September 23, 1938 PIEDEntOrdEWIS/I 6IRONICLE PAGE SIX an THE LEGAL CHRONICLE Hebrew it nevertheless points to a new trend in Bnai Brith work which will em- brace all important functions of Jewish and THE LEGAL CHRONICLE activity. Published Wook17 by The Jewish Chronicle Publie ► ing Cs. ha. It is gratifying to know that this new tendency is proposed by an able and en- ll.1 March I, 1/11,at tb• Pat- tetrad OP waned-elver office at Detroit. Idich, ander Om At of Man. I, II11. ergetic person. Bnai Brith's work will be General Offices and Publication Building watched with greater interest and with the good wishes of all elements in Jewry. 525 Woodward Avenue telephone: Cadillac 1040 Cable Address: Chronicle Having undertaken to embrace every London Odic. cause that serves the best interests of our 14 Stratford Place, London, W, I, England people, we are confident that Mr. Monsky ion. in Advance... ......... ..._...13.00 Per Year and his associates at the head of this Subscrip t movement will have the support of the To insure publication, allcorm...nee nod new. matter moot reach this omen by Tumid. evening of each best minds in Jewry. When maWoc node.., Uuidlr U. mid• of the paper Golf. WLEDEI'ROITLIEWIS11 . 0RON1C14 •orrespondeo• oa The Detroit Jewish Chroniele Poets of Interst to th• Jowl.h people, bat disclaims mama- My for an Indorsement of the views expressed by the write. Sabbath Scriptural Selections Pentateuchal Portion--4.Deut. 29:9-30:20. Prophetical Portion—Ia. 61-10-63:9. Readings of Torah on First Day of RDA Hashanah, Monday, Sept. 26 Pentateuchal portions—Gen. 21; Num. 28:1-6. Prophetical portion-1. Sam. 1:1-2:10. Reading of Torah on Second Day of Rosh Hashonah, Tuesday. Sept. 27 Pentateuchal portions—Gen. 22; Num. 29:1-6. Prophetical portion—ter. 31:2-20. Readings of Torah on Fast of Gehtliah, Wednesday, Sept. 28 Pentateuchal portions—Ex. 32 :11-14 ; 34 :1-10. Prophetical portions—Is. 55:6-56:8. September 23, 1938 Elul 27, 5698 5699 Jews throughout the world greet the approaching new year with a sense of awe and with an anxiety that has not been experienced before by this generation. The uncertainties which envelop the world and the trials and tribulations which oppress the spirit not only of Jewry but also of Christendom are responsible for an increase of fear. On the eve of the year now closing, Jews were hopeful that certain changes would take place to improve conditions in the world and to make mankind more cheerful. But the present year is being ushered in with deeper concern and with greater trepidation. There are undoubt- edly people in many lands who, in spite of their suffering and insecurity, pray that the coming' year should at least not be worse than the preceding one. Such hopes are indicative of the world's sad plight. The war scares, the threats to the well- being of many nations, the fact that in- fants are being fitted out with gas masks in England and other countries, are symp- toms of the spread of hate and the rise of despair in the hearts of men. If the coming year will bring good tid- ings to all mankind, it will react favor- ably to Jewry. But in the event of, war, or of revolutions, or of increased hard- ships and sufferings, we shall not only be subject to the same sufferings as our neighbors but will, judging by historic experiences, be subjected to even greater horrors than during the past year be- cause we make such good scapegoats. To review the terrors of the past year would merely serve to re-awaken the fears of the past and to create even greater panic in the hearts of our people. Hardly a corner on the globe was im- mune from hatred and bigotry. Except for isolated instances of friendship and kindliness in some democratic countries, the entire world was one massive hotbed of bigotry and persecution. Nevertheless, we must not despair. Tyr- anny always meets its doom, and decency and human kindness must always replace it. It will replace it again, and we pray that it will be jn our own time. The year 5699 should be greeted hope- fully, even if we can not be too joyous on the occasion of the current most sol- emn period on the Jewish calendar. Be- cause of our traditional battle for justice, we must not abandon hope. We have been tried in many fires, and we shall carry the banner for freedom and for equality for all mankind to the end of days. It is in this spirit of hopefulness that we greet our readers and pray with them that the year 5699 should mark a return to human decency. • May 5699 be marked for happiness and security for all Israel, and