A merica lavish Periafical Cotter CLIFTON AVENUE - CINCINNATI 20, OHIO 941 the !rom laily For . 8- Detroit Jewish Chronicle and The Legal Chronicle SECTION TWO VOL. 43, NO. 15 DETROIT, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, APRIL II, 1941 Humanity Is Threatened PASSOVER With Universal Bondage PARTICLES This Paper Printed in Three Sections 10 Cents Single Copy; $3.00 per Yeat Modern Exodus to Zion By DR. STEPHEN S. WISE Editor's Note: In an inspiring analogy drawn between the By BERNARD POSTAL ancient and modern exodus to Palestine, Dr. Stephen S. Wise, Senator Brown Points to Passover Lesson as Supreme Director of Bnai Brith Publicity Chairman of the Administrative Committee of the United Palestine Expression of Moral Code in the Present Appeal, sees Passover this year as a symbol of the liberation of Fight for Liberty Outside of Palestine, Passover, Jews from oppression. By THE HON. PRENTISS M. BROWN United States Senator from Michigan A distinctive feature of our that experienced in this country. times is our forced return to first Indeed, more than any other essentials. Principles that once country of the modern world aroused inspiration and enthus- does the American nation owe iasm, for which men and women its existence to the prevalence once fought and died and that of the moral code of democracy. in more recent days had become Discovered by refugees from trite, slightly common-place for- the Inquisition of Spain, settled mulas thoughtlessly repeated by in turn by Puritanical refugees a somewhat bored humanity, have once more come into their own. "Equality of the citizens before the Law," "All men are born free and equal," "Inalienable rights of mankind," were long subject to indifferent observance and trivial breaches alike. Now that a gigantic effort has been made to divorce humanity from these principles, to abrogate the Ten Commandments after four thousand years, we are shocked into a rediscovery of the funda- mentals. After an age-old matter-of- fact acceptance of these eternal truths as selfevident, the world suddenly finds itself face to face with a brazen attempt to over- throw them. Faced by this dan- ger, the world rises in their de- fense. As of old, as in the days when the ideas of equality, of tolerance, of physical and spirit- ual freedom were first proclaimed SEN. PRENTISS M. BROWN amid a glorious fight against primeval shackles of primitive from England, by Catholic refu- humanity?, these ideas proved gees from Ireland, by Liberal once more that they are capable refugees from Germany after of arousing devotion and sacri- 1848 and again in our days, by fice. We discover that our tradi- millions of poverty-ridden Slays tions of democratic government and Jews, Italians and Greeks, are the technique by means of Scandinavians and Orientals, which these eternal truths are America, as we know it, is a translated into political and social monument to the equality of terms. Viewed from this angle, races, to the freedom of the in- the Declaration of Independence, dividual, and to the essential un- the Bill of Rights, the Fourteenth ity of mankind despite political Amendment, are a restatement of and religious differences. A long the moral code of democracy and succession of placid days had per- of religion at once. mitted us to forget our true char- This awakening is proceeding acter and task. The stormy days we live apace the world over, albeit in many countries under the heavy through now compel us to take hand of oppression. But nowhere stock of essentials and to re-dedi- has the shock of awakening come cate ourselves to their service. All this is peculiarly apt to be with an impetus stronger than Passover Greetings UPON THIS OCCASION WE TAKE THIS OPPORTUNITY TO EXTEND OUR BE ST WISHES TO THE ENTIRE JEWISH COMMUNITY FOR A JOYOUS HOLIDAY! KERN'S WOODWARD AT GRATIOT which this year begins on April 12th (first Seder night is April 11th), is observed for eight days by Orthodox Jews, but according to the Old Testament the festi- val lasts only a week. Palestin- ian Jews visiting abroad during Passover are permitted to eat chometz on the eighth day. Somewhere in the Mediterran- ean old, dilapidated freighters loaded with homeless Jews are making their way to Palestine. Those wanderers are enacting the modern counterpart of the exodus of the Jews from ancient Egypt. To the hundreds of men, The oldest treasure hunt in women and children herded to- the world is the familiar Pass- gether like cattle in the holds over search for the hidden afi- of refugee ships, the celebration komen. Archaeologists have established that the date of the exodus of the Jews from Egyptian slavery was 1447 B.C., and that the pharaoh of the Passover story was Thotmes III. When Thomas Jefferson, Ben- jamin Franklin and John Adams were appointed to prepare a de- sign for the seal of the United States on the same (lay that the Declaration of Independence was