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January 05, 1940 - Image 13

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish Chronicle and the Legal Chronicle, 1940-01-05

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

A merica 'elvish Periodical Carter

CLIFTON

Amu* -

January 5, 1940

DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE

1940

REFUGEES

HEBREW SCHOOLS'
TALMUD CLASSES

Continued from Page 1

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CINCINNATI 20, OHIO

ish leaders said in their letter to
Bishop Sheil. "They will always
remember his unflagging efforts
to vindicate the divine doctrine
of the fatherhood of God and
the brotherhood of man which
alone can bring peace on earth."

EXODUS

Continued from Page 1

One of the subjects taught in
the higher classes of the United low Book," divulged, among other

Hebrew Schools is the study of
the Talmud. Rabbi Leizer Levin,
orthodox rabbi of this city, is
the instructor.
There is one Talmud class in
School,
ACKNOWLEDGES SYMPATHY the Philadelphia-Byron

things, that arrangements have
been made with Brazil whereby
3,000 "Non-Aryan" German Cath-
olics are being allowed to immi-
grate as a special tribute to Pope
Pius XII.

OF PROTESTANTS TO
ALL VICTIMS

Urges Refugee Colonization of
Alaska as Necessary for Ter-
ritory's Growth

The leaders of the United Jew-
ish Appeal asserted that when the
gift was first conceived it was
their intention to have it present-
ed through His Eminence, George
Cardinal Mundelein, who in the
minds of Americans had been pe-
culiarly associated with the no-
ble struggle for religious ideals.
In communicating to Dr. But-
trick the decision of the United
Jewish Appeal, Rabbi Silver and
Rabbi Wise declared that it was
felt "appropriate and fitting that
a fund of $125,000 should be
put at the disposal of the Prot-
estant Churches of America as an
acknowledgment on our part of
the sympathy and support of the
leaders of the Protestant
Churches for all victims of reli-
gious and racial persecution."
"We realize that the problem
of the refugee is by no means a
Jewish one, but that it includes
members of all faiths who have
suffered most cruelly from the
tyranny of those governments
whose programs are foreign to
American thought and the Amer-
ican way of life," they said.

BISHOP SHEIL'S
ACCEPTANCE OF
JEWISH GIFT

RABBI LEIZER LEVIN

and another class in the David
W. Simons School.
Arrangements have been made
for a public examination in this
subject at the Philadelphia-Byron
School, on Sunday morning, Jan.
7, at 10:30 o'clock, and in the
David W. Simons School the fol-
lowing Sunday, Jan. 14.

The United Jewish Appeal was
organized in 1939 as a nation-
wide campaign ire behalf of the
Joint Distribution Committee,
the United Palestine Appeal, and
the National Refugee Service,
Hug Ivri Hatzair, the Hebrew
Inc., for the purposes of relief
cultural youth group of Detroit,
and rehabilitation of Jews in
i dm- which
was recently reorganized,
tress in
European lands, refugee will hold its fourth meeting of
aid,
immigration and settlem ent this season at the home of Mr. and
in Palestine,
and refugee i nte- L. Panush, 3358 Elmhurst
gration of those coming to the Ave. on Saturday,
Jan. 13, at
United States. 3 p. m. This
meeting will be in
Accepting the gift in behalf of the form of an Oneg Shabbath.
Pope Pius XII, Bishop Sheil Bernard Panush will lead a dis-
stated that in honoring the mem-
cussion on Sholom Asch's recent
ory of the late Pope Pius XI the hook,
"The Nazarene."
Jews were paying tribute to a
Hug Hatzair consists of young
who "denounced racial in-
n- men and women who understand
tolerance and hatred as contrary or talk Hebrew, and its main
tolerance
to the laws of God, to the dic- purpose is the furtherance of its
tates of right reason and to the own education in Hebrew litera-
welfare of civilization."
ture, At the first reorganization

