DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE and the Legal Chronicle 10 April 4, 1941 began a diary under the title of themselves to the train of Herzl The Jewish Question. These were on his way to Constantinople. He days of great intellectual and had to move through a mess of (Continued from Page 1) piritual excitement, in which all corruption to reach the throne his conflicting ideas on Jewish of the Monarch; and sacrified his contented, disappointed, always on matters struggled for clear ex- personal fortune in the effort the verge of success, the idea pression. He was unaware of The idea was to propose a re: becoming clearer and more real, where they were leading him. funding of the Turkish debt, tak- ending in personal failure. He has Bein describes the situation as ing Turkey out of pawn, in re- lost the battle. turn for which a charter for Jew- follows: "Then suddenly the storm ish colonization in Palestine. would This is the first real biography breaks upon him. The clouds be granted. The way was long of Herzl's life. It is greatly re- open, the thunder rolls and the and devious. It was hard to see duced from its German original, the . reality . beneath the forms of where it occupies 736 large pages. l ightning flashes about him. A oriental trickery. The advisers impressions beat upon o It is admirably translated into thousand him simultaneously, a gigantic of the Sultan were corrupt and liars. The Sultan was evasive, spirited, vivid English by Maur- vision. He cannot think, he can- ice Samuel, who always does leading him on with smooth words . . . 20 PRODUCTS not act, he can only write; something to the books he trans- breathless, unreflecting, unable to that seemed to make promises. Kosher for PASSOVER lates to make them come to life. Herzl got two medallions from the himself, unable to exec- Herzl but . nothing more; he was The detailed story of Herzl- control cise the critical faculty lest he held dangling for a long time probably without the author's de- the eruption, he dashes his sign—makes the impact of a per- dam thoughts on scraps of paper. He with the hope that something would eventuate, but it never did. sonal tragedy. It becomes an , • over-powering human document notes on June 16th: During Thus, the road to Palestine was these days, I was more than once blocked. Herzl realized that he and will be read with deep inter- est even by those who are not afraid that I was going out of must make a detour. If the front my mind. So furiously did the door was closed, he would come affected by the cause which pre- cipitated the tragedy. It has the cataract of thoughts race through in through the rear. He had my soul. A lifetime will not been playing with the idea of fascination, the mystery and and then came the sug- thrill of a Messianic legend in a suffice to put everything down. . . Am I working it out? No, gestion of El Arish, which led modern setting. It is the por- it is working me out. It would trayal of a dream-driven man who be an hallucination were it not him to England. There lie met sought to redeem his people, but Joseph Chamberlain, and found found the burden too heavy for so informed by reason from be- an honest man eager to be help- ginning to end'." one man's shoulders. This Mes- ful For the first time, he was His first act—when stability in a ' position of announce that siah did not die betrayed or AT repudiated by his idea. He died was restored—was to address a he had received a direct proposal saturated with faith, more confi- letter to Baron de Hirsch, the from a government that was pre- dent than ever, more closely re- great philanthropist, the founder pared to perform any contract it lated to his people than he was of the Argentine colonies. To entered into. In these negotia- WILL BE at the beginning. His premature de Hirsch he wrote of no specific tions, Cyprus was excluded; El death served to evoke the first territory; he stressed a great Arish became impossible because real organized national struggle migration, planned, organized, of the objections of Egypt, and for self-liberation. Bein's book financed. The Baron was im- finally there appeared the offer illuminates the period and inter- pressed by the enthusiasm of the of Uganda. You are assured of this fact by the direct supervision of the writer. Three letters were writ- prets the tragedy. This was the first concrete pro- VAAD HARABONIM OF DETROIT ten to him, in the course of which Herzy expounded his "solution." posal Herzl was able to make. What drove him so with cease- He came to that Zionist