September 5, I y I I DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE and the Legal Chronicle 14 Jewish Agency for Palestine Thanks J. D. C. Convention Honors J. W. V. Auxiliary for Aiding Emigration of Many to Holy Land Dr. Jeremiah J. Berman's Interesting Evaluation Is a Sociological Study of Shehitah Splendid Collection of Data on Cultural and Social Life of Jews; Tells of Detroit's First Shohet Detroit Ladies Auxiliary No. 135 of Jewish War Veterans of the United States, at the 14th Rabbi Jeremiah J. Berman The sources of information are annual national encampment, (D.H.L.) has written a most fas- the History of Congregation held in Buffalo, won a citation cinating book, "Shehitah : A Beth El and the publication the for outstanding accomplishments Study in the Cultural and So- Occident. cial Life of the Jewish People," Here is a story of Detroit which has just been published by that is fairly iwell known; yet it Bloch ($4.50). is always interesting for Detroit- The average reader will no ers, and it is especially import- doubt wonder why the author ant since it proves that Detroit selected the sub-title for his 514- was then in the position that page book. But after the very many small communities find first few minutes of perusal of themselves today — except that the volume he will be convinced there may have been greater con- of the validity of it. In the course cern at that time for kashruth of his compilation of data and (even among the founders of study of facts regarding the Jew- Detroit's first congregation, now ish method of slaughtering ani- Reform). mals, Dr. Berman not only se- The Shohet in History cured the necessary information The story of Shehitah is traced on the immediate subject but by Rabbi Berman to the earliest also enhanced his study with de- times. There is the description scriptions of the cultural and of the ritual slaughtering in social activities of Jews during Biblical times, the rabbinical con- MRS. ROSE M. COWAN the various periods described in trol of Shehitah in the Talmudic the volume. periods, the position of the Sho- with all auxiliaries of the nation Detroit's First Shohet het since the year 1000 in the competing. The Auxiliary was As a matter of fact, the book Orient and in Europe, Shehitah awarded the Frances Brams contains some fine historical ref- in America and in modern Pal- Membership Trophy, National erences. For instance, there is estine. Defense Citation and Hospital mention of Detroit, and here is Work Awards. As indicated, the social and the story we read: The president of the Detroit cultural study emerges as a re- "In 1850 the Congregation Auxiliary, Mrs. Rose M. Cowan, sult of the author's descriptions Beth El of Detroit, Michigan, was was elected national trustee, be- founded, and engaged as teacher of the Shohet's place in the sides receiving a trophy present- community, his qualifications, leg- and shohet the Rev. Samuel ed by the Detroit Auxiliary dele- Marcus, late of New York. A islation affecting Shehitah, his gates for loyal service. relation to the meat dealer, etc. letter received from Detroit two Detroiters who participated as An interesting portion of the delegates at the convention were: years later described the cir- cumstances under which these section dealing with legislation Sarah Berent, Ruth Bolhower, tells how Jews secure kosher Libbie Cohen, Lillian Feldman, steps were taken. "'Several men having moved meat in lands where there are Lillian Fink, Eve Feinstein, Sadie here with their families some anti-Shehitah laws — including Gladwin, Mae Ginsburg, Annette time last year, the total want of Switzerland, Russia, Nazi Ger- Kahn, Betty LeBost, Jean Leib- all opportunities for the religious many, Norway, Sweden, Hun- son, Luba Lupiloff, Tillie Madi- instruction of their children was gary. son, Eva Mann, Mae Marsh, The description of Shehitah in Helen Marks, Henrietta Niman, severely felt, especially as their business called them away from this country forms a religious Dorothy Potiker, Birdie Rosen- home most of the time. Subse- history of the Jews in the United berg, Elizabeth .Shapero, Ida quently, at a meeting called States. Furthermore, a survey Schultz and Ruth Schreiber. among those few Jews residing conducted among various cities here, 12 in number, it was re- in this country gives an interest- solved to engage a teacher and ing view on Jewish religious CHARACTERISTICS OF shohet, and also to buy a piece standards and on certain Jewish SEVENTH-DAY ADVENT- attitudes affecting