America 'elvish Periodical CeNter Friday, June 15, 1945 SEGAL (Continued from Page 4) LONDON (WNS).—Sir Robert Waley-Cohen, prominent British communal leader who represented the Anglo-Jewish Association at Sa n Francisco, feels that there are too many "serious divergen- cies" in American Jewish life. This divisiveness is having a harmful effect, he believes. Regarding Jewish activities at San Francisco, Sir Robert said that while Jews were only con- sultants there, the American Jew- ish Committee, the American Jewish Conference and other groups did good work in connec- tion with the charter on human rights. He also praised the Com- mittee's fight on anti-Semitism in the U. S. The discussion on mandates, he asserted, was con- fused, but it was indicated that the final draft of the proposals covering mandates would leave the Palestine mandate intact and not prejudice Jewish rights. Where Jewish organizations were divided on issues, their counsel was rejected or ignored, Sir Robert said, but "their united voice was received with open ears and had an effect." It would be a great tragedy, he continued, if Jewish organizations failed to find a common ground for united work. Admitting that it was diffi- cult to come to an agreement on the question of Palestine, the Anglo-Jewish Association leader said that it is possible for all to agree on the great value of Jew- ish achievements in Palestine if the Balfour Declaration is carried out. "A united Jewry can con- vince the world that the hands of the clock cannot be turned back- wards in Palestine," Sir Robert stated. Aux., Home for Aged, Honors Mrs. J. Rose prodigy at 3" . . They had a jar of the vitamins ready at his crib when he was brought in from the delivery room He was fed one at once. When, on his third birthday, the question was given him, he replied: "I've been waiting for that question and I have the an- swer ready. Is a stenographer handy? I want my answer set down for the record." Young Segal at once delighted his parents by announcing that, after thinking it all over, he had decided to keep on being a Jew. The rabbi of their synagogue was present at the momentous occa- sion and came forward with con- gratulations. He had been send- ing infant Segal numerous propa- ganda tracts in anticipation of this moment. "Now, now, rabbi," Segal laughed, "I don't think you can take much credit for this. I thought it all out myself. Just sit down and let me tell you. Have a cigaret? . . . As a matter of fact, my dear rabbi, I haven't read any of your tracts." Well, young Segal asked, just where should we begin? So he started off by asking: Just what is a man? A man, he replied, isn't what other people think of him. A man is what he is in his character and his way of life, in his attitudes toward other hu- man beings, in his concept of his duties an a social being. And what, he asked, did it matter to such a man that some guttersnipe tossed mud at him? The mud can't stick ; he washes it off and goes his way and re- mains the good man. Three year old Segal paused thoughtfully and inquired: "And what has all that got to do with being a Jew?" He said he had been reading and thinking a great deal about the matter of being a Jew . . "Not, indeed, about the pain of being a Jew—not the anti-Semi- tism that the Jewish press re- ports, not the discriminations that we are told about," he said. When he was old enough to read anything—approximately at the age of 2—he began going deeply into Jewish ethical teach- ing. He had read the Ten Com- mandments and was particularly impressed by what was said there about worshipping false gods. He thought that was the most im- portant Commandment. The main trouble with the world was that people were worshipping false gods—god Greed, god Hate, god Envy. These gods made all the trouble in the world. "Yes, that Commandment is the sum of all the Command- ments," the Segal child said somewhat pontifically. Women's Auxiliary, Jewish Home for Aged, will hold the closing meeting of the year at 1:30 p. m. Monday, June 18, at the Home. A program is being planned, and refreshments will be served under the chairman- ship of Mrs. S. Weller and her committee. Members are urged to come and buy bonds from the chair- man, Mrs. J. Fishman, who will deliver