Hug Ivri Hatzair
To Meet on Jan. 13

While the Jewish people have
suffered more perhaps than any
other people from the actions of
a "malign racialism," Bishop
Sheil observed that the "painful
problems growing out of this in-
human, ungodly fanaticism are
by no means exclusively Jewish
problems." These problems, he
added, are of profound and vital
concern to Catholics, Protestants
and to men of good will every-

manity, Bishop Sheil declared
that it could be solved "only by
men of good will standing to-

gether•"

PROTESTANT
ACKNOWLEDGMENT MADE
BY DR. BUTTRICK

Acknowledging the gift of the
United Jewish Appeal to the
Protestant Churches of America.
Dr. Buttrick said that the "one
sufficient answer to cruelty is a
resolute compassion," adding that
war, hate and revenge ultimately
Proved to be "a stultifying re-
sponse" which deepened bitter-
ness. "The one sufficient answer
to intolerance is good will. Your
gift is a clear token of good
will. In its lighted imagination it
will kindle many other lights
across our present darkness until
a new day shall break."
Expressing the hope that the
generous action of the United
Jewish Appeal will encourage
men and women of every faith
to
make "prompt and compas-
sionate provision for refugees of
(very faith," Dr. Buttrick de-
clared that the refugee problem
is "a Primary American task and
opportunity, in which you are
giving splendid leadership.
Dr. Buttrick said that the fact
that the funds raised by the
United Jewish Appeal were in-

Pogroms Initiated in Poland by
Nazi Military Heads

LONDON (WNS) — The reign
of terror against Jews in Nazi-
occupied Poland was directed and
enforced by the general staff of
the German army of occupation,
according to reliable information
received here from sources in
Poland. German soldiers, the re-
port said, were forced to carry
out the orders of the general staff
who planned the extent and the
severity of pogroms in various
sections of the occupied territory.
Pogroms in Lodz, Warsaw, Kra-
kow, Rodom and in other cities
and provinces were set off in
this fashion, the report revealed.
German soldiers, in many in-
stances, were outspoken in their
denunciation of excesses and vio-
lences against the Jews, but for
the most part, the report stated,
the orders were carried out with
dispatch and brutal thoroughness.

ures are reported to have been
introduced in Soviet areas. They
include three-year prison terms
for refugees caught crossing the
frontier. Polish currency will be
invalid starting Jan. 1 in the
Soviet territory. The measure will
further aggravate the position of
refugees there.

Zviller Annual
Banquet Jan. 28

The Bessie Sorin Zviller La-
dies Aid Society will give its
annual banquet and dance on
Sunday evening, Jan. 28, at
Schiff & Moss', 114 Erskine St.
Mrs. Lena Alter is chairman of
the pledgees and can be reached
at Townsend 5-2310. Mrs. M.
Epstein is chairman of the ban-
quet and Mesdames M. Reznik
and Weisman, vice presidents,
are assisting them. Mrs. Morris
Pevin is president of the organi-
zation.

Order Jews to Evacuate Lodz

MIAMI BEACH

, smart') dr•Igned and

Ileconit er) lung to
COPENHAGEN (WNS) — Ex-
hp desired In a tine ocelot
pulsion of Jews from Lodz, Pol-
front hotel. Near ewer)
rehorl ulImeiIon.
and, has been ordered, it was re-
ported here. No details were
TOUR HOST
available.
JIMMY HonowInt
The German authorities have
officially announced discontinuance
of mail deliveries from abroad to
persons in the occupied territory.
Mail will continue to be delivered,
however, in areas annexed by the
• ---
Reich.
Jews in Chelm Terrorizzed
Because of continued illegal im- ON THE OCEAN COP. 14TH ST.
PARIS (WNS) — Newly ar-
rived refugees from the territory migration, further rigorous meas-
near the Jewish "reservation" in
Overlooking the Ocean
the Lublin area of Nazi Poland
reported that more than 30,000
Jews have been dumped into the
Modern in every respect
ghetto section. Of this number,
All outside rooms. Palm Gardens—Elevator
12,000 have come from the old
—Radio & Telephone in rooms.
Reich, 3,000 from Austria, 4,000
Dancing in Garden and Grill—Excellent
from the "protectorate" of Bo-
Cuisine. Dietary Laws Observed—European
hernia-Moravia, and 10,000 from