animals. For 1ST DENOMINATION of ground for a burial place.' "The Rev. Marcus served un- instance, there is a chapter deal- Seventh-Day Adventists have til 1854, when he was carried off ing with the attitude of Jews on no formal or written creed. The by cholera. His place was taken hunting. There are a number of illustra- Bible is their rule of faith and by the Rev. Liebman Adler, a native of Germany. The Rev. tions which add greatly to the practice. They hold that the sev- Adler, who received an annual value of this voluminous study. enth (lay of the week, from sun- On the whole, Dr. Berman has set on Friday to sunset on Sat- salary of $400, stayed on until 1861, when he was called to a made a splendid contribution to urday, is the Sabbath established more munificent post in Chi- the study of Jewish religious life by God's law. They have never in his fine work on "Shehitah". set a definite date for the visible cago." coming of Christ, believing that Lower Basin Street" — or else, it is near, but that the day and a special album of her own of hour have not been revealed. all-time favorites. By MARTHA NEUMARK Dinah's idea of fun, she says, Jacob Ark of Rochester is the is to collect recipes — for the second Jew to be elected New FROM NASHVILLE TO time when she has her own home. York State Commander of the NATIONAL GLORY In the meantime, she is living American Legion . . . The first It's hard to kep up with sultry- with her sister and family in Jew to hold that post was Sam- uel Aronowitz of Albany back voiced Dinah Shore. From the Long Island. in 1924. . . Ark has a passion juke-box on the corner tavern, SCRIPT BY SLESINGER for striped ties which his pretty from the stages of movie houses The Hollywood columns carry spouse selects for him . . . And and from the pages of the na- tional magazines, the girl from the name of Tess Slesinger in he's an all-around Jewish affairs Nashville is winning the na- small type at infrequent inter- man, being a member of the lo- tion's plaudits. When she re- vals. As glory and power go, the cal Zionist district, Bnai Brith and the leading congregation ... turned to the air this week on the Eddie Cantor show on NBC, script writer is not the most' Ark says that at home his wife she marked the completion of honored unit in the Hollywood 'is the real commander. three years in New York. The machine. But that doesn't mean girl who used to be captain of that hard work is not being (lone who visited her in her palace on the women's fencing team at to earn every one of the mul- the Champs Elysees. Vanderbilt University and who tiple dollars recorded in the Perhaps the family magazines sang on a sustaining program weekly pay checks. Tess Sles- would rather not hear of her for six months before the merit inger has been doing two pic- even today, for even though she of her voice was recognized is tures which vou • will soon see. was a Marquise and then a being groomed by M.G.M. as a For people who think that Grafin, she was of that group of possible rival to Dorothy La- writing for Jewish magazines is women which includes such fig- mour. only a labor of love, there is ures as Lady Hamilton and Ma- Dinah Shore is a story of food for thought in the remind- dame Dubarry. Born in a Polish courage and determination. The er that the first story ever to ghetto, she followed destiny parents of Dinah. thinking of carry the name of Miss Sles- when she married a tailor when the work of her older sister, de- singer in print appeared in the she was only 15, an age when cided that she would make an Menorah Journal in 1928. I some of her friends already had excellent social worker. But from think that Miss Slesinger (Mrs. children. But the marriage ended the time that Dinah sang as a Frank Davis in married life) is soon with her escape to Paris. "lyric soprano" at high school, sufficiently hard-boiled not to She was determined that success only to lose her "soprano" when mind the record of her 36 years. should be hers. In London she she became cheer leader, she After graduating from the Co- became a friend of Lord Stan- has nursed a singing ambition. lumbia School of Journalism in ley. She married a fortune and Now she has her B. A. and her 1927, she did a variety of writ- Marquis Aranjo de Paiva, a ing, including a stint as assistant Portuguese. A subsequent friend career. Dinah — a study in brown, fashion editor on the New York was the Graf Henckel von Don- emphasized by her eyes and hair Herald Tribune. For one semes- nersmarck. She was ordered to