Organi- saw de Hirsch. He made a less unrest? What gave the halt- He record of the conversation. It zation which he had prepared to ing journalist the power to ar- rhea instrument to serve was evident that the great phil- be ans, n- rest the thought and catch the nd found that it was uhis anthropist was not persuaded. eye of Princes and Kings? What to accept his first suc- plillin g w Then, once more the "storm" gave him the strength and ob- cess. In effect, they rejected the stinancy to impose his will upon breaks over him, the clouds open; the thunder rolls and the light- idea of a them. detour. could and not a stubborn people? What made persuade He He pleaded flashes about him. He in- him naive and shrewd, honorable ning serted in his diary a 65-page argued with them. But sentiment was more powerful than logic. and unscrupulous, majestic and pamphlet which he called Address querulous? NOTE: We extend you a cordial invitation to visit our to the Rothschilds. This contained They could not be budged. A He thought that he had dis- the essential points of the book people could not allow the nega- modern and ultra sanitary plant at covered the "solution" of the called The Jewish State. Herzl tion of its objective even for a Jewish problem. The "idea" in- tells the Rothschilds in this Ad- brief period. It could not forget 7426 FENKELL AVENUE fected and consumed his mind. dress that their en for- its prayers and aspirations. The It took possession of him and tunes can be rescued only through hope of Zion could not be sus- made him forget everything that the creation of The Jewish State. pended for the sake of political was personal—his family, his All Jewish fortunes are like a maneuver. work, his life. He poured all his tower, which grows without a By now, Herzl was utterly ex- energy, all his thought—all that correspondent broadening of the hausted, physically and spiritual- there was of him to give—into base upon which it rests; the two ly. He had carried on a stren- the realization of the idea. The dimensions must be harmonized uous effort for ten years with strangest thing about the whole through the single idea of "the an impaired heart. He knew that story is that the process began exodus from Egypt." Neither Bar- his days were numbered. He had in 1894 and ended with his death on de Hirsch nor the Rothschilds been sustained by an inner ex- in 1904. In a decade, this man would respond to his exciting citement—the chances of the transformed Jewish history—and arguments. He came to the con- struggle; the joy of overcoming himself. In a few mortal years elusion that the "exodus"' would obstacles; the overwhelming de- he set his people upon a new not “ be promoted from above. sire to reach the end of the road. road. So strenuously had he There is only one reply to this Now that he had reached the lived, so much had passed situation," he wrote. "Let us terminus, and the road was through his mind, that already organize our masses immediate- blocked; now that a detour was in 1901 he felt that his life was 137. possible and his own people re- finished. "It is now six years Out of this disappointment jected it; his desire to live went since I began this movement," came a new formulation. The out of him and his heart ceased he wrote, "which has made me Address to Rothschild was re- to beat. The Promised Land was Jew- far off; he stood where he first old, tired and poor." written, rearranged. The ew- ish State appeared in book-form. started. But he had created an He was born in Budapest on Thus, the Zionist movement be- instrument of redemption that the left bank of the Danube in gan, the calling of the Zionist would live long after him. At the beginning, he thought free- May, 1860. It was a comfortable the creation of the Jew- dom the Jew- Jew- dom could could be be brought brought to to the Jewish home, but his education Congress, sh ish National Fund and the as Jew- a grant. It could people in Jewish matters was scant and i ish Colonial Trust—the begin- i superficial. He carried with him, nings of the Zionist Organiza- be won through a charter, in- all his life, many of the Jewish tion. These were re-enforcement through funds, through alien in- memories of his childhood and for political activities; he needed fluence. But as the field of expe- youth. When he was about sev- these agencies to further his quest rience was enlarged, he realized that redemption rested with his enteen years old, the family own people. Not the millions of moved to Vienna. He was ad- for recognition. Herzl was able to carry on sim- the