Alia" inEigrizongsrun (11 Rom ICLE • nd THE LEGAL CHRONICLE Ronicm TfiE The Protocols Decision Iii spite of the happy result of the fam- and THE LEGAL CHRONICLE ous trial at Berne, Switzerland, resulting co•lishes1 Weekly by The Jewish Chrookl• Publls ► lag C.. tae. in the condemnation of the Protocols of ward so Second-clam matter Ida.ch I. 1918, at tb• Post- Zion forgeries, it was impossible to stifle a., at Detroit, litch., under tb• At of March I, 1879. the feeling of nausea and disgust which General Offices and Publication Building every self-respecting Jew should have ex- 525 Woodward Avenue telephonist Cadillac 1040 Cable Address: Chronicle perienced at the reading of the reports of Londe. Office, the trial. 14 Str•tford Place, London, W. 1, England To think that such a stupid charge could $3.00 Per Year Subscription, in Advance be spread in modern times is to concede lasur• publicetion, all correspondence and news matter • mods this ofIl• by Tuesday menhir of each week that we live in a very corrupt age, and When mailing notices. kindly use one side of ths paper ea17. that the world's bigots have learned noth- re., Detroit Jewish Chronicle Invites correspondence on oohs nets of Interest to the Jewish people, but disclaim. emponsi- ing of truth. *Lilly for an indorsement of thy views mtpriPmed by the writ•n It was encouraging to read Judge Sabbath Reuling. of the Law Meyer's statement in the course of his Pentateuchal portion—Lev. 26:3-27:34 Prophetical portion—Ter. 16:19-17:14 decision: May 24, 1935 lyar 21, 5695 The Campaign Result Although the Allied Jewish Campaign quota fell considerably below the total goal, it must be recognized that this year's drive was in reality a marked success. In the first place it is well that we realize that this year's drive netted $80,000 more than last year's campaign. This in itself is a triumph. It is an indica- tion that we are beginning to return to original standards of giving and that more and more of our Jewish community are beginning to, recognize their responsibility to every important Jewish cause. Another important element in the cam- paign which must be recognized as a tri- umph in this year's fund-raising effort is that it is expected that the community will come very close to raising the sum needed for the maintenance funds of the local, national and international agencies Included in the drive. Being assured of the continuation of our community services we can feel happy that our institutions will not suffer: Besides, an excellent be- ginning has been made towards the gath- ering of a fund for the erection of a new building for the Jewish Old Folks' Home. The fact that about 7,000 men and women have contributed to the drive is an unusual occurrence for Detroit Jewry. It is the beginning of a genuine effort for the creation of unity and for the enroll- ment of every element for the support of our important agencies. Naturally there are elements of regret in the drive. Entirely too many of the financially more fortunate Jews either failed sufficiently to increase their contri- butions or to live up to their measure of responsibility in the present critical hour. But there is sufficient hope that this condi- tion will be eliminated as time goes on and that not only the middle class and the poorer elements, but that the rich as well, will know that they owe a sacred duty to their community. David Ben Gurion's Visit Here David Ben Gurion's visit in Detroit should be welcomed by all parties in Zionism. Aside from the fact that he represents the most important single group in the World Zionist Organization, Mr. Ben Gurion is not only one of the outstanding figures in the Palestine Labor Federation but he plays an important role in the effort to unify all groups in Zionism and to cre- ate a spirit of understanding that will solidify rather than divide Jewish ranks. His address here will be awaited with considerable interest. While it is our view that the members of the Zionist Organiia- tion and of Hadassah are obligated to turn out in full force at the Zionist Congress elections on June 23 and to vote for the joint American Zionist-Hadassah ticket for delegates, his Labor views must at this time be listened to with the profoundest respect for the sake of having every issue clarified. As the central body which should have much more power than it now possesses in order to eliminate civil strife in