leave — has changed little, even ter she taught what is known as though she has reached eminence "creative writing." But since her France because of that German on the radio, on the platters and marriage five years ago she has relationship. When she died in a soon, perhaps, also on the screen. been turning out movie scripts Berlin suburb, she was under She wants to get married, have and infrequent short stories. She fifty and still one of the most three children and settle down, did an excellent novel once — toasted women of Germany. If Theresa Lachmann is men- she tells interviewers. That's in "The Unpossessed" — but ap- keeping with a girl who majored parently she hasn't gotten around tioned at all 105 years after her in sociology and economics. In yet to proving that she isn't a birth in Polish poverty, it is be- cause she was the product and fact, she reveals that there's an "one-novel" woman. not the cause of the corruption Army corporal she's interested THERESA LACIIMANN which swirled about her. It is in. especially fantastic to hear the No one will bother to remem- Germans and their Vichy friends If you want to be one of those who, a few years hence. ber Theresa Lachrrann. No spe- speak of "moral order" today want to say you remember Di- cial issues will be dedicated to when one thinks back to the de- nah Shore "when", you ought to the 105th anniversary of her cadence which festered from birth. But there was a time when them a century ago. get one of her recordings, espe- yrIght 1941 6y I fith•p•nd•nt jew1Kh cially the ones made with the when she was almost as well known as Gautier and Delacroix, Pr•sm wrier ) "Chamber Music Society of Women in the News , More than 4,000 refugee have emigrated from Europe to Pal- estine in the past 12 months, largely through the "generous assistance" of the Joint Distribu- tion Committee, according to a report from the immigration di- rector of the Jewish Agency for Palestine to the Joint Distribu- tion Committee, it was an- nounced by Joseph C. Hyman, executive vice chairman of the J. D. C. The report by Chaim Barlas, director of the Jewish Agency's Immigration Department in Jeru- salem, revealed for the first time statistical details of the extensive overland migratioon of Jewish refugees through the Near East which began a year ago, after Italy's entrance into the war had closed the Mediterranean Sea to peaceful shipping. In his report, Mr. Barlas stated that during the eight months, from August, 1940, to April, 1941, while he was in Turkey, more than 3,800 immi- grants reached Palestine via that country, including: 1,688 from Rumania, 1,100 from Kaulms, Lithuania, 273 from Yugoslav ia, 90 from Moscow and 250 from Istanbul. In April, he reported, there re- mained outside Palestine 0 x . eluding France, Belgium and Holland), sonic 900 persons ing immigration certificates for Palestine, of whom 300 were in Budapest, 290 in Switzerland, 100 in Rumania and 150 in Yu- goslavia. There were also about 100 in Mersina, Turkey. Young Jews Challenge Nazis As They Get Death Sentence Once a Rebel GENEVA (JPS) — The rolls of the martyrs of Jewish history can now proudly add the names of Joseph Licht, 21, and Franz Hegdish, 22, members of the Ha- shomer Hatzair, youth Zionist organization, of Budapest, who, when tried by a court for anti- Nazi activity, defied their cap- tors and won a sentence of death by hanging for their courage. The two young men had been accused of burning a farm near Sobodka where they and a num- ber of other Jews were engaged in forced labor. The Nazi judges pronounced Licht and Hegdish guilty and sentenced them to be shot. When the young Jews were told they could make a state- ment, they said: "We confess to having com- mitted the act of sabotage of which we are accused. But we want to make it clear that we (lid this to express our protest against the Nazi persecution of the Jews and particularly against the anti-Jewish laws introduced into Hungary at the demand of the Nazis." Enraged by the challenge of the two young Zionists, the judges changed the death sen- tence to one by banking instead of shooting. The sentence was executed immediately. Subsequently, five other mem- bers of the Budapest Hashomer Hatzair were arrested as com- rades of the executed men and accused of having known of the fire plot. Once, Simon Kaplan was a real radical. He was a rebel, and what sonic would call a Red. Today he is passionately devoted to the democratic ideal and he has learned from experience and from intimate knowledge