Americo Yewisk Periodical Cotter CLIFTON AVENUE - CINCINNATI 20, 01110 Friday, July 5, 1946 DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE and The Legal Chronicle REPORT FROM GERMANY N By IRVING HAYETI' Jewish Chronicle Foreign Correspondent (Copyright 1946. All Rights Reserved) The Voice of the Man in the Street The Jewish Chronicle will pay $1.00 to the person whose question is used in this column. Mail your questions to the Jewish Chronicle, 525 Woodward Ave., Detroit 26. This s'rles of articles tells of the War Crimes tS Trials in Frankfurt, Germany. Photos by ERIC BENNETT Staff Photographer Page Five AAN Cr TUE WULF SAMUEL %V. LEIB who is just completing his third term as a member of the General Committee of District Grand Lodge Number Six of the Bnai Brith is saluted by the Jewish Chronicle and accorded honor as the Man of the Week. Leib was born in Chicago. When he was five years old, he chose his profession. The occasion came about when he heard his father, a building contractor, discussing a business matter with his lawyer. The lttle boy listened for a while and then spoke tip. "Dad," he said, "I think I'll be a lawyer." "Son," was the reply, "if you're going to be a lawyer, be a good one or none at all." YA, YA, FROEHLICH! broidered very carefully and beau- TIME: Sunday afternoon. From that =molt on, his future was determined and in 1929, on That just about describes the at- tifully. All the colors of the rain- PLACE: Davison and Beater. being graduated from the University of Michigan, he entered the legal mosphere that prevails in South- bow can be found in each costume profession in which he has remained ever since. ' ern Germany--in Bavaria. It is and because of that Bavaria al- QUESTION: In view of the charge that Jews are crowding There were ten children in the Leib family and each of them Summer and at this time of the ways seems a very gay place. the professions today, shouid started to help out at a very early age. At the age of seven, Samtfel year it is beautiful down here. Embroidery is an art that :s our Jewish youth shift away started to sell newspapers and he continued - selling them until he The trees are in bloom and there beautifully and colorfully worked from profesions in planning finished high school. His sales station was the corner of Fort and is green "'grass everywhere. The into all the clothes for both men their life work? Woodward, at the City Hall. He still sells papers there once a year German soil is good soil, fertile and women. on Goodfellow Day. soil and everything grows beauti- The country itself, with the Alps DOROTHY STEIN, 3765 Kendall. fully and strong. always in the background is No. A Jew is entitled to make "I recall when I was a boy," he said, "that a fellow named Frank The people in Southern Ger- breathtaking in its beauty. But his way just like anyone else. If Tomalczyk came up and bought all my papers at retail prices and many seem healthier, stronger and just merely to say beautiful is not we are more then sold them to the public for the Goodfellows. Years later, Tomal- happier than other Germans. Per- enough. It is difficult to paint a talented, it is czyk and I were partners on haps because there are very few picture with words. Pictures are because we Goodfellow Day. We kept this up signs of the war in Bavaria. for the eyes, not for the ears. work harder until he died last year." Southern Germany, being the play- and are more I went to Garmisch-Partenkir• He recalls how generous people ground and vacatio:land of Ger- desirous of suc- chen last week end. How can I de- were to newsbOys. many did not suffer much bomb cess. In fact, scribe this quaint, village nestled "I remember a Thanksgiving damage. success is often in the bosom of the Alps, so that Day dinner they gave us where The houses are all quaint— a goal with you will get a picture of its John McCormack, the great tenor richly decorated and many colored beauty, simplicity, old worldli- Jews. appeared and sang for us. I de- and all of them are built of aged ness—to coin a word—its grand. I realize there termined then that if ever I watt wood and all of them have bal- cur? The tops of the peaks of the is a great deal in a position to do some good, I conies going all around the upper Alps are snow capped like a night of anti - Semit- would certainly do It." story and jutting out over the cap on a sleeping gown, the green ism and it Asked about unusual law cases lower floor. They all are very neat, trees go up the mountains and might be easier on some Jews if he had handled, Leib felt that he clean and prim. The shutters are form a sort of cloak and down in others chose different fields. But could not divulge information to always a bright color and when the valley are the colorful houses to ask Jewish boys and girls to the public about most of his work. you ride along the highways look and the green grass. It is so change their life work for this "I did have one unusual thing like they are blinking at you all simple and so beautiful in its sim- reason is absolutely ridiculous. happen, however," he said. I the time. plicity and peacefulness that you once represented a man in a The costumes in Bavaria are just stand there and stare and criminal case and in the course quaint and very, very colorful. take a deep breath and say to AL MEISTER, 2111 Ewald Chad-. of time the man was found guilty. No. Any boy or girl who has The men wear shorts-- short pants yourself, "It is good to he alive." I made a routine