A merica 'elvish Periodical Cotter CLIFTON AVENUE - CINCINNATI 20, OHIO 1992 27th rear of Service to State and Country Detroit Jewish Chronicle and The Legal Chronicle_ VOL. 44. No. 28 LIF FR Michigan Jewish War Veterans to Hear National Commander Kaufman Emma Schaver to Sing Patriotic Songs. Butzel, Principal Speaker at Corn. Center July 1/49 a ■ CO or a You t at r In. ■ fhI• Emma Schaver, Detroit's bril- liant soprano and opera artist of note, will he featured at the pa- triotic program to be sponsored by the Department of Michigan Jew- ish War Veterans on Saturday, July 11, 9:30 p. m. in the social hall of the Congregation Shaarey Zedek, Lawton corner of Chicago Blvd. Emma Schaver sang with the San Carlo Opera Company, the Chicago Opera Company. and in concert recitals throughout the United States and Canada. She appeared in joint recital with the famous Metropolitan Opera tenor. Tito Schipa, and she has had numerous successful tours in Eng- land, Poland. Mexico. and Pales- tine. In Palestine she appeared in concert in Tel Aviv. Jerusalem and most of the settlements of the Home Land. Specializing in modern Hebrew melodies, she has been acclaimed both in Palestine and abroad as the finest inter- preter of modern Hebrew melody. Some of her most note-worthy performances has consisted of operatic arias. Hebrew and Yid- dish folk songs. United We Stand The theme of the patriotic pro- gram will be "United We Stand." The principle address w ■ 11 be de- livered by the National Command- er of the Jewish War Veterans, Benjamin Kaufman of Trenton, N. J. Mr. Kaufman and past commander J. George Fredman, editor of the National Jewish War Veterans Magazine, recent- ly consulted with President Frank- lin I). Roosevelt, at which con- ference the President received the Jewish War Veterans' program in the resent emergency. Recent- ly Mr. Kaufman, in behalf of the Jewish War Veterans, presented to Henry Morgenthau, Secretary of the United States Treasury, a check for $30,000 as an out-right donation for the purchase of a pursuit plane for the United States Government. A second check for $30,000 was presented by the national commander at the Air-Cobra Pursuit Plane Manu- facturing Co. in Buffalo, N. Y. on July 10. Mr. Kaufman has traveled extensively throughout the length and breadth of the Country on behalf of the Jewish War Veterans "all-out war effort" and "United We Stand" program. Fred M. Butzel, honorary pres- ident of the Detroit Jewish Com- munity Center, will give a short address in behalf of the commu- nity. Honorary department chat, lain, Leon Frans. Rabbi of pin- ple Israel. will render the invoca- tion. Dr. Robert Rosen, national Rabbi-Scholar In Dire Need of Aid Rabbi Moses Fischer advises that a well-known rabbi and great Talmudic scholar of De- troit. has suffered a stroke. He is now gravely ill at home and needs assistance. Getter- , ios Detroiters are asked to make contrib utions, which should be sent to Vaad Ha- Rabonim, care of Rabbi Moses Fischer. 37-19 Fullerton Ave. vice commander of the Fifth Region, will extend greetings for the Region. Dr. Perry Burnstine• department commander, will ex. NEW YORK t\\ - NS )—Zionist leaders in America and Jewish leaders in Palestine gave evidence of deep concern as the march of Rommel's troops to Egypt inevit- ably raised the threat to Pales- t'ne. In what was described as a 12th-hour appeal, Dr. Stephen S. Wise and other Zionist lead- ers dispatched a final plea to Win- stun Churchill asking for the immediate mobilization of all available Jewish manpower in Palestine. "The advance of the Nazi armies," the Zionists cabled, "brings with it the threat of in- vasion to Palestine and therewith the possible annihilation of Pal- estine Jewry. For more than two and a half years, the Jews of Palestine have demanded the right to defend their country and to fight the mortal enemy of their people and of humanity along- side the armies of the United See SCHAVER—Page 12 See LEADERS—Page 12 EMMA SCHAVER Red Cross Unit of Beth El Continues Work all Summer Over 300 Women Knitting for Soldiers Because of the large produc- tion. quotas assigned to the Red Cross Unit of the Sisterhood of Temple Beth El, the unit will continue working all summer. on Tuesdays and Wednesdays from 9 a. m. to 4 