the superiority of the American way of life. Kaplan's life story, his experi- ences in Russia during the early revolutionary days, his personal share in sonic of the underground activities against the Tzarist re- gime—these form a fascinating story in his personal narrative "Once a Rebel," published by Farrar & Rinehart. Today he is a leader in the Poughkeepsie, N. Y., community, and he is a vital factor for good there. His knowledge of the clas- sics, his revolutionary back- ground, his rich experience in the study of human nature, help him in the advancement of higher social values. The experiences of this revo- lutionary date back to the Russo- Japanese War and the Revolu- tion of 1905. The vile discrimina- tions practiced against Jews served to arouse his bitterness and antagonism and he flung himself headlong into the rebel- lious work against the tyranny of Tsar's government. In the course of his work in behalf of the revolution, Mr. Kaplan traveled through Russia, met revolutionary leaders and workers, studied the ways of the populace, saw the life of the people and their miseries. He was witness to the squalor of the Jewish population, to frequent degradations to which they were forced in order to eke out a livelihood. Of particular interest in this volume is the description of how the author became disillusioned in the "liberators," when he came face to face with the men like Stalin—whom he knew as Nijeradze when he met him— and when he began to despise their tactics. He writes: "The end of my peace of mind con- cerning. the Revolution of 1905 must be dated from that day in Boutyrka when I found out that this man, Nijeradze, was the one who had staged various rob- beries and "expropriated" over 300,000 rubles from a Tiflis bank to promote the revolution. Now, this was not in accordance with my theory of liberation . . . " The story of Simon Kaplan's escape from Russia is familiar to many who had to go through similar experience. But it is nev- ertheless a thrilling tale of ad- venture. "Once a Rebel" ends in 110 optimistic way. It affirms faith in democracy and declares upon its conclusion : "The time for tion is almost at hand and . v will not shirk our responsibilitn A mother does not betray r children ; we, foreign born ' 1' local born, it makes no differen. will not fail our mother, eits' r, and our mother is the Amer: 'a of our dreams. America v Ill stand up under this terrible 1. 4 in spite of all the blathering r''- liticians from all the tall stic!•s• It cannot fail." Argentinian Foreign Minister Voices Sympathy for Jews BUENOS AIRES (JPS) — Although the Argentinian gov- ernment followed an indetermi- nate policy toward the Nazis in her midst until recent weeks, her Foreign Minister, Enroque Ruiz Guinazu, has the most cordial sympathy toward the Jewish people and the problems they are facing because of persecution, the statesman told Dr. Nahum Goldmann, chairman of the World Jewish Congress, who has been on a tour of the South American countries. The Argentinian diplomat was formerly his country's Minister to Switzerland during the period when Dr. Goldmann was the rep- resentative of the Jewish Agency for Palestine to Geneva. In a long and friendly talk, the Foreign Minister commented on the work being done by JOWA in the upbuilding of the Jewish National Home in Palestine and asked Dr. Goldmann for a com- prehensive review of the latest accomplishments. There was also a discussion of the general Jew- ish problem, in terms of anti- Semitism, refugee immigration and governmental policies. Mr. Guinazu expressed ap- proval of the purpose of the In- ter-American Jewish Conference to be held this autumn in Wash- ington under the auspices of the Ameircan Jewish Congress. This view was especially striking in view of the fear that some Jews had expressed that attendance at the Conference might be misun- derstood. Report Ban On All German Nazis Deny 300 Jews Burned In Byalistok Synagogue NEW YORK (JPS) —All Jew- ish women, as well as men, be- tween the ages of 18 and 45, will no longer be allowed to emigrate from Germany, it is re- ported by the Berlin corres- pondent of the United Press. The labor shortage in Germany is said to be the reason for the ban. GENEVA (JPS) — The radio station at Berlin issued denia lof a current report 11 at 300 Jews were burned in the Byalistok synagogue. The state- ment admitted that the syna - gogue had been burned during the battles in that city but de- clared that no Jewish lives w, 're lost in the fire. Emigration