therefore for all mankind! This Year's Obligations The new year 5699 will carry with it many obligations which Detroit Jewry will have to carry. First and foremost will be the respon- sibility to the refugees from lands of op- pression. This need is so pressing that only the most hard-hearted will be found outside the ranks of those who come to the aid of the persecuted. Then there will be the duty of building a Jewish hospital—a task which will in- volve the largest single monetary obliga- tion that has ever faced our community. Detroit Jews must not be permitted to forget that there is need for erecting a new Hebrew school building in the north- west section of the city. Unless we are willing to subject thousands of boys and girls to ignorance and to a lack of knowl- edge of their history and their language, the building of a new Hebrew school must be made a matter of first considera- tion. A new Center building will, we hope, be constructed this year, especially since there is a possibility of the needed sums being made available for this purpose. The upbuilding of Palestine and the providing of necessary funds for the self- defense of our pioneers must be given a place of priority on the agenda of finan- cial obligations. European-Jewish relief must not be cur- tailed. The year 5699 will be a trying one for Israel. It will carry with it many respon- sibilities. It must not find our people shirking in duty. A New Era for Bnai Brith A new era dawns for the Order of Bnai Brith. Assumption of leadership by young men and the adoption of a more militant atti- tude augurs well for the movement, and much may be expected from this impor- tant organization during the current year. It is safe to assume that under the presidency of Henry Monsky this year's activities will mark the beginning of a greater future than has ever before been experienced by the movement. We base our convictions not only on the past ac- complishments of the new president, but more especially on his recent utterances. Most interesting of all of his statements is the Rosh Hashonah statement he has issued last week. Asserting that "Bnai Brith is conscious of its responsibility," Mr. Monsky points in his greeting to the following as con- stituting "the challenge to the Jews of America and other democratic nations for the coming year": "Relief for refugees from the lands of persecution; aid and assistance in the rebuilding of Palestine; unremitting effort in the defense of Jew- ish rights; unswerving loyalty to the de- mocracy in which we live and the protec- tion of that democracy and its principles, ideals and institutions, against all sub- versive forces and influences; the building of a richer and more vital Jewish life." Mr. Monsky speaks of reconsecration to these purposes and he makes the declara- tion: "We have supported the rebuilding of Palestine and this significant and vital project in Jewish life and history will con- tinue to receive our profound interest and generous support." He even establishes a new precedent for a Bnai Brith presi- dent of quoting Scripture in the Hebrew original, and although it is elementary By PHILIP SLOMOVITZ Rosh Hashonah Facts You'll Want to Know By RABBI MORDF.CAI L. BRILL While the Jews of Palestine ob- serve all holidays with a one-day celebration, Rosh Hashanah is an exception and is observed two days, even by Palestinian Jewry. • • e Many Jewish holidays have spe- cial dishes associated with the day. On New Year's eve it is customary to eat fruit dipped in honey. The prayer that precedes the eating reads: "Stay it be Thy will to renew unto us a good and sweet year." Ultra-Orthodox Jews, do not eat, nut., on Rosh Ilashonah because the numerical value of the Hebrew words for nut, "egoz," is equivalent to that of the Hebrew word for sin- "chet." Red apples were the specialty delicacy of the French Jews during the Middle Ages, while the Jews of the l'rovence ate the head of sheep and white grapes. •• Pre-Talmudic • literature con- tains not a single statement to the effect that Rosh Hashonah is a day of judgment. It is in the Mishna (135-220) that the Jew- ish New Year is first referred to as a day on which God judges mankind, the reference being " . . . on New Year's Day all men shall pass before Him like young lambs.: A Hospital Is Needed STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL PURELY COMMENTARY Old Customs for The New Year Wishing You a Year of Joy We approach the threshold of the new year 5699 with trepidation and with a sense of awe. Everything about us is wrapped either