DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE and The Legal Chronicle U FARM (Continued from Page 1) unmarried man should ponder be- fore he enters upon it. Farm work plus household chores are apt to become too burdensome. Unless a feminine member of the family, mother, aunt or sister— joins him on the farm the single man is too likely to throw up the sponge. And even the married man must make certain that farm life will appeal to his wife. It is maintained that the most im- portant factor on the farm is the farm wife. Many a promis- ing farm venture has gone upon the rocks just because of the wife's dissatisfaction. Partnership in farm enterprise is not advisable. The farmstead is not simply the workshop of the family heads. It is also the family home. Where there is farm partnership the families live together, usually under one roof. Differing outlooks, varying tem- peraments sooner or later give rise to clashes, which end up in separation and failure. Moreover, because farming is a way of life, the Jewish farm buyer who does not want to cut himself loose from Jewish con- tacts and who wants to observe religious practices, should locate in an established Jewish farm community or near a town or village where his Jewish ties can be maintained. So much for the human and social factors. In the economic phase the core of the problem facing the farm purchaser is to buy the right farm at the right price and upon the right terms. What is the right farm? Ob- viously the farm which will give the farmer and his family a sat- isfactory living, not necessarily riches. Every potential farmer has his specific problem requir- ing solution to fit his specific needs. What is the eminently right farm for one man may be the utterly wrong farm for the other. What is the right price? There are certain criteria of values, not too well defined. Experts have been known to differ widely in their appraisal of the same farm. Just now farm real estate is ex- hibiting an inflationary trend and the farm buyer must be more than ordinarily cautious. In a way, more important than the price is the matter of mortgage terms. Few farms are bought for cash. The man with modest capital should content himself with a modest farm. Heavy in- terest charges and onerous mort- gage terms not only retard prog- ress, they may actually spell the doom of the farm enterprise. These are broad and sound principles. Yet their violation has not always spelt failure. Old men have succeeded while young men have failed; unmarried men have made good; partnerships have turned out favorably; men who entered on a shoe string have outstripped those who start- ed with fat bank accounts. But those are the exceptions. That man will be well advised who seeks competent and unbiased counsel. Farm settlement guidance has always been a major item in the Jewish Agricultural Society's pro- gram, and the Society takes pride in the fact that it placed em- phasis on the quality, and the number, of its settlements. As a result thousands of Jewish fam- ilies have been constructively es- tablished on farms and flourish- ing Jewish farm communities have grown up. During the five years, 1939 through 1943, the Society settled '739 families. At the end of 1943, 692 families- 93%—were still on their farms. The first five years are the cru- cial years and the fixity of the family that has weathered this span is well assured. The value of directed settle- ment was strikingly demonstrat- ed in the Society's work with refugees. With an exception here and there, most refugees had been business and professional men—lawyer, physician, editor, teacher, merchant, manufactur- er, industrialist, tradesman. Few were below 40. Most were in their forties and fifties, some even over 60; soft-handed men without a vestige of farm ex- perience and without manual dexterity. Yet these novices, these strangers, properly located and intelligently guided, have thrust their roots deeply into the soil, and have evoked the admiration of their native neighbors. Sure- ly what has been accomplished by refugees can also be accom- plished by returning soldiers and those dislocated in the transition from a war to a peace economy. The Society has a well defined, well rounded program. It guides the farm buyer, it makes farm loans, it conducts agricultural classes, maintains a broad edu- cational service, it places young men on farm jobs, it fosters farm cooperatives, it promotes community effort, in short, its activities touch every aspect of farm life. This service The Jew- ish Agricultural Society stands ready to employ for the benefit of those who can make use of it. sor of Hebrew at the Teachers' Seminary. One of his colleagues there was David Yellin who later became a professor at the Heb- rew University. In the three years he stayed in Palestine, Schapiro perfected his knowledge of Arabic, Syriac, and other Semitic languages. He was not yet 30 when he embarked for the United States, one of the many Jewish immigrants destined to contribute immensely to the civilization of America and Amer- ican Israel. At first he was asso- ciated with the Bureau of Edu- cation of the New York Kehil- LEARNED lah, founded by Dr. Judah Mag- nes, and, together with Rubein (Continued from Page 1) Brainin, he edited the Hebrew weekly, Hadvar. Jews, the Near East and related "The decisive change in my subjects throughout the 31 years life took place in 1912. In that he headed the Library's Semitic year the great philanthropist, Division. H. Schiff, presented to the The retiring director, who can 'Jacob Library of Congress a collection boast of the friendship of men of 10,000 volumes of Hebraica like Bialik, Sokolow, Eliezer ben which he bought from