 II
Hll .1

if

A DESERT SONG

He wants to know the ultimate ab o ut
Tuitintri• aquas
its final goal, :Ind the learned s,11
of Lliica t o. eoni, to the conclusion that the final goal oi
the ci.milie-t of the desert.

• lo..•

The •le,e-• he believes, will fill up Pale-tine prop..
dfali• -.lin 311/1 41113 t hen rtnicli out to t 11.• ,. l 1 11 , 1111 4
1i111..! 11.
he cii11, 1 1114 of that complete desert
desert will In. the final
tu•
•,
11111-t pay back to the desert \O no it 1..1
,

hur

t.„.,

u

,Indilllthol'll a-

a:1 ,1.A any

he points lint, the .11 4 ,' reeeiY( . 11

rev,
t,,ni.

Jed to hint that lllatt is not a part ., ,

..11111 now, ill

ob-

g" .111

i

4444

making the desert bloom. l-rael will but In
t44 the bleak, stt•rile sand,.

•

11111, 1 '1,11 Uf

•

•

Alves
It Is

1 briny' '•

""

• ,, n1

l' "
1 , 1,111, Hie X ;ins like to look at
Jew in the role 11f the
•
In , •
l i e 11, the NatZi` t he saint. rand
n
am the P
Ihs Ilehrew tali,
•
•
•
Ludy. Tit ‘k 1 itt 1 1,, al
TOWARDS UTOPIA
how ,cot, to retold a few intcrest-
ing
I.
u1.2.411 ding the ,rieninal
11r, Il..bert Settil, isolder of numerous thingamajig-,
cling
la,, and
adininistration.
Pre- the Segal 1'a/ed. and 1.reth•r of the invt.ntro• of the Segal
',month., of innocence, fair and a dinner the other night.
impartial t rials, restrict ion , :igain,t
Turning to 31iss Flatoti,
Zionist worker, \I , S..1•I
. curl :ind inhuman punishments
asked if she had read his hook, "Tripoly."
tin-, and many ',ital features of
"No," .;lid Miss Platou.
Resent bas itil hprodence are
"You , Imuld read it," said Nlr. Segal.
"I think it \i•'. .141m.
1.• L, f••iind, applied and
o
Later. 11 r. Segal runtided that in t,;11
years' tint,' dove
State s would adopt the economic principles
Organization of Courts.
outlined in In.: w •,-.
Inciileatall ■ ', Segal,
I penis nf
rinun.Il lure . li t
hindrItn, being an inventor and stn 1.
it , t111/111'11 730111,t,
.1 •.f 2:1 inerullers,
Ile wars at on e tim e edit., .j" th,
it large 1'1,10 .11accalit•an, tht• itionecr Zionist journal.
:Ind
. , ncf

Si

In

110 11411•11,, o 4 .11:111e , f44

attn

-

,1

1,11411

.•4 , 111I.,

Iv

1i - 41111,1 and

The 14 1g4111-
H411111,111111

the

i

draft.

4i.. 13,It

a t ity

unique featur e of

II. I••• o

111,3,11 a , a

t, Ih I .uttlhtr

het from 1.--

III

find

it , t• i

It sect
the

4,1.44144•4 - .. e

unfortun a t,
a - city of letup , " ,,her• he was
I' remain until the .11,th, fthe
high priest of Petty id-
f..n s e. were tried ly less formally
,onstitated trihumil , of three.
qualiticatimis for judgeship
w'er• most exa, t mg. Those who
made money through games of
Mince or 11,111y not only ,Clire 11111'-
1,11 as judges but rendered inconi-
indent t.• appear a- ieiln,vses . The

Cru•n to Next Pagel

,

\\,

,

i,t

tit

.

ellitior.flin of that :n 11 11'11:11.

u.I

■.1 1 ,-1 ,11phut

,el.

pl ;6,-11

A JEWISH DOCTRINE

•111 , 11 . 1iii

iii•on the
"f IIIIV t• III III {11111 y
i•••I d papilla tion
I1
••1

,4

that dut"'''' him to various coun-
tries in Europe to plead for Zion,
which last yetti - impelled him to
precut to Seta') African, wllele
he 1:11.1, , I for many month., :in.1
this year brought loin to !I.
I• toted States.