Zionism, the central Zionist organization should re- ceive the majority vote for delegates at the Congress. Such an expression by Zion- ist voters will not, however, belittle the powerful position held by the labor ele- ments but will rather guarantee their po- sition against internal warfare. By CARL ALPERT The Itraele roomers all questiom of generol aleNiPil interest. ()aerie. should be •addremed io The Oracle In eve of The Detroit Jewish Chmilicle. and should be accom- panied by a aelf-tuddreated, stamped en, Nope. Strictly Confidential THE ETERNAL FIRE Personal Meditations and Contemplations of a Christian Pilgrim in 1935 Tidbits from Everywhere By PHINEAS J. BIRON (Copyright, 1530, by B. A. ) Q. To whom does the Arab By PIERRE VAN PAASSEN saying, "More faithful than Sam- UNPUBLISHED uel," refer?—C. G. Samuel Untermyer has opened (Copyright, lain, Seven Art. Feature Syndicate) A. This refers to Samuel Ibn a deposit account at Macy's, as Adiya, poet and warrior, who evidence that he is satisfied that lived in Arabia in the sixth cen- EDITOR'S NOTE: Pierre van Paassen is without question one of the most gifted jour- the New York department store tury. A famous Arab poet, Amru nalists of our time. His interest in or rather his passion for the Jewish problem has driven him is adhering to the boycott. . . al-Kais, left his cousin and his time and again on strenuous travels to see and observe for himself the calvary which modern However, a gentleman who is usu- personal armor in Samuel's safe- Jewry traverses in so many countries. Ile has visited Palestine many times in peace and in ally in the know, insists—prom- war, and has risked his very life to obtain valuable information from direct sources. Pierre keeping and while on a journey ising to bring concrete evidence— was killed. An enemy asked that van Paassen is now again in Palestine. This article is the first of a series of letters front Pales- that Macy's is still handling a line tine, dealing with the cultural, political and economic orientation of the new Palestine. In this Samuel give up the dead man's of German goods ... There is no article, Pierre van Paassen, before embarking on his swing around the country, turns his property and besieged Samuel's question, however, that Alfred eyes inward and meditates on his personal relationship to Palestine and the Jews. castle to enforce his demands. Friedman, N. Y., glove importer, The besiegers succeeded in cap- and L. A. Salomon & Bros., chem- turing Samuel's son and in the JERUSALEM.—Many ties bind me to Pales- that, to quote from "Les Apotres," some day ical dealers, are doing a lively "I hope the time will come when people face of repeated refusals to capit- "when our petty-minded, bourgeois, mediocre so- business with the country in everywhere will be astonished to learn that ulate, cut off the boy's head in tine. When I look back into the past, something which the brown terror still in the year 1935 it was necessary to talk sight of his father. Ibn Adiya which is perhaps permissible now that I am ap- ciety, this world of pygmies is finally swept into reigns. . . . We are told that for 17 days about possible authenticity in this the discard by the heroic and idealistic forces stated that the boy had brothers, James Warburg, charged "inno- proaching "the middle of the way," I must con- incredible nonsense which is called The Proto- but that once his honor was gone of mankind, the luminous ideal of Judaism shall cently with having sailed on the cols of the Elders of Zion.'" it could never be retrieved. This fess that even in my earliest youth the Land of be incribed as a prophetic revelation above the- S. S. Bremen, actually did book incident gave rise to the common Israel and the Jews exercised an ineluctible fas- portals of the paradise of humanity" I was ad- passage on that ship and at the "Incredible nonsense" is a mild way of Arab saying. cination on my spirit. Although it underwent • • • vised not to dream about Renan's or any one last minute canceled his booking labelling the stupid charge, but it is well because of pressure. . . Great a deep change in the course of time, that interest else's utopian visions, but to confine myself to excitement prevails in certain Q. Have any of Mark Twain's that this verdict is down as a matter of never flagged; yes, upon restrospective consider- record in a case which assumed worldwide works been translated into He- ation, I may even say that Palestine and the the reality around me. Yet I had by then Jewish quarters, primarily in brew?