Ephraim Jehudah, Benzion Mossinson and Deinard, the Hebrew author and Shemarya Levin, is a colorful bibliophile who died in New York personality. He combines a thor- in 1930. The Washington Eve- ough Jewish background with a ning Star called this acquisition profound secular knowledge. the 'most notable event of the Born 61 years ago as the son year at the library of Congress.' of a Hebrew writer in a little Additional 4,000 volumes from town in the Russian province of the Deinard collection were pre- Suwalki, he attended Russian sented by Mr. Schiff to the li- schools as well as the famous brary two years later. This price- Yeshivah of Telshi. The 18- less acquisition led Congress to year-old "bachur" proceeded to enact the legislation which cre- Berlin, then the Mecca of all ated the Semitic Division in the ambitious East ern European Library of Congress. In present- youngsters, and plunged himself ing his gift to the Library, Mr. into deep philosophical, philolog- Schiff stipulated that the Li- ical and historical studies. At brarian of Congress should ap- the University of Berlin he point a specially qualified person, heard the noted Assyriologist not a mere cataloguer but a real Friedrich Delitzsch who, in his Hebrew scholar and bibliograph- last years, became a rabid anti- er, who would in his person as Semite, though he was the son well as through the collection of an ardent defender of the worthily represent Jewish schol- Jews. At Strasburg Schaprio was arship on the staff of the Library a pupil of the eminent Orient- of Congress. Dr. Putnam be- ialist, Theodor Noeldeke, an lieved me to be the right one adept in Biblical and Talmudic for that task." literature who was a close friend Dr. Schapiro showed me the of Abraham Geiger and died in well-organized stacks of his divi- 1930 at the age of 96. sion, now filled with more than • "Noeldeke was particularly 40,000 volumes of Hebraica, in- fond of Jewish students, saying c l u d i n g many incunabula—a that, having been acquaint- third of all incunabula known to ed with the Hebrew language be existent—and rare editions of from infancy, they were better the 16th and 17th centuries. One fitted for the study of the Sem- can find there "Halachoth" (the itic languages than their Chris- legal parts of the post-Biblical tian colleagues. I was the last literature) and Responsa as well student to be examined by old as works pertaining to homiletics Noeldeke who afterwards re- or to liturgics. Among the treas- tired from academic life." ures are a complete edition of Having obtained a Ph.D. de- the Talmud, issued by the Flem- gree for his dissertation on the ish printer Bomberg at Venice haggadic elements in the Koran, around 1520, and several hun- the holy book of the Moslems, Schapiro was sent in 1907 by dred editions of the Passover the Hilfsverein der deutschen Haggadah. The Yiddish collec- Juden to Jerusalem as a profes- tion contains about 10,000 items. PRAYERS FOR VICTORY ON TISHA B'AB July 28, 1944 Referring to this collection, and agreed already to grant rights of praising Schapiro's role in devel- passport if not of citizenship to oping it, the Washington Herald osn e aoJnv wrote, a decade ago: who Jewsat I.:toile:lle:el a nin Hungary cestry back "The story of an indomitable race and the scholarly lore it ac- to Spain. Sweden of centuries has agreed to cumulated through the ages is extend p rotective citizenship t told in the Semitic Division of 800 unfortunates trapped in; c the Library of Congress with a Hungary. 'thoroughness unsurpassed any- This protective citizenship, ac where in the world." cording to an authority on . Washington's "Semitic Divi- ternational law, can be given by sion" differs from the "Jewish Britain and the United States to. Division" of the New York Pub- morrow wit h o u t complicating lic Library in many respects. In their immigration problem one the first place, the department bit. that was headed by Dr. Schapiro Sonic 750 Jews in Hungary contains—as indicated by its who were doomed to deportaticm name—not only Hebrew and and death were saved by the Yiddish writings, but also works Zionist organization in Budapest, written in other languages, such which put up a king's ransom as Arabic. Books on Jewish and for them. They are now either Semitic topics written in Eng- on their way to Palestine or ac- lish and other modern languages tually there. are kept in the general collection of the Library. Finally, the Semitic Division has no Reading FUGITIV E Room of its own—its books have (Continued from Page 1) to be perused in the Library's general reading room. "Not only is the Semitic Divi- tenced to long prison terms, In the meantime, Hungarian sion the pride of American Jews," Dr. Schapiro said to me, civil authorities are reported tak- closely pressing a volume to his ing new and more drastic anti. heart, "but it is the rich source Jewish measures. A decree re- of essential facts and thought cently issued by the National preserved through the ages by Commissioner of Public Health Jewish scholars for the use of ordered the seizure of all equip. modern students of theology, meats and medical supplies to philosophy, medicine, history, jur- be found in the offices of Jewish isprudence, natural sciences, doctors. The decree also ordered closing of several hundred mathematics, archaeology, a n d the Jewish medical aid societies and other subjects . . ." hospitals and Our conversation was inter- Jewish-supported sanitariums. rupted by a phone call: A Sen- to Kidnap Horthy ator asked the chief librarian to Attempt A report reaching here from send him a comprehensive book on the population problems in reliable sources in London reveals Palestine. Several persons