I.

THE NAZI SALUTE
4i. 1.41i kg1 , 111111, it. underl,ing Phil-
It Le
Beal hlet• ObjeCt, to th e Nazi salute.
It ,.,
pl,i
Its inter-1,1;0cm kith the inelegant, in that it is the common sign for indicating tha•
■ • omania and theoh.gical fare I o go out of the room a nd go...!
th•• III i ti nee pll . ill a
Inelegant, perhaps, but appropriate.
•
•
•
development. (no. eat, ON THE GERMAN STAGE
nest hat wond, r
IL
t•la1,4 at,
(Inl• one de,Y, says a repoi•I from Ge r many
It Val , tfilcillft "I. "I
1:" he t n a
iced
remain on the Berlin legitimatt• , tage. Ile
nation of onl, •
I ",
in
ander
(lranach and is playing. the\lephisto part in "Paii 7
"1 its
h i'
e‘plaintol, says the sante 11 1 1)011,
G11111:101 Is 11 ,
our

I'l• "

1 ,, ition. Ile
lin
• •
his re.earch n 1•k
I. re•-t, he is it riting III.
1114,
' , It all the tone he is
II It• 11 I., 'hat holy impatience
•
,,
•
inipati, , nt with
II . ,... w
Tool', talk, argue, dc
hat. , In-tc.o1
doing, acting for
the mkaneem•nt ,if the National
llonn. It is that holy impatience

...till

o'n 1 , 1. to

11,14 4 very Z1.3.
.411
:kr let IL. ,

1411 ,

the Jewish Agency Executive asked
loin to continue his visioning some other time.

114

\al

no

Ia.. '
the Neu, Yolk Timt•s, I . pra.
In t . •the go , eidirip•nt of the
. 11° ,4.
oie the r'reati,e Urge is coristio • z re.

I.,ine that that is ginol Jewish doctrine.
1
Siddiii• that 1 mil
!Tent•, WithOUt k' done
opts, tions involved: "Ma-chadesh bets.
knl
"
re nt.wt•th every day in Ills good!,
the

j

•,,

t •,...'

•

•

MATHEMATICS AND FAITH
But
, 11 . 11111., 1 , What eStu•lit the,.
phy,ici•ts and mall
clan, are p , •net rating into the domain. et morals and ritligho•
iftciu, hie been
to prove ■ 111 1 ■1 1 1,111 air!
Arid j11 , 1 rTirutly , 111 , 11, Gunou. .1t•wi-11 phy•ticist of tlo•
Neils Ito ld% has hea t 11 it•ettin•sing in What ha, heel, called "lit,
tame ly of truth and error." And all of thi is dune by matt
•
It looks a. if, should we hilYe it new 1' eligion, it will no .
1410111111
(in fruit of the lotivt
but that the prophet will intim. from a laboratory with a paper •
tvith figures and perhIps the next Ten Commandments will in
Ten Equations. • ti •

ANOTHER GERMAN DISCOVERY

lu Germany, I limo, some of the Nazis have discirvered a
of th e i • co n•an ic proldeni which they are tackling.

Sumo

of their restnii•t•li men have begun to believe that It'
the mu.ical trenitp., was really of .1..w•isli stock, and that tl •
originally Abrahams.
If this were' confirmed, It would h. terribly, as it wonlil

RA N DOM THOUGHTS ""
d"
Joseph

-Till }miller steps would h. necessity for Ger1111111y lu con

de•ir,sion.

.