in hate or in mystery. The world is in jitters, and fear dominates the heart of man. When, therefore, the Happy New Year wish is exchanged at this time, it becomes an expression of prayer mingled with hope. There was a time when the advent of a new year was greeted with idle talk about resolutions and the futility of trying to adhere to them. Today it is much more serious. In our time it is a question of nations deciding on policies, reli- gious groups determining upon firm adherence to faith. The Jewish people, being the most sorely tried, has much to account for and a great deal to deliberate upon. Because it is so difficult to decide on major principles for action in dealing with our enemies, it is essential that important basic and elementary obligations be adhered to. It is important, for instance, that we do not yield an iota of loyalty to our faith, to our tradi- tions, to the Law which is the foundation not only for Jewish existence but for the survival of every religious and national entity that is concerned with the highest ethical and moral principles of humanity. We must not lose faith and courage, and it is of the utmost importance that we should remem- ber that in the end justice and - truth will prevail and the persecutors will meet their doom. We must carry our obligations with courage and dignity and if it is necessary to battle for existence we must so mobilize our forces that an united people will defy indignity by standing erect and by refusing to be humiliated. Above all, we must retain our sense of humor and must not yield completely to despair. Pious Jews fast most of the ten penitential days from New Years to the Day of Atonement, but not on the day immediately preceding Yom Kippur, on which fasting is forbidden. • • • According to one opinion held by early Rabbinic teachers, the world was created on the first days of Tishri—Rosh Hashonah day. r • • Rabbi Johanan (3rd century teachpr) held that on New Year's Day three kinds of record books are opened; those for the com- pletely ri ,,hteous and for the com- pletely wicked are at once writ- ten up and sealed, the one to life and the other to death; but the books of "the great middle class" are kept open for ten days (till the Day of Atonement) that they may repent. Repentance was the sine qua non if one wanted to expiate for sins. All other forms of expiation were conditional upon repentance. • • • If tradition is to be believed it was on Rosh Ilashonah that Joseph was freed from imprisonment and the Hebrew slaves stopped work- ing for Pharaoh. • • r It is impossible for the first day of Rosh Ilashonah to fall on Sun- day, Wednesday or Friday. • Fighting Bigotry With Laughter The latter ought to be made one of the most powerful weapons in meeting the onslaught of the enemy. It is true that it is not possible always to laugh away danger, and that at times it is impossible to be witty in the face of hu- miliation and insult. But as a general rule it should be possible for us to resort to the deadly weapon of wit and humor in dealing with forces that betray humanity and seek to crucify the Jewish people. In his splendid book, "Pity the Persecutor," Rabbi Julius Gordon of St. Louis proposes wit. ridicule and satire as a weapon against persecu- tion. Ile points to an interesting example of the use of wit as counter-propaganda against Nazism by quoting from a letter written recently to the Nation by the Rev. L. M. Birkhead of Kansas City who tells that he sent the following telegram to the German ambassador to the United States: "I hereby apply for a special visa to go to Ger- many for the purpose of organizing branches of the Friends of Democracy among German citizens. Included in this permit, I should like to have the privilege of marching the members of the Friends of Democracy through German highways, carrying the Stars 'and Stripes and shouting slo- gans from the Declaration of Independence and Bill of Rights. I should like, moreover, to have it specifically stated in my visa that the Friends of Democracy may set up semi-miltary camps on German soil and carry on both secret and open propaganda to educate the German people in ideals of liberty and democracy." Here is a piece of mind which, if widely broad- cast, would serve to hold up to ridicule efforts of Nazis in Germany as well as those who are trying to plant the seed of Nazism through Bund camps in this country. • about the Fuehrer's harangue of the Jews at ,a large public rally. Adolf was gesticulating and shouting and emitting venom against the Jews. He asked his