adopted, they first proposed a device showing Pharaoh sitting in an open chariot, a crown on his head and a sword in his hand, passing through the divid- ing waters of the Red Sea in pursuit of the Israelites; with rays from a pillar of fire beam- ing on Moses, who was repre- sented as standing on the shore extending his hand over the sea, causing it to overwhelm Pharaoh. Many Protestant clergymen in the America of Colonial. days drew a parallel between George III and Pharaoh in their dis- courses on the grievances of the colonies against England, Infer- ring that the same providence of God that rescued the Israelites from Egyptian bondage would free the colonies. recalled by my Jewish cocitizens on their ancient festival of Pass- over, the holiday of liberation from slavery. It was the darkest hour of Israel's history, the hour of Egyptian bondage, that led to the supreme expression of the great moral code which had been laid down on Sinai and has re- mained the corner-stone of civili- zation ever since. At present, it is not one race alone that is faced with the re- vival of slavery. It is humanity as a whole that finds itself threatened with universal bond- age. Together we shall face the danger, together we shall over- come it, and together we shall vow allegiance to our old Amer- ican dream: the dream of a free society of free and equal and mutually tolerant men. Foundation Buys Biblical Digest WASHINGTON, D. C. — The Bible Foundation, the national non-profit Bible educational body formed several years ago in Washington, D. C., also main- taining offices in New York City and Aurora, III., announced its purchase of the Biblical Digest, a monthly magazine that has been published in Siloam Springs, Ark., for the past four years. Mary E. Hughes is executive director of the Foundation. When the NRA was first formed, President Roosevelt se- lected Miss Hughes as the di- rector of the Women's Division and she completed organization of wmen in every state in the Union. Her success was largely attributable to her previous ex- perience in organizing religious women groups of America for national religious educational and welfare movements. Miss Hughes res'gned as vice president of the Golden Rule Foundation to be- come executive director of the Bible Foundation. The editorial offices of the Bib- lical Digest are in the Presby- terian Bldg., 156 Fifth Ave., New York City. tificates. They must be landed in secrecy or else be apprehended and placed in internment camps. But for them "Next Year in Jerusalem" has become "Next Week in Jerusalem" and the last ordeal of misery does not break their spirit. For the Jews in Palestine and for the hundreds of thousands in the dark ghettos of Nazi-con- trolled Europe who yearn to find their way to Palestine, Pass- over takes on a new and cogent meaning far more profound and soul-stirring than the original exodus from Egypt. In fact, to them the existence of modern Palestine with its capacity to ab- sorb increasingly large numbers of refugees is comparable to the miracle of the crossing of the Red Sea. Passover in Palestine is a process of reliving not mer- ely the history of the Jews as a people, but their personal his- tories as slaves under the Ger- man Pharaoh and as free men redeemed through the rebuilding of the Jewish National Home. There can be no greater testi- mony to the paramount import- ance of Palestine than the fact that even in this year of devas- tating war Jews are continuing to reach the shores of the Prom- ised Land. Although the war has blocked normal shipping lanes in DR. STEPHEN S. WISE the Mediterranean, the over- of Passover is not a relic of whelming pressure of men and the remote past. It represents, women struggling desperately to in fact, a sorrowful chronicle escape the Nazi ring of steel of their own suffering and flight and barbarism has shaped new from bondage under a modern roads to freedom. The exodus Pharaoh. In their agony and from Hitler-dominated Europe to hunger, as they huddle together Palestine is proceeding through in the dark corners of the un- three major routes. The Jews seaworthy vessel, the final words who are situated in Western of the Passover service ring in Europe sail from Lisbon on ves- their ears. Louder and louder, sels which round the Cape of clearer and clearer, until all con- ood Hope and reach Palestine sciousness of other things van- through the Indian Ocean. Jew- ishes. Above everything rises the ish refugees in Rumania and Bul- prayer, "New Year in Jerusalem." garia and other Central and Weeks and months have passed. Eastern European countries The ship has constantly zig- travel to Istanbul where they zagged off its course to avoid take the overland route through enemy craft or British patrols. See WISE—Page 8 These refugees do not have cer- Passover Greetings To You and to Those Whose Happiness Is Yours, a Very Joyous Holiday. • ealVSHORS" 1426 WOODWARD AVE.