drop- that an attempt has recently made to kidnap Nicholas ped in to talk with the wizard, been Hungarian Regent, and among them a woman journalist Horthy, overthrow the puppet Sztojay who wished to have the names of to Government. According to the the Zionist periodicals in this report, the was made by country, and a Christian student members of attempt he pro-Nazi cabinet who desired literature on a theo- who had become alarmed at the logical subject. Patiently and dislocation resulting politely Dr. Schapiro tried to economic from the ouster of Jews from help all the callers. economic life of Hungary. When I conversed with Dr. the conflicting report, also from Schapiro, he would or would not A London, said the attempt was divulge the name of the man to made by a group of Hungarians succeed him. "Whoever takes who resented Horthy's promise over when I stop ought to be to "suspend" the deportation of not older than I was when I Jews. began—about 30. Being head of Simultaneously it was disclosed the Semitic Division of the larg- here a committee of Hun- est bibliographic establishment on garian that ministers at the Vatican, earth is a life job. It will re- Madrid, Lisbon and Stockholm quite the full capacity, strength had issued a statement express- and devotion of my successor "horror and disgust with the just as it has required mine. The ing crimes of Hungarian quislings Near East is important now; it against Jews and others." will be still more so after the war. Demands upon the Semitic Division are certain to be heavy MINISTERS and compelling. I am most deep- ly anxious to see the position (Continued from Page 1) filled while I am yet available to advise and to help the incum- already signed the pledge to fight bent, whoever he may be." anti-Semitism. After the destruction of the Kenneth Leslie, editor of "The great Jewish libraries of Berlin, Protestant," in a panel discus- Frankfort on Main, Vienna, Vilna sion on Anti-Semitism, the and Warsaw by the Nazi hordes, Bridgehead to Fascism, at the the importance of the rich Church of Our Father, called Semitic Division of Washington, upon the Christian Church to D.C. is greater than ever before, "clean its own house" by eradi- It may be regrettable that Dr. cating the notion that the Jews Schapiro, after the loss of his killed Christ. He declared that beloved wife, chose to retire from this teaching is the nerve center his post, but it can be expected of anti-Semitism, that the rancor that he will be of assistance to left by this accusation has in- Mr. Archibald MacLeish, Librar- fected even unbelievers. ian of Congress, in any emer- Jew is Unpopular gency. In Palestine, the land of Leslie also declared that the his dreams, he will have ample Jew has been unpopular because time to devote himself to scien- he refused to be a slave even tific studies and to add a few in the ancient times. "There is more books to the imposing list some characteristic in the Jew of publications that he has to that makes him stand straight up his credit by now. and look men straight in the eye. BLACKMAIL (Continued from Page 1) Jewish soldiers seem ing in the United Nations armies assemble at the Wailing Wall on Tisha Web to pray for victory, as Jews throughout the world commemorate the destruction of the ancient Temple in Jerusalem. In the United States Tisha ll'ab will he observed not merely as a memorial for the dead, but as the occasion for the quickening of the organized effort to rescue the living through the instrumentality of the United Jewish Appeal for Refugees, Overseas Needs and Palestine. By its generous response to the $32,000,000 U. J. A. drive, American Jewry is niaking it possible for the Joint Distribution Committee, the United Palestine Appeal, and the National Refugee Service to expand their relief rehabilitation, and reconstruction pro. grams in Europe, in Palestine, and among the refugees in the United States. that the matter deserved consul- tation with Jewish leaders. It was this incident that has recent- ly prompted the American and British Governments to repeat- edly warn Hungary against the mass-extermination of its Jews. The deportation and execution of Hungarian Jews by Nazis is leading to an increasing demand that the British Government take a stronger stand than it has adopted yet against these atroci- ties. The demand has been voiced that the British Government make its position unequivocal by ordering the bombing of gas ex- ecution chambers at Oswiecim and Birkenau and the intensifi- cation of the radio and leaflet campaign to convince German terrorists that they will have to pay for their crimes. There has been a proposal that the United States and Britain grant protective citizenship to Jews still left in Hungary. This is not such an academic question as it seems. Spain has That made him unpopular with the top men. The God of the Jews is the God of justice. A lot of men are trying to follow strange Gods. You can kill every Jew but you can't kill the God of the Jews. Thus humans of this world are doomed as the Haman of old was doomed. Be on the lookout for those who speak about Jews but mean the devil." Albert Kahn, author of Sabot- age, was one of the speakers,a the People's Congress of App lied t Religion. "Not all Fascists speak Ger- r. Japanese," he declared. Many of them are right here in Detroit." The theme of the P Applied Religion n has of pplie been economic, political and , rac- ial justice for all people. .11' hit,' d . . and Negro ministers part i cip a te A loving heart is the great re- ppress. quirement! . . . not to o . . . not to exalt not in ding down others. oneself by treading but to comfort and befriend thw i —Fo-rho- hing-stan-king. BUY WAR BONDS