-

N S H
HOTEL

MIAMI BEACH, FLA.

and American Plan.

meeting Bernard Isaacs talked on
the works of the late A. H. Fried-

land; the second meeting was de-
voted to a discussion of the eco-
nomic conditions of the Hebrew
writers in Palestine; at the last
meeting Miss Ruth Tickton in-
troduced the works of J. Burla,
a noted Palestinian author. The

lectures, discussions, and conver-
sations are held in Hebrew.
Young people who talk or un-
derstand Hebrew and who are
where.
"Least of all can we Ameri- interested in this work are in-
cans be indifferent to the victims vited to attend the meetings. For
of tyranny and oppression," further information call Town-
Bishop Sheil wrote. "Our tradi- send 6-4739.
tions, our institutions, our na-

tional spirit and temperament
nurtured by and rooted in the
soil of liberty, make tyranny in
every form peculiarly odious to
us."
Stressing the fact that the
refugee problem is not a problem
of any one race or religion, but
a problem which affects all hu-

WASHINGTON (WNS)-
There is less racial and religious
prejudice in Alaska than in any
section of the United States and
the citizens of the Far North
will gladly welcome refugees to
increase the population "so long
as they have the same rights to
become citizens as any other im-
migrants and are economically
able to sustain themselves," said
Anthony J. Dimond, Alasa's vote-
less representative in Congress on
his return from a flying tour of
his immense territory.
Pointing out that most of the
present residents of Alaska came
there from other places, many
from northern European countries,
he said there is no prejudice
against aliens. "We take a man
for what he is and not for what
his forefathers were or where they
came from," he declared. "Amer-
icans must not underestimate the
difficulties of Alaska for colon-
ization," Dimond said, "immi-
grants must receive complete sup-
port for one year and partial sup-
port for two years more.
"But if we could make use of
our tremendous timberland for
pulp mills," he said, "We could
take care of many thousands im-
mediately. The European war may
cause a situation by which Alas-
kan pulp mills could compete with
the mills of the Scandinavian
countries in supplying pulp for
this hemisphere."

13

the Polish areas including Kalisz,
Sieradz, Koin, Kolo, Unijow and
the Suwalki region.
The refugees further reported
that a reign of terror in the city
of Chelm, which has a Jewish
population of more than 25,000,
brought pogroms and plundering
of Jewish property. All Jewish
leaders were arrested and several
were shot. More than 2,000 Jews
were rounded up in the market
place, driven to an unknown des-
tination, reportedly the Soviet
frontier, and ordered to find their
way to some settlement.

Junior Hadassah
Will Meet Sunday

For the month of January, the
Detroit Unit of Junior Hadassah
has changed its meeting date from
the second Sunday in the month
to the first and therefore its
regular meeting will be held this
Sunday, Jan. 7, at Hotel Statler,
at 2:30 p. m, An interesting pro-
gram has been planned and en-
tertainment will include talent
from Wayne University. All mem-
bers, prospective members and
friends are invited to attend.
Miss Shirley Martin, chairman
of the membership committee, will
announce plans for a membership
dance to be held early in Febru-
ary at the Jewish Center. The
ticket of admission will be the
Junior Hadassah membership
card.

Home Reliey Soc;ety Board
to Meet Jan. 12

C. F. SMITH CO.

PURE FOOD STORES

WHERE PRICE TELLS
AND QUALITY SELLS



Mrs. S. J. Leve of 1635 Hazel-
wood Ave. will be hostess to the

new and old board members of
the Home Relief Society on Fri-
day, Jan. 12, at 1 p. m . All
members of the board are urged
to be present at this important
meeting.
On Wednesday, Jan. 3, Mrs.
Ralph Levy was hostess to the

executive board for a luncheonette
at her home on Lawrence Ave.

adequate to meet the needs of
Jewish refugee relief organiza-
tions made "your kindness to us
a double kindness."

A STORE IN YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD

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