p. no. Another work day is being added. The Red Cross work rooms have been moved from the second floor of the Temple to the large, cool social hall. According to Red Cross headquarters, the unit is one of the most efficient in the city because of the quality and volume of production. Mrs. Mer- rill Silverstein is the general chairman, assisted by Miss Hilda Gottlieb. The unit has been in See RED By WENDELL L. CROSS—Page 10 WILLKIE EDITOR'S NOTE:—Answering the widely protested "Case Against the Jews" by Milton Mayer comes this forthright articl e by Wendell L. Willkie. Expressive of the American attitude on minority groups, the following excerpt has been reprinted by special permissio n of the Saturday Evening Post, Copyright 1942. by the Curtiss Publishing Company. There is health in bringing into the open, by honest discus- sion, such wartime menaces to racial, religious and political mi- norities. But I can find only dis- ease and death in the wailing dis- tortion of Milton Maye•'s recent flagellation of the Jews. For only one useful purpose is to be served by any such discussion- to-develop, by a forewarning of the consequences, a sober public judgment that will prevent any tendency toward a repetition of such national ignominies as the Ku Klux Klan and such calamities JULY 10. 1941 Leaders Aroused Hy Zion Danger The Case For The Minorities War, when prolonged and diffi- cult, imposes severe stresses upon as people, and such necessary sac- rifices we will make. We will keep out fortitude in adversity. Our danger is from another di- r ection. It is the threat to indi- vidual and minority rights inher- ent in every war and its after- math. MICHIGAN. FRIDAY as the series of race riots in our cities which grew out of the emo- tionalism of the First World War. The threat to racial and reli- gious, even to political, minority groups springs in wartime from two things—an overzealous mass insistence upon general conform- ity to majority standards, and the revival under emotional strains of age-old racial and reli- gious distrusts. Mirrities then are apt to be charkd with re- sponsibility for the war itself, and all the dislocations and dis- comforts arising from it. They are jealously subected to scrut- iny to determine if they are the recipients of special advantages. Some groups may not display what is regarded as the required patriotic fervor, and becont the objects of ostracism or attenfpted chastisement on the part of their See MINORITIES—Page 10 Meeting in Honor Of labotinsky's Memory July 20 Noted Speakers to Addres; Gathering A large meeting to honor the memory of the late leader of the World New Zionist Organization, Vladimir Jabotinsky, is being ar- ranged by a special local me- tOo; Single Copy: St.00 Per Yee' Dinner Meeting Hears Report On Jewish Theater Guild Drive Rabbi Morris Adler of Shaarey Zedek Principal Speaker at Corn. Center July Less than two months follow- ttog to hear reports whtch sound ing the presentation of the con- ed the keynote of the spirit in cept of a Jewish Qoannuttal the which Detroit Jewry has around this endeavor. B. M. Laikin, chairman of the budget committee, presided at the meeting. to which had vonie delegates and representatives of not one group but of every la/ - portant element its our commun- ity, all determined to merge their united efforts to make this cul- tural enterprise a success. Con- spicuous aiming these was the large number of young rople who welcom• the advent of a theater in Detroit and an oppor- tunity to participate in and b•'- came familiar with the artia'ie heritage of their people. RABBI ADLER RABBI MORRIS ADLER toter to the Jews of Detroit. a large and enthusiastic group gathered last Wednesday eve- ning. July 1, in the Jewish Com munity Center, at a dinner-meet Alternate Plans Heard at Jewish Hospital Meeting Estimates Range from $125,000 to $1,500,000 At a meeting held on Monday- July 6, at the Jewish Community Center, Holbrook and Woodw to rd Ares.. the Hospital committee which was a ppointed suotr ti me ago presented the report of J. J. Golub of New York and J. N. Lewis, architects, who had been EtYllleSted to prepare Hall submit alternate plans for a Jewish hos. pital in Detroit. A group of representative citi- zens heard the alternate reports