audience whether they knew who was responsible for all of the world's and Ger- many's troubles, and he gave the answer by screaming: "The Jews! The Jews! The Jews!" Whereupon a tiny, shriveled-up fellow, with an umbrella under his arm, sitting in the rear of the hall, remarked calmly: "And the bicycle riders." Hitler was stunned. No one had ever dared to interrupt him or to interject anything in the middle of onO, of his speeches. He turned to the little Jewish fellow and asked: "Why the bicycle riders?" And the Jew calmly replied: "'Why the Jews?" According to Van Paassen, the hall was in an uproar of laughter. For once the Nazi chieftain was licked. It is possible to hold him up to even greater ridicule by repeating these stories and by passing them on from mouth to mouth. The Hitler Joke Book should become the best seller. Let the jokcsmiths get busy. Such a book should be made the major weapon against Nazis and Nazism. • Artistic Calendars Have you selected your calendar for the New Year? As in previous year, we again have the op- portunity of selecting very interesting calendars, and the most attractive available Jewish almanacs once again come to us from three sources: From Se Palestine Publishing Co. at Tel Aviv, from the Jewish National Fund and from the National Federation of Temple Sisterhoods. The Sisterhood's calendar this year features the artistic works of Louis Kabrin. talented young New York artist who has illustrated books for the Union of American Hebrew Congregations. From the Jewish National Fund comes a splen- didly arranged booklet, beautifully printed and packed full of interesting information about Pal- estine and Jewish national agencies. An inter- esting picture of achievements in Palestine and advances made in the Jewish National Home are a part of this booklet. But the finest calendar of all is the one which is available from the Palestine Publishing Co., Ltd., 6 Harakeveth St., Tel Aviv, Palestine. The best art from Palestine is included in this calen- dar, and a splendid picture, seven by eight inches in size, illustrates every weekly cycle in the Jewish year. But it is not the excellent art alone that makes this calendar stand out as a piece of fine art. Each photograph is accom- panied by an appropriate Biblical quotation. It is appropriate, for instance, that the opening photograph, showing a patriarchal flee. should have the explanatory sentence from Exodus 15.2: The Lord is my strength and song, and he is become my salvation." It has long been a tradition for Jews to pro- duce artistic calendars. The three to which we referred are an excellent collection to choose from when purchasing your copy. and the • one that comes from Tel Aviv and is illustrated with 52 excellent photographs is by far the best and most artistic production of the year. Scoops of 5698 By PHINEAS J. BIRON HAPPY NEW YEAR! We're going to simplify your reading of Jewish news for the coming year .. . In other words, we'll now give you the highlights of the headlines for 5698 . If you'll read this column care- fully you'll be in line for the post of social lion in your community . . . You'll be as amazing as we are . . . Ladies and gentlemen, lean back . . . Lights out . Operator, flash the news for the year 5698 . . . POLITICAL PREVIEW You'll wake up one morning to find front-page reading matter about new schemes to send large numbers of German Jewish refu- gees to Mexico, Madagascar and Canada . . , Don't let your heart beat too fast, though ... It won't mean a thing except publicity for this or that individual or organ- ization . . . Then there will be the well-informed sources whence will emanate the authoritative pre- diction that a certain millionaire will prove to have made a will leaving millions for the solution of the problem confronting our un- fortunate brethren in Germany and Poland . . . Forget it, and double your contribution to the JDC For the will, when pub- lished, will leave the money to some university or to a home for lost puppies . . . Sonic evening a visiting celebrity will give you ad- vance information that Shalom Asch, the Yiddish novelist, will re- ceive the Nobel award for litera- ture for 1939 . . Tell your dis- tinguished scoopster that he's all wet, and tlept a comparatively un- known Swedish or French writer will get the coveted prize . . . Bruce Barton, the aggressive Con- gressman, will one of these days issue a grand and glorious scheme for the solution of the Jewish problem ... But you just remem- ber that Mr. Barton is going to make a serious bid for higher