-0. 0. E. felt emanating from Judaism the rays of a sun B'nai B'rith circles, because of importance. A. The late Aaron D. Mark- people whose destinies are inextricably bound the announcement that Max Rein- Among the most encouraging elements son of Detroit translated Mark up with that land have been a determining factor which we cannot yet see. It was as if I had had hardt has decided to produce "The in the decision in the Protocol case is the Twain's "Prince and the Pauper" in my own spiritual evolution. My early venera- my first greetings from the land which' we seek Merchant of Venice" in the Holly- with the spirit. I began to see that the spiritual wood Bowl as the California Fes- attitude of the press throughout the world. into Hebrew. • • tion for the land was a primitive attitude of disposition of a nomadic tribe of Bedouins, known tival play this summer. .. . There The non-Jewish world appears to be re- Q. What were some of the devotion to a shrine, to a sanctuary, a holy place. one thing these Jewish groups joicing as much as the Jewish communi- activities of the late Otto Kahn? Over there, far away, in those sun-scorched hills as the Bene Israel, who first rose within the ken is of history as wanderers in the green places on do not realize, i. e., that Rein- ties everywhere that it should finally have —M. B. of Judea, I knew, the miracle of divine infil- the confines of the Syrian and Arabian deserts, hardt's version of Shylock is 100 A. Otto II. Kahn was known been established that the Protocols of the per cent pro-Jewish and a dra- a banker, philanthropist and tration into human affairs had once taken almost had produced a chain of religious phenomena matic exhibit of Christian anti- Elders of Zion are not only dastardly forg- as patron of the arts. His banking intangible shape. The event filled me with no and set in motion currents of thought so extra- Jewish prejudice in those Vene- eries but most stupid imaginations of cor- career was linked with Kuhn more astounding than the site and milieu be- tian days. rupt and insane minds. An example of Loeb & Co. since 1897 when he came hallowed with extraordinary sanctity. And ordinary among the spiritual manifestations of ZIONIST NOTEBOOK comments made by the press is the follow- became a partner in the firm. Ile it was to the members of a humble Jewish com- the peoples of antiquity that their force and The present editor of the New significance, instead of diminishing with time, most prominent as a sup- ing editorial which appeared in the New was porter of such musical organiza- munity in a city of the Netherlands that my silent grows upon us with the ages so that we, who Palestine, M. F. Steinglass, will middle-aisle it with a charming York Times: a tions as the Metropolitan Opera respect went out as the living witnesses of traverse one of the most devastating eras of his- blonde of Brooklyn before the and the Philharmonic Symphony past which was as vivid to me as the solemn torical transition, have come to recognize that next month is over. .. . Meyer is The notorious "Protocols of the Elders of Orchestra Society. Ile was also a ritual of the church. I was yet to learn in those Zion" are now declared . by a Swiss tribunal in the social conceptions of Judaism the basic and one of the best journalists and dirctor of the American Federa- days that Judaism had not petrified into the writers in the Anglo-Jewish field, to be what honest and enlightened men have tion of Arts, treasurer of the principal elements required in the construction and we consider Miss Rhoda J. long known them to be, an Impudent forgery American Shakespeare Founds. rigor mortis of the phrase, as my teachers gave of the new society of the future. Blakeman, herself a writer and and a libel. The case was brought before the tion and a member of the Visit- me to understand, but that the struggle of Jacob artist, a very lucky girl.... Talk- Civilization's Debt to Judaism cantonal court of Berne by Jewish citizens ing Committee for the Depart- with the Angel goes on to our time, forever. ing about developments at Zion- of Switzerland. They sought to stop the Herein, then, lay the debt of Western civiliza- ment of Art and Archaeology of Even in those days, however, the first faint circulation of Nazi literature containing the tion to Judaism as I began to see it: When Juda- ist headquarters, some of our Princeton University. Kahn was sleuths report that a rather vio- rumors of a newly-born Zionist movement pene- shopworn story of ■ Jewish conspiracy for born in Germany in 1867. ism elevates' every Jew to royal rank and then, world dominion organized at the first Zionist • • • trated to me and made me glad with the expecta- in order to impart a still greater sanctity to hu- lent private conclave took place Congress in 1897. Q. Who was David Belais?