March 2b, 1943 DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE and The Legal Cl,ronicle Detroit Jewish Chronicle and THE LEGAL CHRONICLE Published Weekly by Jewish Chronicle Publishing Co., Inc. JACOB H. SCHAKNE JACOB MARGOLIS Pres.-Gen. Mgr. Editor General Offices and Publication Bldg., 525 Woodward Ave. Telephone: CAdillac 1040 Cable Address: Chronicle $3.00 Per Year Subscription in Advance To insure publication, all correspondence and news matter must reach this office by Tuesday evening of each week. When mailing notices, kindly use one side of paper only. The Detroit Jewish Chronicle invites correspondence on sub. jects of interest to the Jewish people, but disclaims respon- sibility for en endorsement of views expressed by its writers Entered as Second-class matter March 3, 1916, at the Post. office at Detroit, Mich., under the Act of March 3, 1879. Sabbath Readings of the Law Pentateuchal portion—Leviticus 6.1-8.36; Numbers 19.1-22. Prophetical portion—Ezekiel 36.16-38. MARCH 26. 1943 ADAR 19. 5703 The Giraud Decrees The abrogation of the Vichy laws by General Honore Giraud included the Cremieux decree of 1870, which conferred French citizenship upon the Jews of Algeria. The abrogation of the Cremieux decree puts the Jews and Arabs on an equal foot- ing, and means that Algerian Jews and Arabs must make application for citizen- ship of they are to enjoy these rights. The action of General Giraud has evoked a storm of protests. The Jews of Algeria who enjoyed the status of French citizens since 1870 are now deprived of that right. This is a serious deprivation, and unless the General has excellent rea- sons for this deprivation of rights, no good purpose can be served by such dis- criminatory action. Our State Department raised no ob- jection to the decree, which it must have studied. This fact leads us to believe that there must have been some strong and moving reason for the action by the Giraud government. Our French policy, from the day the Armistice was signed, has been designed to keep the French within our friendly orbit. This has often irritated those who want strong, decisive action, but who can say that the policy has not been the cor- rect one, or that it has not borne good fruit? The Giraud decrees have restored civil, economic and social rights to the Jewish people of Algeria. These are very im- portant, and even the failure of the gov- ernment to give our people political equality must not make us lose sight of the fact that civil and economic equality are of paramount importance. It is entirely proper for Jewish organi- zations to ask for an explanation from the State Department. Whether the State Department is in a position to make a clear and definite statement on the sub- ject, we do not know, but in any event we should keep on prodding and demand- ing that all rights be restored to our peo- ple whereever they have been deprived of them. However, we are confident that Alger- ian Jewry has a friend in General Giraud, and it is not due to wilfullness or enmity that the Jews of Algeria may temporarily be deprived of political equality. Man's Faith in Crisis The theme of the convention of the Union of American Hebrew Congregatons to be held in New York, April 2-4 is "Man's Faith in the Present Crisis". Many men who are actively partici- pating in the war effort have faith in a victory over aggression and brutality, but what of those who are conquered and must look on while the gales of uncer- tainty and suspense engulf them, and the spectres of hunger, want and death sur- round them. And what of the faith of those most unhappy of all, the Jews of Poland, Ukraine, White Russia and the Baltic States? It is true that the Christian world has been preoccupied with the vast and mani- fold problems of the war, but yet can one blame our Polish, Ukrainian, White Russian and Baltic Jewish brethren, if they have lost faith in all humanity and human protestations of decency, kindli- ness and neighborliness? Have the Christian leaders of the United Nations done what they could to inspire faith in these indescribably wretched, and by now misanthropic, men and women? If there is not one among them that has a shred of faith left, that would be understandable. Even those of us who have experienced no deprivation often question whether man can become a de- cent social animal after the catastrophe that has overtaken the innocent and help- less millions of our people. If European man now has little or no faith, it is because, since the end of World War I, he has gone from despair to greater despair, and now has reached the ultimate despair. In his futile, con- fused, childish efforts to save himself he has created a Frankenstein in the form of a million-headed police military super state 1 which has squeezed every drop of faith, individuality and dignity out of him. He is so perplexed and frustrated that he cannot do anything to overcome this monster of his own creation. This period of regression will last un- til peace again comes to the world. How long it will take after that for man again to get on to the road of progress is a matter of prophecy in which it were foolhardy to indulge. We believe that civilization will sur- vive and that man will create a decent world fit for human beings to live in. A Doleful Hitler Plain Talk • . • by Al Segal Zilch and Blitz LL PEOPLE who are sick and A tired of living in the debating society called American Jewry will be glad to hear of the Amer- ican Jewish Assembly—a union of all varieties of Israel—which has been projected by henry Monsky as president of Bnai Brith. A debating society is a center of pleasant intellectual recrea- tion for an evening, and not too many evenings at that. Even to endure a debating society for a week would be something that would impinge too horribly on the nerves. Yet to be a Jew has been to suffer a continuous debate. As a democratic spirit I can not advocate a totalitarian Jewry in which all members think alike. Debate is the circulating medium of ideas in .a democratic society. But; debate is reduced to ab- surdity when it never arrives at any decisions. It is the essence of democracy that its debates must eventually come to conclusions voted by the majority and accept- ed by all. This, it appears, is the aim of the American Jewish Assembly —a kind of parliament that will speak to the conscience of man- kind and to the authorities of the nations in whose hands the doing of justice lies. All this brings me to the case of the Last Jews which came to me the other evening out of a cloud of pipe smoke. His name was Zilch