po- litical honors Justice Brandeis will be reported resigning and Felix Frankfurter will be talked about as his successor . . . You can bet your shirt that the Grand Old Man of the Supreme Court will resign gn x be p f i i o . e r s p Ib t u oo ts etye hal's se c- ond Frankfurter, who deserves the honor of being his successor, will not get it ... Speaking of politics, De J. J. Golub's statement in this issue prepare yourselves to address Gov- of The Detroit Jewish Chronicle in which A Dialogue sWith a Moral ernor Lehman as senator, and Sen- he declares, on the basis of his investiga- The Basle National-Zeitung reports an inter- ator Wagner as Mr. Justice . . . tion, that a Jewish hospital is needed in esting dialogue that was overhead by a party Don't be stunned if George Backer, of Swiss hikers on the Austrian-Lichtenstein versatile Jewish and Labor ('arty Detroit, is a dramatic culmination of more frontier, between an elderly Jew and a uniformed leader, will be on the New York than 30 years of local community striving German official. State ticket for the position of for such an institution. "I beg you to let me stay in Austria," the lieutenant-governor . . . And, It is too early to state whether a cam- old man pleaded. "I was born here and my son speaking of new Jewish faces in died in the war. I can't go into exile in my the big political headlines, remem- paign for a hospital is advisable at this old age without any means, can I? Don't you ber the name of our old friend, time, primarily since the distress and suf- understand? Aren't you also a human being?" M. Maldwin Fertig. fering of world Jewry places such serious The answer was: "Silence! I am a German!" ZIONIST PREVIEW obligations on every Jew. This dialogue speaks for itself. Its moral is The British Imperial Partition Most recent of all Rosh Hash- too impressive to need elaboration. The only Commission will report on its find- An Old Story—Always Good But the fact is now definitely estab- onah customs is the practice of comment it can possibly evoke is that the Germans e recall the story that was told by Pierre ings and will come out with a lished that a hospital is needed, that it sending New Year cardl. It did Van Paassen, just before Hitler came to power, are to be pitied. ( PLEASE TURN TO PAGE 7 ) ( PLEASE TURN TO OE 7 ) 'should be built as soon as possible, that -------- the wealthy Jews of the community ought to pool their resources for the construc- Dr. Wile in New Year tion of such an institution. Broadcast on Sunday Dr. Golub's forthcoming findings rela- The Price of Freedom Rosh Ilashonah, which is to By LUDWIG LEWISOHN tive to the attitude of Detroit Jews on the begin on Sunday evening, Sept. question, and Harry L. Lurie's study of By DOROTHY THOMPSON 25, will be ushered in on that chau. In other words, this Euro- How shall we begin this year the f,nancial problems involved, may fur- pean gentleman, this writer, schol- day by a special broadcast after the unsurpassable horrors ar, thinker, is being ignominiously over a nationwide hookup of ran ae hare both demoentrY and eronomle security? Must we ...once one ther complicate the issue. to net the other? flow much freedom mould we rite op for the sake W ROSH HASHONAH 5699 But in view of the need, now definitely established, nothing should be permitted to stand in the way of realizing the de- sired and needed goal. The building of a Jewish hospital in Detroit will increase considerably the com- munity's obligations. The construction of such a building will involve not only the initial construction expense but also the added obligation of a large maintenance fund. But where there is a need a way should be found to fill it. We are confi- dent that the way can and will be found. Barbed Wire for Refugees There is no end to the misery which con- fronts the refugees who are fleeing the countries of oppression. Two weeks ago world public opinion was moved to sympathy by the report that more than a thousand German Jews slip- ped into Switzerland through an under- ground subway. But now barbed wire is being strung along the Swiss frontier with Austria to keep out additional exiles. Journal de Geneva writes that the refu- gees "have kissed the ground of Switzer- land, they were so moved by the thought that they had reached security." Pointing to the fact that the unfortunates who are escaping from Germany are waiting for propitious moments to enter Switzerland which they consider the promised land, this newspaper predicts another flow of immigrants and writes "The Saint-Gall