- tion of seeing with my own eyes a renewal of man dignity, proclaimed him a son of the Master the other evening in the home of Louis P. Rocker, chairman of the The plaintiffs showed that the Protocols B. T. N. Israel's ancient glory. were fabricated in Czarist Russia during the of the Universe, it tore to shreds the decretum Z. 0. A. finance committee.... A A. David Belais was the in- It was Henan, who brought me the revelation horrible of antiquity, which was an expression former president of the Z. 0. A. revolutionary upheaval of 1905, and that the ventor of white gold. Ile died in told the present head of the or- language was largely copied from a French that Judaism is not an extinguished flame, but ( PLEASE) TURN TO NEXT PAIIE (PLEASE TURN TO IOSXT PAGE) pamphlet of 70 years ago directed against Napoleon III. The parallelism was pointed out by the London Times 15 years ago and has been mentioned since then at frequent intervals. But it did not prevent Adolf Hitler Personal Reminiscences from putting the Elders of Zion into his book. A Short Shory The Nazi spokesman before the Berne court A Review of Anglo-Jewish Life Under the Reign of By JOSEPH BRAININ proclaimed his unshaken faith in the Pro- King George V By S. J. AGNON tocols with tears in his eyes. The Convenant of Love Again we must recognize the truth that although the decision has been handed down against the anti-Semites of the world the Protocols are not necessarily dead. Nine years ago Henry Ford also apolo- gized to the Jewish people and recognized the falsity of the Protocols. Yet they con- tinued to be circulated throughout the world. The editorial writers of the New York Times agree with us that, as they label another portion of their editorial, "The Lie Will Return." This New York Times comment should be taken note of by Jews everywhere in order that we may be able to face realities. To quote the Times; It is a gain to have the Protocols stamped for the vicious lie they are by a court of law after exhaustive hearings. But it is not to be expected that the Swiss verdict will silence the criminal agitators who resort to such weapons. In this year 1935 and in the land of Kant and Goethe it is possible for a lunatic named Streicher to stand up, with government approval, and declare that the Wassermann test was invented by Jews who need Christian blood for their ritual. It will be mere child's play for Streicher to "prove" that the Swiss judge was hired to brand the Protocols a forgery by the same Jews who wrote the Treaty of Versailles and dominated the Stress conference. It is well to know that at least we are not alone in our battle. This is a fight which will continue as long as lies are hurled at us and spread about us. With the press in liberal countries on the .side of fairness we have less to fear from pos- sible consequences. At the same time, Jews must learn to face realities, to know that a decision in Berne does not stifle big- otry in Munich, and that we must always be on guard against the outbreaks of new waves of hate and prejudice. Warburg and Palestine The most interesting transformation in the attitudes of Jews relative to interna- tional questions has been effected for Pal- estine and the progress made in the Jew- ish Homeland. Most interesting in this connection is the manner in which Felix M. Warburg has gradually come closer to Zionism and to Palestine and has as- sumed a position of unquestioned world leadership in the Jewish national move- ment. Since his recent return from Palestine he utilizes every occasion to speak of the manner in which progress is achieved, how the refugees are adjusting themselves to the life in that country, and how, to quote him: "Every cent we have spent there has been put to excellent use. I have never seen so much progress in any other coun- try in such a short span of years. There