•

I 1- ALL DEPENDS

OUTLIVING I1111.1.R
that position.
Hu: on the win. ,
.oilidiahly titled .... :In
Dr.
edo.
\\
think. hand, Einanii-1.:1 would he 11..•-• I
I Xute York Jen•r ■ :,
lye
11 will eventually' find fortunate if Dr. lioldelison tt-,,, t h: I
,, 14
It is inlet est ice ti
Iris pla c e lit Ihv 111111•, l'niv•i- deride i' accept. I think 1 ki...., • . i.
I
•
loan
who
through
the
• it, in Palest lie.
\Vt.i/inann has the American Itabhinate pi•ett, •
. ..f hi. int, , 11, , ctuality
the
pinion th a t in ills it a y the %yell :Ind Emanu-F1 w ,
.uld lia,i , ..c.1 .
[ , 11,tuality has imid, , N ur'
ti
he a to look as long tino •.. tind any id. , .••dolditutry place for him-
. ,11'1 , 11 .111144ng the tom,
-, :i Ii, .1na-ritatit .brutish life.
II,
t
Ilia does he w
rt . ! kiitt,, flat nataninV of thc
about and
I
From Macaulay's Speech on ..., ••11 '' `, I1'`Illimiali,t, " yet he i.
hilt I j11 , 1
,111 .1
of the Most forceful and ag
Jewish Disabilities.
1 ,
hng that %,i , h-
• ntaro., I- flow ,,,
in the pulpit.
If Temple
11 c si,l.t
l'al.
OM] all
V.Inanu-E1 has its %vay, Pitt,burgl
paths of
I
not I.,,
. ,11111 then it,
.lewty will g. into mourning.
dash.", II
taking refuge in
to at ,
11% al Ice
I 1' ni.f many ages
will all I , .c . •
JEWISH UNITY
cc- it h Ito le,
c
•
, tineriorttc
1,, \
di, disgu.ted
c Com-
it -4. to that
t
I. , .th are
• :,tartan and
cc ill outi.,. II
deter-
weak
upon a unified policy in the
strong.
WEIZMANN'S PLAN
Germany.
flu , .
•
kl •
d a Ilion , ',
• , rice w ith the
hanging, n,, •
plat
. tuns morn t I , tiding
among nil'
1, : . .. ' .e . ,,1 •kinds ladtt'r than 1..,
,•.izat ions
1 1 • ..1-nt are
the member for II.. I •
"
..1
D‘f..1.1
that
thert•
1-
',moan
1.
II,
•
I.
I
ri.il ehatart , r wh
•
•
tht highe.t d, 1
II. knit,: aha , , t• •
L
sass
" :117;011m, , • •

that

111. I.icir fight, Oat
publisher, tells one about it
England \rhea he had Lord l/unsany out to
dinner in some re-'
I itin , any ',armed the menu and thin remarked:
"I say, is du-
or you or on Ha.,"
"tin ill', of Course " -44141 ITTi•right,
"I invited you."
" \Veil, then, waiter," , ; i d Oun-any, "get me a whole 1111.

•

•

•

THE EH-EH MAN

Mr. II:Irina:1+h of lilt. Palestine Bureau of the Zionist Or
lien 1. a Ivry hu,y mart, what with the bundled, of inquirir:
to that 'Mice relating to settlement in Palestine.
There wa , n Jew who came in recently to the otlice,
and pa.
had 411 , 4 tat ,• , 4 :it great length and almost
to the point of exli
•
%that it would be necessary for him to .1
to Pori,-:.I.
Then
',tits it term to he filled "UT
"Whir
full name?" asked Ilarbarash.

I , ;

.lac

.r.ttr. •

.,! 1 :ink,' Y,•iikelovich," said the man.
ur wife's name?"
Itic- koh," said the man.
" \1 , 11 born!"

.