and he was the last Jew in the world. Life had been bearable for him as long as Blitz lived. Blitz was the second last Jew. As long as Blitz lived there was some one to argue with about Jewish life. I don't know how it came to pass that these two were the last Jews in the world, but it appears they had grown to man- hood in a considerable Jewish community. In this community they had been brought up on the idea that Jewish life was a fight that a zealous Jew should never allow to die clown. It was the practice for one group of Jew never to agree with another group on anything, never to give in, never to compromise. I I I TN OTHER sections of society people managed to get along, despite disagreements that from time to time divided them. They felt that for the sake of its sur- vival the human race should compose its differences and prog- iess in unity toward its goals. The dissidents eventually went along with the majority and even helped all they could to imple- ment the decisions of the ma- jority. But not so among. the Jews. Nothing ever was settled and Jews rode in all directions • being Jewish and the community was full of the tumult of diverse voices. It may be that it was o account of these irreparable di- visions in Israel that ultimately t here were only these two Jews left in the world. Anyway, that's the way it was. The two surviving Jews decided to keep up Jewish life in the sense of the ancient battles. Well they knew that their arguments never would lead anywhere, since there were no more Jewish goals left to lead to; but then, in the olden times, the same debates never get anywhere either. They kept up the fight by reason of old habit of Jewish upbringing. It was one manifesto and ;m- other that they hurled at each other through the public prints. If one day a manifesto had to do with Zionism, the next it re- lated to some particular brand of Zionism; a manifesto on the nature of the Jew which argued that to be a Jew was to be a member of a nation; a mani- festo which asserted that being Jewish was a religious identity only; a manifesto attacking those 96 rabbis who had been dead 100 years; manifestors of excommunication. Zilch and Blitz passed each other on the streets without a nod. of recognition. The only sign that they were aware of each other's existence was a stab- ging glare of their eyes. "He calls himself a Jew," Zilch thought. Blitz said: "That Zilch! Audi mir a Jew!" Zilch felt that it was only the grace of God that let an 1.111- Jewish Jew life Blitz keep on living. Yes, the ancient recriminations continued even to these last two Jews. Neither would let the other have the last word. When, at last, Blitz lay on his deathbed, his one regret was that Zlich would have the last word on the latest manifesto. It was on the matter of the Jewish army con- cerning which there had been such furious controversy back in 1942. B I I f UT ZILCH was sincerely sorry to hear that Blitz was dying. He felt that with Blitz gone there would be no more Jewish life, since the debate at last would conic to an end, and what could there be of Jewish life without the heat of controversy. Even if The speech of Hitler on Heroes' Day was somewhat belated, as it was to have been delivered a week earlier. Belated or not, it was one of the most uninspiring See SEGAL—Page 10 ever delivered by him to a weary and dis- illusioned Germany. The Bolshevist and Jewish bogeys were Bnai Brith Given Treasury Department Citation trotted out. He assured his hearers that those who have delivered themselves more and more into the hands of the Jews will experience collapse and meet their end one day from Bolshevist poison. If the recent speeches of Hitler, Goeb- bels and other Nazi leaders showed a defensive atlitude, this went even fur- ther and regaled a state of depression Action Now and weariness. It may well have been that the Fuehrer Congressman Emanuel Celler of New had to stick to the text of the speech that York calls for the liberalization of our was probably prepared by somebody else, immigration laws in order to provide a yet this could hardly have been respon- haven for refugees from Nazi terror. No one who is concerned about the sible for the doleful character of the text. fate of the Jews of Europe can object to Perhaps the fact that he reported the a liberalization of the Johnson Act, but at death of 542,000 victims of Nazi mad- this time is would be a most difficult un- ness may have had something to do with dertaking to persuade the present Con- his apparent lack of enthusiasm. The people of Germany and those gress to change the law that represents dragooned workers from the satellite and the immigration policy of this country for conquered countries must be infinitely more than two decades. What is needed is emergency legisla- more weary and unenthusiastic than was tion that will remove the quota principle the fanatic Hitler on last Sunday. It is The Greater Detroit Bnai Brith Council was presented with from the law. Even if the quotas were this lack of enthusiasm and war weari- the Treasury Department's official citation for going "over the top" ness that will eventually break the Ger- increased, that would not solve the prob- in its one-month drive to sell $1,000,000 in War Bonds and sponsor man will to resist. The hopelessness of lem for the Jews of those countries whose two submarine chasers. Mr. Hill, a member of the staff of the the situation must be clearer tp the Ger- United States War Bond Program for Michigan, is shown presenting quotas were negligible. It goes without saying that Britain man masses today than ever before in the citation for the sale of $1,490,000 to Mrs. Lillian Aaron, presi- dent of Pisgah Auxiliary, and Max Goldhoff, treasurer of Pisgah should remove all barriers that now limit the decade of Nazi rule. Lodge, who were co-chairmen of the Greater Detroit Bnai Brith The German heroes now have the con- Council's successful drive. the number that may enter Palestine. This drive was participated in by the- following groups: Pisgah Good will action is what is needed now,olation that "In future the people with t Louis Marshall Lodge, Theodor Herzl Lodge, East Side and there can be no better good will ac- true culture will be neither Jewish Bol- Lodge, Lodge, Pisgah Auxiliary, Business and Professional Auxiliary, Theo- tion than measures to rescue the Jews s shevist or Jewish Capitalist," if the dor Herzl Auxiliary, East Side Auxiliary, Louis Marshall Auxiliary, prophet Hitler can be believed. who are in the Nazi grip, the junior Bnai lirith organizations, A. Z. A. and junior girls.