is a great demand for labor, and the house- building is not keeping pace with the de- mand." Mr. Warburg is still spoken of as a non- Zionist. Perhaps this is necessary in order to make the position of the Jewish Agency, which must of necessity be composed of Zionists and non-Zionists, a bit more ef- fective. In many respects, however, Mr. Warburg is a much better Zionist than many of the affiliates. The point is that Mr. Warburg has ren- dered a yeoman service for the cause of THE ORACLE Germany Hates Our Newsmen Temporary silence on the part of some American newspapers on the increased anti-Semitic outbursts in Germany caused some to fear that the resentful attitude of the American journalists towards Ger- many's treatment of the Jews has abated and that many of them are beginning to accept the persecutions as a matter of fact. But the following official German news bulletin, issued by the Nazi propaganda bureau, seems to indicate that not only does the original resentment remain in full force, but that Germany continues to be on the lookout against the revelations which are being sent to this country by our newsmen: "Julius Bolger, business manager of the New York Times Picture Service, lAd.„ was ordered to leave the territory . of the Reich within five days. Bolger, who is a Hungarian subject of Jewish extraction, has repeatedly given expression to his malicious and hostile attitude toward the new State and its leading men, which makes his further sojourn in Germany wholly impossible." It is naturally inconceivable that a free- thinking newspaperman will concede even an iota of ground to Nazi in- justice. It is to be hoped that the con- demnations of the liberal press in the world will continue until Germany remains Palestine's redemption and not only the branded for her atrocities and isolated present generation but also posterity will like a moral leper from the rest of the honor him for it. world. EDITOR'S NOTE: We present S. .1. Agnon, outstanding modern Hebrew story teller, who was just awarded the Bialik Prize for 1934. Mr. Agnon resides in Palestine, and writes in Hebrew. This is an authorized translation. David Ben-Gurion Jewry Under a British King Editor's Note( florid iten.litorton, leSAI- Ing memberof Si,. Ale1,611 Agency Ws- eel) e and Jew 1.11 lobor Federation of Palestine. is now in Otto muntry. I remember him 18 years ago as a co-Legionnaire in the British Jewish battalions. Ben Gurion not only followed Jabo- tinsky's leadership in those days but was one of his fer- vent admirers. He and Ben. Zvi were inseparable in the Le- gion. Quiet - mannered, low- voiced, they circulated among the Legionnaires, taking a per- sonal interest in the needs of the Jewish soldiers. Only a small minority had ever heard of them. They were known to the inner circle of Peale Zioh- ists as resourceful propagandists and organizers. The rank and file of the Jewish Legion looked at them with ironic eyes. They were nicknamed "Mutt and Jeff," because of Ben Zvi's tall stature and Ben Gurion's small size. As soldiers they were a complete flop. Neither of them ever rose above the rank of private, and it was a miracle that they were retained in the army. Somehow they never acquired the art of "form fours" and "about turn." After a few months both of them were the most beloved members of their batallion. Bower sr hoodlums, Chicago toughs and East Side gamblers who had donned the British uni- form out of a spirit of adven- ture, without any understand- ing Rf the Zionist significance of this military undertaking, submitted to the strong and quiet authority of Ben Gurion and Ben Zvi. They attended lectures and felt proud of their association with the two Poole Zion leaders. Ben Gallon has changed a great deal. As I looked at hint the other day I hardly recog- nized him. Of his soft, fem- inine face nothing but a sort of helpless smile remains. His face is stern, virile and that of a fighter. His white wavy hair and his bitter mouth remind one of pictures of Field Mar- shal Mackensen. He still speaks very quietly, without ostenta- tion, and whenever he com- ments sharply on • personality or on a subject he punctuates his remarks with a disarming smile. Today he is the spear- head and the personification of the relentless chalutz spirit of Palestine. Restless, he is far from satisfied. The pace of the upbuilding of Palestine is too slow for him. When he speaks of