It, hoa,h, interrupting the "
'

Dr. Crayzel's "The Church and the J , ws
in the Thirteenth __ Century"
•

the
•,...
iimteenth
n of an Intl„ • •,r art.!
The larger porti-1. . •
important work I
- The '.:n-c-ts of church do, ,
church and the .Iews in the Thir- author collected all the i•
.• .11th ('entry," lull Dr. Solomon Ift th e Jew, in the 1011 •
ayzel.
I 1 , 11's of the first half of
‘‘•hiir th e fr,•,,k aim s
to girt. teenth century and in ti
• • Ier-hip
councils
of that
".•
than
a
Itiettlre
o ctrl
of the rida-
are given in the Latin •.1 •.
,,,,,, ihe Roman Church
in an English tran-late
tied
•I ...intents art• in theii) •
t
I :1 1, awl I
I, •
of human Intel. •
I htl,
th e first h o ot,
ildished in F:C.
1
-tent
se,•cral
I • t•• a and abroad in
ye a r
•• , 'rata.
or ,, • •
o the
In-tolt• of tit
•
• I. t he „Ii i ilVal:r.t. t tithi ti t., m , iddle
Phu •
• • • ,urging
' 1 a - a,
I. the book to encourage them.
•
•
t.11-11 !Ift• al -
heart h and -t rem?'"

• .11 1

I -

• ,y

Na-

alt„

It

.

:311 4 •3 , 141,1 •41 , 411

el

to the In

' 11 periods 111

Lai -

I
It! , 1 o I ,1!.!

of

I

1'1

'

II' .!

-.

C.0013 OUT OF EVIL

and the

1• of,

the instance of 101'11 111 the Jewish m:d-•
who express an attitude of resiglia••••..
well to point out that Jews as a
not always 1111 . 1t . 11 to the severing of ,nevi'
ties by those who choose n o t t o etni d y„, •

•

fol

111,11..4!

it,

1(

Ill It- (1,1311

t 11 d t f lo

11 .%gen , y, hilt he te-
r an of iietion,
Ile i. n..t
foi the 'kit, I. in l'411

• • ,

111 4 11-Z14 111 , 1 ,, 111113 I
Ii. , 111t at rho
14i 1011
\ V it 11 le:111111e

Staty , ,
, not

.

,•t c ,

1't l',

'11}I mat hl

• oild
e
.. 1" I, 11

I,tt
1114of. 'takings.
1
:11 Hur inimical al
•• •• 7.1 , 4111-1

If,

1'4,1

I:

reminded him
th a t his resignation was not accepted. In

the assinulationist-charity-Jews take
of this and when they learn to accept Jew-
ish values they will eventually find greater
happiness among their own people.

1, 4 ,1.4 ..

t.

t

1,.

other colored - skliiinwl fillow

Ihnir .1...\vi,liness. In our case it is the
a' large 11111 ■ 11 ■, 1 1 1111,1 to say even t,
(Air(
a-, similationists that the desir.• •
the latter 1 , , merge with their neigh'•
.til• matter, but that it is another mast '
%Own it 1•01111 , to their being accepted. I.'

4•'

':Inc

I)

,k41-, lei!
11,e 1,, ..!

111111

Illo.ney,

44,4111111g

I

•

II

It

Illited

till
in

\VitiZ111/11111
u: it r.:111',. in

;

1 '4.1111,1 at the Prat ,

❑ Pallit

■ 11 , 1 , 1■ 11 1 . 1 1 11fel'Ilice .ace
", 'lint lie \VII , .111 , milli
['I -idiot of the Zmni,t
., , , , •11. what he don..
La- worked all t
•I•
and ,vith whit
!nc, and ITna,'ily of 11111.
,rtylitidy know.. II,- ha s
didinuou,ly on the nnwe
9I4111, anti 411,,
fot
i.1,• one Virile-, 7.1,1

hull, Inn, that
uf the format ton of a

The empty shell which a certain group
f ", harry .1, , w+ - ask is to substitute for

al l our

"I

I aii111111eil a

It was his

of Cantor Bosrnhlatt

ni.