gendarmes of the Rhine Valley have had ample occasion in the past 20 years to see the misery of refugees and men with- out a country entering Switzerland clan- destinely, yet what has been witnessed be- fore was nothing compared with the phy- sical and moral distress of the Jewish refugees fleeing Germany since the begin- ning of August." But while the exiles are housed in a disused textile plant in the village of Diepoldsau, over which they hung a sign reading "Thanks to the Swiss People," "it is forbidden to them to have any close relations with the Swiss population and engage in any political or lucrative ac- tivity." In the meantime one land after another is shutting its doors tight to refugees, and as the days pass into weeks and months opportunities for saving them decrease and the situation becomes more horrible. With Italy joining in the mad rush to the anti. Semitic bandwagon from which is being disseminated the worst type of discrimina- tion — including heartless expulsions cf Jews—and with Czechsldvakia in danger of being absorbed into the family of atroc- ious Nazism, the immediate future looks frantically hopeless for millions of Jews. We have indeed come upon evil times! and tragedies that marked the year just gone? Let us at least begin it in the spirit of that say- ing of Rabbi Jizchak: "If the year is poor to begin with, it will be rich in the end." Let us, in other words, begin it in a spirit of indomitable hopefulness, of ac- tive hopefulness, in that trans- cendent and magnificent spirit which Shelley hoped would be the spirit of all humanity but which must be, as a mere matter of survival, the spirit of the Jewish people in this age: hounded to death by jungle ways. A number of years ago I sat with him in his beautiful house in Vi- enna, filled with books and ob- jects of art, and he lifted quietly a little stub of a pencil and said: "With this I have earned that." Before the world war he had been sincerely playing the part of be- ing an Austro-German. His plays were on all stages, his stories in all hands, his weekly critical ar- ticles were widely read. He even went in for hunting. lie had per- sonally known an archduke or two and hunting-trophies were in To suffer woes which hope his house. thinks infinite; In later years a rift was made To forgive wrongs darker in the darkness of his false se- than death or night; curity. Zionism was not as un- To defy power which seems fashionable as it had once been. omnipotent; West European gentle-folks were To love and bear; to hope curiously taking it up. Salten met till hope creates Kurt Blumenfeld, most versuas- From its own wreck the ise of men. A spark began to thing it contemplates. glow in him. Ile went to Pales- tine. Ile wrote a book Neue It is curious to contemplate the Mensehen auf alter Erde (New exactness with which these un- Men on Ancient Earth), a beau- dying verses describe what is and tiful book, a book with the right must be the attitude of the Jew- vision and the right perception, ish ample. We have year after book worth a wilderness of those recent year and especially during a tales (Bambi, etc.) with which that just past, suffered infinite he made money and reputation. woes; we have been afflicted with I thought that Felix Salton's will wrongs darker than death or had been awakened and had iden- night; we have had at least by tified itself with the will and des- our erectness of spirit to defy apparently omnipotent power; we tiny of Israel. But evidently it had not done have sought, especially 'in Eretz Yisrael, to love and bear; we so. For the years went on and must, we must cling to the kind! Salten drew no inference in ac- of hope that does literally, again tion from what he doubtless sin- especially in Eretz Yisrael, create cerely embraced as genuine opin- from its own wreck the sub- ion. He remained in Vienna. I do not even know whether he stance of its ultimate vision. But it must be no supine or left his foreign royalties abroad or kept them to be stolen from merely prayerful hope. It must be active and sacrificial. Often him. Hitler came. Central Eu- and often is the Midrash quoted rope grew darker and darker. to the effect that God permits no Even under the successive recent makka, no ill or misfortune, to be- Austrian governments, Jews were fall Israel until the "refuah." the treated with every species of open remedy therefor is already in ex- chicanery and contempt. Salten istence. Profoundly true! The remained. He did not protest by truth of that Midrash is vibrantly his withdrawal. He did not seek