submitted and a lively discussion took place. No definite action woos taken at the meeting, but (1 1 11- Mt0 proposals for organization development are likely as a result of the meeting. Five alternate See HOSPITAL—Page 12 INSPIRES Rabbi Morris Adler, honovary president and guest speaker, thrilled his audience w OM the note of evurage and determina- tion which he sounded. "A Jew- ish theater today which will pro- ject the beauty and dignity awl wholeness of Jewish life, 11101114 two thilogs," he said "First, it signifies our faith in American Jewry, and second, our deter- mination that Jewish life will not exhaust itself. Now, more than ever, it is important that we carry on and vitalize those in- stitutions and ideals which Jew- ish life in Europe can no longer nourish and which we are de- termined shall not have been de- veloped in vain," Ile noted the particular characteristic and `en- ins of our people in building con- structively tomll solidly in periods of greatest darkness and des- pair, and cited the farsighted. Hess of those who eau rally to OW CAM. Of a theater in this day Rabbi Joshua Sperka, who was present and who pledged hi9 whole-hearted support and back- ing for this project, weleomed theater which would be of such quality and standard that the or thodox ar well as non-orthoolox element of the voitimunity would flood in it oo true expression of the creative genius Whiel1 for Velitturb's was tb , Yelopeti by OP religious lift) of the Jewish peo ple. Jacob NIalgelis, editor and publisher of The Detroit Jewish Chronicle, commended the plat- form of the proposed theater, See DINNER—Pago 10 ■ The Laurels of Immortality Rr DR. CHAIM WEIZMANN EDITOR'S NOTE: The following evaluation of the modern Zionism, by his successor ll the mantle (mottles- of of Wool.' Zionist leadership, he, bee n released by the Zionist 01 ganise lion of America a n the occasio n of the 314th AMINO' 1141 y of tho death of Hord, which is being lib 11 by lionial Districts during July. If we speak of Theodor Herd, is not to mensure . the extent VLADIMIR JABOTINSKY of his success at' to institute nom parisons with oth er lead e rs o f mo•ial committee for Monday thought or action, but us all evening, July 20. The meeting net of lionotgo to I he 1111111 Who will he held in the Boni Moshe iu the eyes of Zionists stands out Synagogue. The speakers will in- incomparable. In adopting this clude Dr. Steiner, a prominent attitude, there is no desire to Zionist leader from Chicago); Dr. create a omit of hero-worship, Lew. a leading Zionist, who re but an endeavor to avoid the de• cently arrived from Belgium; veluument of hike values in our and several prominent lo-al Zion- assessment of what he did awl ists. The well-known cantor, of that which lie nought to David Kerzman, will chant the achieve. Ila zkara. It is related by Herzl himself Vladimir Jahotinsky advocated how in his first appearative be- a Jewish Army long before the fore the Jewish mionntoo---it was present war and the imminent in the ‘Vhitecluopel Ghetto In danger to Palestine by the armies 1896 he then felt that legend of Rommel. As a militant Zion- wan beginning too weave Its ist he would no doubt be in the threads around his personality. forefront of the movement for A true aristocrat by iodine, 1.I. a Jewish army and with his gpi.- WW1 inntinctively drawn towards the "common people" who so See JABOTINSKY—Page 10 trustfully' acclaimed him at lirnt sight as their !rootlet; but litth. did he know of thome who %%Tr., pre p ared to follow him. The 'womb whom he 1'0111111v ly ev 11(4'1141 to understand 111111 1110 men of great Alfairs and, above loll, his fellow-intellectuals at tho Nlarealiamiii Club in London, to whom he turned tit the Hrht hi- 1111,St, lead- ers of their 'coreligionistn" hood not a shred of sympathy for his idea. Unconscious even of his form miners, he yet tututtively I ntl 141 as 110 1111111 11811 br NM' 111111, the age-long yeainings 11111111110 nail 11111111111111t., of the T111111 t111, 11+ 1110 10411v1 who 1010W 110t of the people he Was 11011111011 10 P110W 1110 way, 1 111 1 1 W11 11 , 111 tilt. slim t spats of eight yearn of 11 In 1011.11C tar, 111 .1 /1•11111.1vntl 10.c11111t. vlIeltrlara in the 111'111•m if 11'1101 . 4.a, of thou. So. IMMOKTALIA Y—Peg• ka