I ,

rather

1 . 111,1 , 1k oc 1111
c urred
1.1.a ‘1111111 huts tin ,
nth C. , 11g1t
held

tcith

has 1 , 41 k 4 •il 111 de,
1401,1
•111C1 .
11 1 11, la-f re

soot Bvti 1,14in of th e

t

With III ,
:,..1,134,v,

N411111,4

I

when

him an
ihn
\ nom, in 1 , 1 I
1:10 I,y 11, 1 'line

light'' , of prominence in this

It is ‘‘ ell, in mourning over the death
, that we learn a ! ■ ,,,
son ft11111 Iris Ileath.
It isn't enough that
the great should he revered in their life-
time. The community awe's a responsibil-
ity to them in their final hours. That it
should become necessary to collect funds

the outside world and would \vitt over to
our new government a multitude of Ger-
man citizens, including some 14 the most

the II

14.g,!le I

,

ell , of till

4 the

/14,1-1,1 411141

country, Ile charmed many audiences :Intl
congregations with his beautiful yoke, and

for millions in their lifetinm.

t. ,

•

no kn, i n a, the
i•• Va t
h in
1 ,, of

I

n'oi. , e. 1, 1

h us ,,,1111.:
I11a re:Ili,atitncfline
Arly drudini.
lu 11 1 1: 1 lir

I

1111i

Zr'',,

I

Cantor Josef It ■ owithlatt.

Proceeding to outline what he considers
will be a solution to the problem, Professor
Koehler declared:

between Jew ish and non-Jewish Germans
--in public office, the liberal professions
and the to ad•rnic world without any im-
plication o f h
any disp a r age _
merit of it:.' den - as ,11111 --I an sure this
would have'
most tranquillizing ori.ct on

,11

'1
-.-1,•1

de a th of

Too often do ‘ve hear of rabbis, cantors.
a•te-.1.- and others who die in extreme pov-
erty lit spite of lite toy they bad provided

4.1 the 1141114,V 1 ' 41k - 1'r -tit \

, t! \ ',lit Scopu s , t

nth, i“ , -k op a • ritieal
H.
and III

till a \ ,

114,

The Late Cantor Rosenblatt
Non-Jews as nui•li as Jowl it , re aced seJ

Jews 111 public life in Germany than in the
supposition that the measures are grounded
on contempt for the Jews on the postulate
of inferiority."

"Now. I at convinced . ti t authoritative
enunciation that the new race leirislation
simply seeks t , 1 e stablish a similar balance

--.an,

1 , 10 , 1 Into LI,o,1 ,1 1

lion for the Advancement of Science, was his high standing in Atiwriciin and Euro-
asked \\inditer he c on sid ers th, , . lowish pea r l comtuunities. that \vont should come

Reich, in tilling the higher administrative
posts,

1:,,

111

;

Ina ',Ingham Palma. prioi t
rodung i f the
"
II tool 11 , 111e
to say!
Ill II,'
tiro y, , l fir laid the foundation

rut
HIS UNIVERSITY IDEA
Thoutzit a follow,
of political
Zionism, \Verne:inn. N11111 half

pity ParticularlY that won
l'rofi.ssor \Volt- gang
' for hint so much esteem and honor. Cantor
his ro-
the Psychology Institute of the l'iti%,1*,ify !I:W:0111111 M !mule nu concession
of Berlin, who came to the t:iiited States ligious practices.
at the invitation of the American Assocm-
It is doubly unfortunate. in \Jew

"It has long been the practice in Ger-
many to keep a certain balance between
Protestants and I atholics, in proportion
to their mind.
Ailrerent parts of the

1 , 14

f I 1. 4

I, .1'

II,o.e.
I,
earty wit
•.,I. him form-
nt of the ;Is
■
h as it
• t h,
followers

II,IIIall totiI

411141 4,

1.,•fut, 1,,
tt tti,t1 in tn,dietue Iv IL.
Thu rhuilnr key from \lt,

.

hi'
In
1,1 fen'
g the

e

di

"

I4, !

f

this as a Je \visit problem. and if out
falsely distributed economic forces are to
be re:ohm:led the job must lw dons by
Jews.