alive in history by both positive actively to identify himself with and negative examples. It is ex- those new people upon an ancient emplified with burning clearness earth. He was not even on that in this age. There is a "refuah" last train of fugitives to Prague. for our present unspeakable ills. With will frozen, with soul unified, There is. But it is at yet latent an Austro-German to the end, he and not active. It is as yet only awaited his doom. Let us not in its various mani- dimly discerned and by many, many thousands it is not yet seen festations await our doom or eon- at all. The remedy for the ills sent to a doom which an evil and of Israel is in the re-born will of pagan world may be minded to Israel. Birth pangs are felt here bring upon us. Let us not mouth and there, birth pangs are felt by words and neither mean meanings individual souls and by small nor translate them into action. groups. The will of the entire Torah is to be "learned" in order people is not yet reborn. It must to be put into practice. Visions be if the people is to survive. For are to be seen in order to be em- that rebirth of a people and • bodied in realities. he will to- people's single will to life is be- ward the survival and the good of yond all question the "refuah" Israel is to be wholly roused and which the Eternal has designed to become identical with the total for the "makkoth" of our time. will, with the total inner man. So The matter may be illustrated and only so will we have • better by a single symbolical life and year. So and only to will we do tragedy. Bitter news comes that our duty as Jews and as men, our the well-known Viennese man of duty to Israel and our duty to letters, Felix Salton, aged 70, it humanity. We ourselves are the in the concentration camp of Da. "refuah," the remedy of the Eter- DEMOCRACY AT HOME the Columbia Broadcasting system in which Dr. Stephen S. Wise. chairman of the ex- excutive cvommittee of the United Palestine Appeal, will be the principal speaker. Madame Goeta Ljunberg, noted soprano, formerly of the Metropolitan Opera Company, will be the featured artist. The Iligh Holy Day broad- cast, which is to be presented under the auspices of the United Palestine Appeal, will be heard over Station WABC in New York and other sta- tions of the Columbia chain throughout the country on Sunday afternoon, Sept. 25. from 4 to 4.30 p. m. In addition to Madame Ljun- berg's appearance on the pro- gram, the broadcast will also include ritual music by the choir of the Free Synagogue under the direction of Prof. A. W. Binder. During the course of his address Dr. Wise is expected to review developments in the past year in Jewish life throughout the world and dwell on the significance of the re- building of Palestine as a ma- jor force in the solution of the problem of Jewish suffer- ing in various parts of the world. The United Palestine Appeal is now conducting a nation- wide campaign to raise $4,- 500,000 for the settlement in Palestine of Jews of Germany, Austria, Poland and other lands. nal—we, our hearts, our souls, our burningly awakened wills. Mankind watches us; part of the good of all the world is in our keeping. In the will of every Israelite the roads of choice cross today. The decision is to be made now; the re-dedication is to be achieved today. Never was a be- ginning of a year more fateful in the long history of Israel. But fate does Oct depend upon the world. Its essence depends upon us, upon Jews, upon each Jew and his love of his people and his valiant hope for it and his de- termination that all he is and has will be placed in the service of its survival and redemption. (copyright, Mk S. A F. R.) "Trust in the Lord with all thine heart; and lean not unto thine own understanding. In all thy ways acknowledge him, and he shall direct thy paths." —Proverbs 3:6, 6. Men must eat many a peck of• salt together before the claims of friendship are fulfilled. —Cicero Everything is pardoned use want of tact. of a new owl. order? Thew are some of the 11.1 questions diseussed and answered by Miss Tito/Noon, oar of the greatest of women Journalist.. It is characteristic of these times that we discuss democracy and freedom with a clear impli- cation that both of them are on the defensive. Apparently our liberal democracy is on the de- fensive on two fronts, externally against the powers outside that are not democratic and that are bombarding the rest of the world with anti-democratic propaganda and internally against our real or imagined enemies within. Unfortunately, democ- racies