bonds to the home of each purchaser. At the closing meeting of the executive board which was held at the home of Mrs. David Kli- ger, Mrs. J. Rose was made an honorary member of the Aux- iliary. Mrs. Rose is sunshine chairman of the Auxiliary, and has held that office for 20 years. As long ago us 1912 she was interested in the welfare of the residents Judaism Is Justice He had also read the Jewish in the old home on Edmund teaching in Leviticus . . . "Chap- Place. ter 19, if you care to know," he buy Bonds to help them come remarked . . . He remembered the verse about loving the strang- home sooner. er as yourself . . . "That looks to me like the original idea of brotherhood" . . . He remem- bered the verse. "Ye shall do no unrighteousness in judgment, in meteyard, in weight or in meas- ure" That's justice, he remarked. Yes, he said, all in all, Juda- ALSIPIHINI ism looked like a good thing to World's Lirge ,,t Sollt r dt 10 keep on belonging to . . . Since St.elloseph FIRST DETROIT SNOWING e Work/ MCHARD TAUBER GREAT OPERA IN LEONCAVELIVS If famous -re/for "PAGLIACCI STEFFI DUNA • _-----ALSO EiloaGeik. IB ERGAI ER. , LISH/ BOTH FILMS IN ENGLISH) THEATRE -64iht/ric6271 1 ,COLAMALA & WOOPeR it has to do with the good life which is the main thing. "So what's the matter with being a Jew, provided you are the right kind?" the bright youngster asked. Of course, he added, there was no sense at all in being a Jew, if you're the wrong kind. Then you have no defense against the guttersnipe's mud. It sticks. He said it hurt to be a Jew only if you weren't worthy of being one. If you were worthy it didn't matter what anti-Sem- ites said against you. Your head stood high above the guttersnipes and you didn't suffer. Segal, at the age of 3, had decided to stick to the Jews . . • "I'm going to try to be the best kind of a Jew. Then being Jew- ish never can be a pain." His mother kissed him. His father offered him a lollypop, but his mother said No, he shouldn't have candy now . . . "It's time for his vitamin" . . . The rabbi said he hoped Segal would join his congregation. Now the time has come to report what my home-town rabbi replied when the member of his congregation asked: "Which way would you have gone—Jewish or Gentile—if at the age of 3 you had had your choice?" The rab- bi's answer was practically along the sonic line as young Segal's. "I'd stay Jewish because I would know that if I was a good Jew, faithful to the Jewish spiritual and ethical teaching, I could never turn out to be a Nazi. That's one reason." Mizrachi Demands Zionist Reform; Blasts Leaders NEW YORK (WNS). — "We have now reached the point where we must declare that we can no longer bear responsibility for the work and policies of the Zionist Emergency Council," the Miz- rachi Organization of America declared in a letter to Dr. Ste- phen S. Wise, chairman of the Council, demanding the reorgani- zation of the Council within the next two weeks. Mizrachi has steadfastly sup- ported the leadership and mili- tant policies of Dr. Abba Hillel Silver. Pointing out that "the wide- spread interest which has been aroused among the Jewish public by the San Francisco Conference should not obscure the fact that these actions are of relatively minor importance so far as the future of Palestine is concerned," Leon Gellman, president of Miz- rachi, stated in his letter to Dr. Wise: "In view of the imminent dan- ger, we feel that adequate meas- ures were not adopted by our po- litical leadership as represented in the American Zionist Emer- gency Council. Noe attempt has been made to reintroduce the Palestine resolution in Congress. There has been no forthright de- nunciation of the anti-Zionist trends prevailing in the State Department. "There has been no adequate attempt to force a showdown on our government's policy through the concentrated pressure of public opinion. There has been excessive reliance upon the pri- vate and public assurances of individual statesmen and the continuing failure to pursue more vigorous and militant policies. Synagogue Council Re-Elects Officers I N DIANA NAPIER LA rare treat for music loyers,, the scars firstcovIrtt opera/ • Page Thirteen DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE and The Legal Chronicle Disunity Hurt Jews At San Francisco, Says British Leader I CLIFTON AVENUE - CINCINNATI 20, OHIO i:i.RAYmOND MASSEY THE SCREENS MOST DARING LOVE STORY I) NEW YORK.