problem among the major issues In tier- front it'llisaltqn that r"ut(ir 1 ■ () s`'llhiatt's
many, and answering in the affir ma ti ve h e family is in destitillo circtmislance,. The
made this statement: lot of the man in piddle life is an exceed-
"I and convinced it is. And apart from ingly sad 0111 1 . Ile may be in all his glor
while h, serves his people and \\id • he is
its incidence WI our domestic situation. it
has strongly affected public opinion abroad. at the height of the ladder. Rut when the
final day l'01111 1 S he and his family are often
The core of the matter is perhaps less in
found in wont 111 1 1'1111,11 1 1111 0111 1 had stopped
measures taken by the tlerinan
to think of his economic circumstances.
ment for restriction of the participation (d

I' , 1 - .1

11 , 111111,AI 1111 , 1.1-
.t1111 111 ■ 4110,1 ,if

I:IUsI 111,11 t , . the
11,1a, a

I'

1

'4

/: n,

1111.e

11;11 1 111 • 1111111'

Ile

1

hill at once mean the declassing of many
t e n s o f th o usand s o f Jews. \Ye must yeeog

In the past 211 1 - ears Cantor G ,

N,

1

1,

The question of balancing Jewish
twills must not be permitted to blind item
phe into believing that an opportunity is
immediately afforded to solve the prob-
lems of persecution. If it nwans anything.
the balancing Of 1111r rights by non-Jew,:

111 CH11111111111 anti Mounting till the

Itt

• , why the
shouldn't bt• that many Jew . , in Palestine in
f tom now."
'Ind.' ,, , ntinued NIr. Neumann, "we -1muld see
"
II ct, :he beloved Ruhhl NI, , yer Ilerlin, head of the Mince{

t l •Iry Is it

4 , 11-I I lit 111ll;

' 11,
,

,11 11

'41,4

see then ill l'111,4111•?"
"1. (1 11," Logan ME. Neumann, "I s hould say then
see ul l'altn.tilie about three-quarters oil a million* Jews.
1-,

no vit.:toning.

Ill,.

,•tl. 1 1 , , !

ill

Id

4 1 , 14 4 , 11

I said, "Mr. Neumann, as we are sitting hen', a man
with some drinking concoction. It look, like wine from tli.
of
-the kind of wine that perliale. David drank wl ,
III e p , itlins. It looks that way, but we take a drink,
arid t•
1.1 ' 1111 ' 1 111,,1111.111 Potion in it, for immediately we fall asleep
- "And when we wake up --we rub our eyes. The ., •
us looks unfamiliar. Hitler, we art. told, has long ago I.
the New Deal has been supplemented with a Newer
a: We
look at the calendar to see what (lay and date it .
it is 111th,
"We have been asleep ten years.
"Now, !qr. Neumann, presuming this to have hull..
we art in the year I II•13 of 1 111:1, whit
do you 01111,

14,1\ tnvltt

•

Lrt,.

t ht !

1 •. , I 14 14
1 . 1.

I was in the office of Emanuel Neumann, who ha. to •
from Palestine the other day.

\t hint relllirld, lily that Dr. S. NI. NI•lanon•d has also Lc

\I•
trt

I

1 , 44

and Ilse IiiellIber of

!I,, early

11-11r-

W13 1., like lierrnany and Poland has
• milit•need the political status of Jews.
I he solution suggested by Professor
l‘o•hl•r may be interpreted as sound by
'tie average titan reading it. In reality.
how ever, it is the most serious challenge
to the ..h.‘vs of the 1\ orlil to think seriously
1'f their 1 1 11 , 11 1 111111'slatii e,

This is not the problimi of (lernian Jewry
: dun e.
It tittects out people every \vhere,
and Jews must give thought to it.
young /Hell aril women espevially must be
taught to think sanely about this problem.
It is high 1 1111e that we stepped overcrowd-
professions. and that we thought in
terms or a natural distribution in all eco-
nomic endeavors and professional pursuits.

II

4014 lent

'14

ot only our 1 •1/1101111U 1 A 1111 '11 11 '. but III

The time has :irrived for an :ippraisal
of our position among the peoples of the
•. orb'. There is need for ti revaluation ot
our economic status and for a new distribu-
tion of our energies and resources. The
proldern is of such vast proportions that!
the most that can possibly he (lone is to
suggest it. It %vitt require all the po‘ver ,
at the disposal of the genius of Israel to
soli" , it and to propose a s o lution.