the shortage of Jewish labor in Palestine and the uncertainty of Jewish life in Germany, Po- land and Eastern Europe, there emanates from his words an indomitable passion to acceler- ate the tempo of Jewish work and to force the Jewish masses to a realization of the emerg- ency. For a whole hour the three old one thing—the way they recite the men had not spoken a word, but Priestly Blessing here. Since I sat there on the beach, contentedly came I have never missed a day's warming themselves in the eve- public service, and everytime I saw ning sun. Drowsy and half asleep, them go up to give the blessing my they had suffered the wind to play whole body was aflame, as if it were roguishly through their white gar- a holy day. But now when I hear ments, whilst the rays of the sun that they merely do the thing as a played lightly around their lips like routine, like throwing a worn coin at a beggar, I cannot help think- golden keys. They were three old men who ing of all the little synagogues and had come, in the evening of their chevrahs outside Palestine, where days, out of the tumult of the Golus the thing is a dream to them and back to the peace of the ancient they pour out their souls with home. Most of their days had every note and their hearts with been spent in the toil and mod of every letter. There , they say, there small businesses, but at last the is no Torah like the Torah of Eretz "holy memory" had crept into their Israel. But how do they teach it hearts and taken complete posses. here? Like a school exercise, with- sion. They had locked their shops out savor and without fire. No, my for the last time and it was as if friends, the Shechinah is in exile. they had taken on a new vigor and This Eretz Israel is an ark without new life. They had "gone up" to the scrolls. The little lamp still flickers, but where is the Torah?" Eretz Israel. "You are wrong, my friend," re- It was aready some weeks ago since they had prayed at the Wail- plied the second of the three old ing Wall, visited the graves of the awn. "You have lived all your life Zaddikim, and performed all the outside Palestine, and have studied offices of charity and good deeds Torah and performed all the com- which are the duty of the pious mandments. You had in your heart pilgrim. Now they were tired— the divine spark,• shining through tired with the scorching sun and the night of Galuth, and you want- the sight.of the lakes. They had ed to go to Eretz Israel. But you come at last to Jaffa to bathe in the thought that you would measure sweet, clear streams of the open the light of the Schechinah by your own light; you thought that you sea. At Jaffa, they had put up at an would bring it back its light with hotel full of fellow-Jews. They your coming. It is like the candle would take part in the services, which shone in a dirk place and study Torah with the best of they, thought it was the sun .. until and recite their due meed of song the sun melted it." Then spoke the third of the and praise. In the evening, when the day grew cooler and the sun group. As a rule he used to speak was westering, they would go out slowly and deliberately. Now the on to the beach, sometimes for a words came tumbling out, as if he bath and sometimes merely to sit were ■ messenger afraid that he for hours on little cane chairs and might die before delivering his mes- feast their eyes on the pageant of sage. "It is a good simile, my color. After a time, their shyness friend," said he, "but there is no would wear off and they would need for similes. I, too, have of- warm towards one another, even ten felt disquieted and upset at not though they said not a word. There getting all the joy and peace I had would be between them a commun- expected out of my life here, but ion of silence, as they sat there now I have seen it clearly. it is watching the waves break into mere folly which promotes such creamy foam and feeling the cool thoughts and which leads a man to wind brush gently across their sever what is a bond between God and Israel. Our rabbis have said faces. A waiter came out from the ho- that settlement in Eretz Israel out- tel and set before them three cups, weigh all the commandments, a bowl of sugar and a plate of Should we not, then, account it an biscuits. They poured out tea and ex tra grace of Providence, if we started to drink. At once their do not enjoy it, for so are we ac- drowsiness seemed to