—At the plenary session of the Synagogue Coun- cil of America, held last week, the following officers were re- elected: Rabbi Herbert S. Goldstein, president; Rabbi Isaac Landman, 1st vice president; Rabbi Robert Gordis, 2nd vice president; Rab- bi Ahron Opher, assistant to the president; Benjamin Koenigsberg, corresponding secretary; Max Fink, treasurer, and Charles P. Kramer, honorary secretary. Organized in 1926, the Syna- gogue Council of America is the united religious voice of the American Jewish community. Its constituencies are: Union of Orthodox Jewish Con- gregations of America (Ortho- dox), United Synagogue of A- merica (Conservative), Union of America Hebrew Congregations (Reform), Rabbinical Council of America (Orthodox), Rabbinial Assembly of Ameria (Conserva- tive), Central Conferene of American Rabbis (Reform). NW Sisterhood Elects Officers, Picks Committees Sabbath Motion Clears Ways for MizraChi Return The annual meeting of the Sis- terhood of the Northwest Hebrew Congregation and Center was held at the home of Mrs. Ira G. Kaufman on June 6. Mrs. Esther Mossman, wife of Chaplain Sidney Mossman, ad- dressed the group. She stated that many of the Jewish boys in service are blaming their par- ents for permitting them to ne- glect their Jewish education, and emphasized that it is the duty of every Jewish parent to see that children receive a basic He- brew education. The Hadassah Choral Group sang Hebrew and Palestinian songs. Mrs. Max Goldsmith, president, appointed the following commit- tee chairmen: Membership, Mrs. Z. Garber; conservation, Mrs. B. Brodman ; card and gift, Mrs. A. Waller; Sunday School, Mrs. Ira Kauf- man ; tickets, Mrs. A. Sachs and Mrs. G. Kushner ; telephone squad, Mrs. H. Berlin and Mrs. I. Shere; war efforts, Mrs. Rose Singer; war bonds and stamps, Michelle Tchor; social, Mrs J. Gordon, and publicity, Mrs. M. Haidy. Young People's Society, Mi- chellyL Tchor, representative, and Mrs. David Miller, consultant; Yiskor and memorial fund, Mrs. Robert Wallach and Mrs. David Tchor; fund raising, Mrs. Alex- ander Moss. Besides Mrs. Goldsmith the other officers are: Mrs. D. Miller and Mrs. Ira Kaufman, vice pres- idents; Mrs. C. Charlip, treas- urer; Mrs. Meyer R. Rubin, re- cording secretary; Mrs. D. I. Samelson and Michelle Tchor, corresponding secretaries; Mrs. Ben R. Levy and Mrs. A. Helf gott, sgts-at-arms. The donor dinner is being giv- en by the congregation at the Jewish Community Center this Sunday evening, in cooperation with the Sisterhood. A large number of reservations have been made. Dr. Emanuel Gamo- ran of Cincinnati will be the guest speaker at the dinner, and Aaron Rosenberg will officiate as master of ceremonies. A meeting of the board of di- rectors will be held at the home of Mrs. D. Miller, 17523 Cherry- lawn, on Wednesday, June 20, at 8 p. m., to outline activities for the coming season. JERUSALEM (Palcor). — The adoption of an amended resolu- tion by the Vaad Leumi, Jewish Palestine's National Council, on the public observance of the Sab- bath, has cleared the way for the return of Mizrachi and Hapoel Hamizrachi, to their posts on the Executive Committee of the Council. The amended resolution had previously been adopted by the Assephath Hanivcharim, Jewish Palestine's Representative Assem- bly, and was passed in the Vaad Leumi, by a great majority, over the objections of the Hashomer Hatzair, Labor Unity and the Left Poole Zion. The resolution applies the Sabbath observance regulations to public transport and communications. To date, these regulations were applicable to trade and industry alone. V .ttronize Our Advertisers. FIDELMAN'S 'where vacation dreams come true' South Haven's Finest Resort 80 Acres of Playtime Paradise • A gay, friendly crowd • Swimming, tennis, golf, horses • Handball, ping pong, archery • Dancing, concerts, movies Planned Activities Rooms with Bath Superb Food Write for folder Phone 789 — SOUTN.HAVEN, MICHIGAN — "a little bit of heaven" LEVIN'S RESORT Only Swimming Pool in South Haven' It is under auspices of State Health Dept. 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