1,i
'

Ina 1111,1

to tradition won for hint ihr
respect of all who knew. hint or heard hint.

"I am not a politician. therefore I cannot
speak professionally on the enactments in-
volved. If I were asked, however, what
could be (lone fur mitigating the difficul-
ties, I should perhaps propose the follow-
ing:

Weisman:I
er preniderit Lit the Jaw
ri ,
II,
1,44.
tid.d As gut, tit
1,,4 •11101i .s . 1 In..,
Joil, I alid .a<
as 'lien a
t ,d rd 4, Ica •I4 loader. rim rnery part or the
.
1..1 • •
• r 41oc %tat u1
Agency
.411.e tho..droei ol the man Mho

. 1

.11,1,11 Telegraphic Avo.o,

. ,,P,r 4 i.h1

IN TEN YEARS

Ask the aver:igt , person what is
by the term "111ositic Law."
The answer invariably will la"
"The Ten t'ommantlinents;" and
while some I,' ogle will more cor-
n, tly include in their definition
the vast structure of l'entateuchal
with the religious, so-
economic and political feat-
of the Ilehrt•w theocracy, rela
I ist•ly ft -w Call g011ey(11111 that polo .
It is quite evident that the Ile-
hrew law, like any system of law,
lutist have undergone Certain ill-
rtwadtitionary changt•s. Vet-
el an • to ter capital punish-
ment kiln have sought bildical bus
tilh:rti it for their stand, fast•
.• ned upon the rev 11111,t111, -"An
tooth for a tooth"
for an . ■ .•;
oonite ILL 141141 of the fact that
• had !„en illterlirtlei1

HODESS

no .,

his adherence

Balancing Jewish Rights.

the Scientist.

or three prolessoms, have
ii dontinating factor in the middle
,re predominantly merchants and
been forced into
ekeepers,
position by the prejudices and per-
.! on- imposed upon us throughout the
now Mid our-elve:-: in a lielplc,s
H.11 m
(Jur falso Jistribu-
u Ibe tale: : y id
alfoct-

July ' I I

I

our

.1,

By

httle use of our fooling (purse]
;,, , tual status economically in the
•itch s in which we live. and
• are recognized as Jews. ()n ee
II time it should be recognized
lib-
som e
.le ■ s that there

ali1111,

Zionist and

A Sketch of the

Tidbits and \'
By DAVID sum\R
: C z i''

By-the-Way

M. BARAHAL

Ily MAX

Into Iwo

I tiefittay

1,o4

CHAIM WEIZMANN---LEADER OF
HIS PEOPLE

fr.m professions :tint from tilos• public
Inch they found themselves
otb,
adapted.

,

n . •
‘1.1

The Criminal Law
Of The Hebrews

,

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n.anf,t,ly

,•

\ •
♦

i •

•

ntall-h,,ti
1' I f. In Cr,

o

1

• M.

'

Tt 111111 (.1 11 iii XisoN

•la-s,
the 1,...

•

-"ana and re

'a

I gaiion.

rabbi wh. ,

•

, u F'

11, p , • 1 h

e

.1. ti .-h

If

I it- .1

•

u. ' 1 ,•• d

•

.11
.li dat• k,
I
nd all
Hous• of Common+, April 17th, J, w , are one in suffering. so the
1s3:11
(Turn to Nest Pagel

• them: not 1 .•
".• • •• t :n
. g h"t

.I•

•3 work with

It

at..1 •I

• •.

•

.‘bast.
..• dr the ae
. rat III Ic

! " II •• "
i•
t o
y I ,,,e <It 41 a I
1 ! " 41 t I he Jews against the opportunity, as ha s
fury of their perst•cutors. It also been riven to the <on •
indieate• that the enemies of the ' Hugh Walpole.

at