disappear and corded the merit of fulfilling this holiest of ordinances for its own they fell to talking. It was the eldest who started the sa ke? And though we are not holy conversation. "There is no sun, enough to enjoy the meanest part he said suddenly, "like the sun of of it, should we not ascribe it to Eretz Israel! Look, it is already the bounty of Heaven that we.are going down, yet it still warms the permitted to live in this holiest body and enfolds the limbs like a place? Says the book: 'Walk before robe." And as he said this he me and be blameless.' Our Master scooped his hand into the sand at Bashi add: 'Be perfect in all my his feet and !sighed, "Fret; Is- trial of you. Then I will give you rael? Is there really an Eretz Is- my covenant—the covenant of love and the covenant of the land, for rael. "Don't worry yourself about the upright shall dwell in the land blameless shall be left in it.'" that," rejoined his neighbor. "After the (CoPYright. 1136. by P A. F all, Jaffa isn't Eretz Israel. Remem- ber what it says in the Bible: BIOGRAPHY 'Jonah sought to flee from the presence of the Lord, so he went down unto Jaffa."' A broad grin A little Jew lived in a little strew hut; of victory spread over his pearl- There was thatch on his roof; on white teeth . his floors there was not. "Yes," replied the first speaker, "you say that Jaffa is not Eretz There was smoke in his chimney, and sun on his cot .. . Israel. But is Eretz Israel itself?" His two companions glanced at But him sharply and curiously, as if a There was nothing in his pot ... lunatic had just been speaking. So hungry and little in a world that was wide, " Y ou wonder?" said the speaker, He tried to get used to not eating; know w hat ' he tried t h; t I f o r ' ib id tha of Eretz Israel, but I ask you, The first slay, the second. "A habit!" he cried. is this Eretz Israel which is re- vealed to us now the same land as Then sighed. is described in the Bible and in the And thus the little Jew died . —Abraham lig Klein. In Opinion CoPYrIght, MS, by a. A. words of the sages? Look only at P. Syndicate. By A. L. EASTERMAN moron's NOTE, Thin In the find of a tosien of ,,emir, on lirhinli Jett', under the reign of hunglieorge V. lite.. orticle*, oritten on the 01,1.10.4,,f the slyer Jubilee of the thilistli Kinn, tirncribe the114 , 01(pm...it of sari.* .,)wet, doltish life in England during - the fwd quarter of o century. The nemnd s net neek, article, tu lot published will be t the pen o Dr. Morn,1e Article* by Volum MOtolow and lsroel Colin will follow. Ise f preftent this f(ad xclt.1)ely in The (lit ...nicht by nottelol mtur. re Feature syndicate end the London Jensinls arrangement n1111 tile Smell V rtn Doily Post. To the Jewish people, who re- toll of Jewish life and blood. The count their history, not in years London Board of Deputies of Brit- but in cycles of centuries, e., 25 years ist Jews was a dignified assembly, semi-somnolent, t nated by worthy is normally but a fleeting hour, but not unduly active members of It may be, too, that for the past the more prosperous section of the two millennia, the running com- community. Its contact with the mentary on the swiftly moving Jewish masses was remote and ten- drama of the Children of Israel uous. Its presiding genius, the has been a recurrent "Ever chang- late D. L. Alexander, K. C., had ing, yet ever the same." A sombre come almost to regard it as a per- canvas of suffering and tragedy re- sonal perquisite, and his frequent lieved by heroism, martyrdom and references to "My Board" had be- come a communal cynicism. the will for survival . When some Jewish matter of Yet the future historians of Is- real urgency called for exceptional reel will assuredly accord pride of action recourse was had to the place to the past quarter of a can- House of Commons lobbies, where tury as an epoch of transcendent two Jews walked in the full glare of importance, far exceeding any time the public limelight. The eleva- since the destruction of the Tem- tion of Herbert Samuel, N. P., to pie of Jerusalem and the annihila- the rank of Postmaster General in tion of the Hebrew nation in the the Liberal cabinet had aroused Holy Land of Palestine. The events justifiable pride among his co-re- of this comparatively brief period ligioni sts and created prophecies of stand out with dazzling clarity as tu Jewish Prime Minister of a future marking the great to in