Rothschilds, nor the charter mitted to the Bar in 1884. In his early youth he felt the call ultaneously a variety of parallel of a corrupt Sultan, held the of the theatre, the call of jour- activities. He was engaged in secret of renascence. Before he nalism. He wrote plays, feuille- preparing the ground, at all died, he saw a rising young peo- tons, stories, and some of his times, for alternative proposals. ple recovering their nationhood essays were published in local He worked with the idea of en- through pain and struggle. Out journals. Then he served as a listing the interest of the Kaiser, of the will' that their hope should legal functionary in the courts of the Sultan, of the Pope; he not remain a dream, they would SHORT AND LONG TERMS at Salzburg, and married a girl was engaged simultaneously in establish a foothold in the Prom- of good family, eight years young- pursuing the lead that brought ised Land; and upon that foot- REPUBLICAN TICKET er than he, in 1889. Like other him to Palestine, to Cyprus, to El hold they would create a Jewish Jewish young men of the period, Arish. He twisted and turned State. What they built would For 23 years Wayne County Highway Engineer . . . he was annoyed, humiliated and like a prisoner seeking an escape, serve, better than charters, man- For 9 years engineer and Deputy State Highway Com- disturbed by anti-Semitism. Much a landing-place for the adven- dates and what not, to evoke missioner . . . Built the country's finest County highway of the anti-Semitic literature tures of his imagination. He from an indifferent world ulti- came to his attention and pro- wrote to Bismarck but received mate recognition of their right to system . . . Michigan's outstanding highway engineer yoked reactions varying with his no reply. He developed a friend- a place in the Sun. . . . Knows State, County and Municipal problems best. mood. He knew nothing of what ship with the Grand Duke of was being said or written among Baden, and through him met Contributed by Friends All this—and more—is revealed Jews with regard to anti-Semi- Count Philip Eulenberg, Von Bue- in the engrossing life Alexander tism. He knew nothing of the low and Hohenlohe. He succeed- Bein has written of the Great works of Pinsker or Moses Hess. ed, ultimately, in meeting the Adventurer, the founder of the In 1891, when thirty-one years Kaiser in Constantinople and in Zionist Organization. The truth A FINE JUDGE SHOULD BE RETAINED old, he was appointed Paris cor- Jerusalem, and held interesting is more arresting than the Leg- respondent of the Vienna Neue promising conversations with him. Re-Elect JUDGE HENRY G. Freie The Publication book (issued by the Presse, which was owned The Kaiser played with the end. Jewish Society of by a group of assimilated Jews. thought of intervening with the America) should serve to place In Paris, all the latent thoughts Sultan on behalf of the Jews. Theodor Herzl in the center of evoked by brooding over the Jew- He was dreaming of the road to Zionist thought of the day. It is ish question led him more and Bagdad, but in the end his ad- both instruction and inspiration. more to express himself on the visers succeeded in putting the problem of Jewish life. The Jew- idea to sleep. Nothing ever came CIRCUIT JUDGE ish THE SABBATH question began to precipitate of it. Herzl confessed, "We shall His Record for faithfulness, fairness in literary forms. It was referred not achieve our Zionist goal under The custom of celebrating the to in passing in some of his cor- a German protectorate." and competency is unsurpassed." respondence to the Neue Freie From the first, he directed his Jewish Sabbath from sundown to HENRY G. NICOL Prem. He wrote "Das Neue attention to the task of interest- sundown is based on the recur- CIRCUIT IUDGE Ghetto" in 1849. The Dreyfus ing the Sultan, Abdul Hamid, rent phrase in the biblical crea- case was an incident which crafty ruler of a totttering em- tion story, "It Was Evening, bruised his spirit. Finally, in pire. As always, the way to Yildiz and It Was Morning," evening I 1895 he wrote a letter to Baron Kiosk was paved with back- always preceding morning in • de Hirsch and on the same day sheesh. Many parasites attached mention of the day. HERZL Passover comes 'Lot once q year.. SO SERVE THE BEST! MATZOHS Matzoh-Meal • -P. HOROWITZ MARGARETEN Announcement! THE BELROSE CREAMERY TH Milk and Cream Kosher for Passover Phone UNiversity 1-3600 BELHOSE CREAMERY CO. ELECT LEROY C. SMITH State Highway Commissioner 1, VOTE TWICE APRIL 7 NICOL CHRONICLE WANT ADS PAY 7'1