don't even seem to agree about the external ideological enemies to be onnosed to say noth- ing of internal ones. The Soviet Union represents the ideal of many of our brethren of the left who consider the American way of life merely a botrgeoisie al- ready in an advanced stage of dis- integration. Fascism; on the other hand, is their King Charles' head, and they want us all to mobilize against it not because it also menaces our society, which it cer- tainly does, but because it threat- ens to become the successor of the present social order, and they want to inherit it themselves. The real weakness of democ- racy, it seems to me, comes from the fact that in a world with very clearly defined other ideolo- gies, people who claim to believe in democracy seem unable to clarify even in their own minds what it is they really believe in, and at all points they qualify their belief. They believe in democracy providing it works, and sometimes when you ask what democracy has to do in or- der to prove that it works, you find that it has to do all the things that despotisms do, onl• do it without despotism. Now, it seems to me that it is high time to come out and say that there are lots of things that despotisms can do that democ- racies can't do and remain democ- racies. Some of these things seem to be at first sight impressive and desirable. In the field of domes- tic affairs and particularly in the field of economics, whole masses of our people are asking for things that the despotisms claim to have accomplished and that we certain- ly haven't accomplished, and even in high and responsible govern- ment circles we are being told that we are challenged and that unless we can do these things, democracy is a failure, the infer- ence being that democracies are going to have to bribe their citi- zens in ...order to obtain their loyalty. The government is being asked, for instance. to guarantee the economic existence of every in- dividual and to guarantee that every individual will have satis- factory work at a satisfactory annual wage, work that he likes to do, a field that he likes to do it in, otherwise democracy will not be justified, and all sorts of devices are being thought up to bring about this unquestionably highly desirable end. But democratic government— government, mind you — cannot do this. It is my firm belief that a democratic society as distin- guished from government is a society in which the energies of the people are released, in which high standards of official work are encouraged, in which punitive re- strictions are minimized, and in which the main activity of gov- ernment in the economic sphere is confined to setting of reason- able and universal rules, taking carefully planned action to sup- plement private initiative when and in so far as that is demon- strably necessary, and devising a taxation s-stem that will operate to keep production and distribu- tion going rather than clog it. It is my firm belief that this sort of society can produce and dis- tribute a greater amount of, con- sumable wealth and national in- come than any other system that we yet know about, and so give the average man a higher stand- ard of living than any other 'sys- tem that we yet know about. But government in such a so- ciety cannot guarantee the in- dividual that he will live again in a Garden of Eden, protected against all the exigencies of life by a benevolent state and even without any increased effort on his part. Now, I may add that despotisms cannot do this either, but they can perhaps come nearer to guar- anteeing universal security at a very low level of existence until they get into war. We shall have to wait on history to see whether even this is so. The German government, for instance, can for the time being guarantee that everybody shall have work, but everybody cannot have work of his own choosing; he has got to take what is offered and not to take what is offered becomes a penal offense. Ile has to be will- ing to serve in the army, work in labor camps, and stay on the farm if the state decides that that is the sphere where he belongs or what the state under condi- tions determines for him and do precisely what he is told. In re- turn for doing that, the govern - ment guarantees his existence, and he pays for it with his con- science, his freedom, even with his immortal soul. Our form of democratic gov- ernment can't do this. No gov- ernment can do this unless it has complete control over all the means of production and distribu- tion of wealth. It may get that PLEASE TURN TO PAGE 7 ) ea