England. the national life of the Jewish race Samuel's Advent —the most momentous episode since the beginning of the diaper- Anglo-Jewish hearts also flut- sion, two thousand years ago. tered proudly at the success of Ru- For this generation has seen the fus Isaacs, K. C., on his promo- international recognition of Jewish tion to Solicitor General of Eng- claims to rebuild Palestine as the National Homeland of the Jews, land, and Knighthood. On the and has witnessed the translation Liberal benches in Parliament, too, into reality of the age-old dream of sat Alfred Mond, in whose direc- "next year in Jerusalem" and the miracle of the first great trek back tion approving glances were being from exile to the freedom of a re- cast, and about whom whispers of stored Jewish land. i c n og mifn rg eepo ly lu itti tcearlede were he. This This momentous episode of na- tional regeneration has raised the Jewish community of Britain into • In the inward life of the Jew- pre-eminence in the Jewish world. shcommunity, however, these three The Balfour Declaration of 1917 or rising figures played no conspicuous paf rotr . e T tw heena td y ,y ee n a trs of we srie r to H e e l r a b< ps r e t rmfed be twhaesJneowtiso hn i yeo so a pmlee,sbsau ge t troafnhsofope the Jews of Britain from a mere Samuel, High Commissioner for section of World Jewry into the Palestine, and more than that for spearhead of Jewish life and action. the sudden and surprising emer- Acceptance of Inevitabl e Renee of Sir Alfred Mond, first of The King years between the accession Lord Melchett, as the Jewish pa- George V. and the out- triot and perfervid advocate of the break British of the World War found Jewish renaissance in Palestine. is Jewry in a state of corn- His conversion to Jewish loyalty parative tranquility bespeaking ei- did as much of anything to rouse ther a lapse into communal coma Anglo-Jewry to its wider respon- or the broding of new force. The sibilities and Iss make Zionism in upheavals and anxieties of the England both important and re- Aliens' Restriction Act had given apectable. way, in 1910, to a calmer accept- A Rising Revolt ance of the inevitable. The doors The cataclysm of the w , ar of England had been closed for five years to the clamoring refu- brought another important develop- gees from the persecutions and po- ment in Anglo-Jewry—the self- consciousness of the provincial groms of Russia and Eastern ope and British Jewry had settled communities. These have now. be- r c e o n m te e self-contained Th r e pre s a en n d talteisyse d r e o p u e n n il down to its 350 000 Jewish ' w Lo hi n le doa n cca esptth he m no e m nsi. rens, a number which has remained ing e c tom almost unchanged to this des y. Eur- The r ib s of Glasg.nw, The community had nettled down, cdheenstteorn, to engage, unexcitedly, in inter. authority of the Board of De mi- nal issues of more or less commun- al importance. In 1910 such mat- ties, perform regarLee deddsasatnhde p Mreanr-- hers as Ritual Slaughtering, chant-nal ogative of the London body. In able relief and synagogal rivalries were the principal matters agitat- provinces have developed a strength Mg those who, by long residence in matters social and religious the and vitality coincident with free- England and steady assimilation to dom front metropolitan authority. English ways, had assumed the m in England has. title of "British Jewry." It was ■ for long, bee sporadic and not congregation strictly confined to the duties of "Prayer, Repentence and itndharnstohr encouragement hrc eaten .1 jbl d l ei, Charity," without interest in, far unduly blatant character, but, trecent in years A been bolder less enthusiasm for, the wider more threatening. awry needs or aspirations of a great in- with feels secure in the innate justice ternational community, and good sense of the British Pe"; A Dignified Assembl y th e, yet, in face of a latent tent Peri' When it did sometimes look be- rebellio n yond the British horizon, it saw ainst complacency have become more i stent. the problems and trials of Jewry as age i ns new elements of rebe occasion These are signs fresh yip! of a for financial aid for th tyrannies and, afflicted by foreign th Jewish ln us' and a new vitality in the more rarely, for • cautions profs; community, which combines to an- when violence toot too heavy a cestrl faith in the Jewsh i ideal., copyright, Mt. ty g A F. SY." .