motion to have planned a profession as a vocation - -"Hose" made out of leather and Saturanty nignt we wentisto the should continue with his plans. the jury polled. The judge was very profusely decorated, then Stadium which is somewhat the There is anti-Semitism and there out of the court at the time and they have suspenders with a cross size of our Madison Square Gard- is no use try- the clerk directed the poll. The bar, also made out of leather and en except that it has no roof. It ing to deny its first five jurors said that this was also decorated with colorful em- is an Ice Palace. Here the skating existence. their verdict and the sixth said broidery and ornaments. They this was not his verdict. The and hockey meets were held and The only an- wear white woolen long hose SAMUEL W. LEIB clerk was so befuddled that he here now one of the most color- swer to that, which come up to the knee and to discharged the jury who thereupon left the court. top it all off they wear those fun. ful, skillful and entertaining Ice however, is that shows is put on for the GI's, offi- every Jew must ny little Barvarian hats with the "That meant a new trial for the man and when he was tried for cers and all Americans and Allied behave in a way feather,—a long one- - and many the second time, before a new jury, the verdict was not guilty. This personnel that care to see it. The that makes him decorations. is a very rare occurrence in the practice of law. The man in question - The women are all dressed in as show runs for about 2 hours and a credit to his is now a proniinent business man here in the city." has everything, costumes, skating people. The pro- many colors as possible. They skill and grace, choreography, fessions should Leib's work is now largely in the field of corporation law. In the wear peasant blouses with the low scenery, jumping and comedy. It be entered into course of this work, he is director of a good many corporations and neck line, a bodice, full aproned is indescribable, sitting there un- not alone for hence has a feel on the business pulse of the city. skirt and cover their heads with der the stars with the Alps, the the purpose of a livelihood but kerchiefs. The women, too, wear He was appointed by Mayor Edward Jeffries as a member of the with service to humanity as a (Continued on Page 14) the long white woolen socks, em- Great Lakes, St. Lawrence Waterway Committee whose purpose is to goal. To deny opportunity to anybody foster legislation in Congress to create the project and to mobilize because of his race or religion is public opinion in its support. Leib is a firm believer in the usefulness of this project and thinks it is particularly necessary for the welfare completely unAmerican. of the central states. The project is being fought by the eastern rail- By LEON SAUNDERS road interests who are fearful they thereby be deprived of freight 1271 R. W. IIENDERSIIOTT, revenue. Leib feels that on the contrary, the project would add to Tyler. their wealth and to that of the entire country. Absolutely not. I am not Jewish This novel goes back to the days of the Roman Emperor Hadrian. One of his primary interest is Bnai Brith. In 1937-38, he was but I think the very idea of deny- The author speaks of it as a "novel of Pagan against Christian" and ing to anyone his right to choose president of Pisgah Lodge. During his term of office, eight new youth through it, shows the proselytising spirit and the combativeness of his own vocation is disgraceful. organizations were brought in. For two terms, he was president of the early Christianity. Everything that is American in Michigan Bnai Brith Council, consisting of all the lodges In the state The heroine of the book, an actress who was born in Antioch, me rebels at the very thought. of Michigan. He himself has been instrumental in the organization of Syria, and who later became famous in Rome, is used as a mouthpiece This is a democracy and the several Bnai Brith lodges. He travels extensively_ through the state against Christianity. By making her an unsympathetic character, the very essence of democracy is the speaking to lodges all over Michigan. While chairman of the Michigan author thereby weakens the objections she voices and throws greater right to pick for yourself. Council, he inaugurated what later became known as the Michigan glamor and sanctity on the defenders of the then new faith. Plan for the foundation and purchase of Hillel homes through the I know that The story itself is told through the medium of an elderly director anti - Semitism Bnai Brith. of the Imperial theaters, one Roscius, a non-Christian. He is a man exists and per- He is firmly convinced that the comprehensive nature of the with a sense of justice and righteousness and is perhaps the only haps it exists services rendered by Bnai Brith stamps it as the foremost Jewish really human character in the whole book. in the profes- - service organization in the world. The story starts off with the trouble that Emperor Hadrian was sions because having with his imperialist schemes, particularly with his efforts to From the inception of the ration board system during the wat. many Jews conquer the Parthans and the Judeans as well as all the little Eastern Leib was chairman of such a board. When these were consolidated want to enter countries. During his reign, the new sect of Christianity had already under the price control commission, six such boards were set up. As them. If Jew- acquired great power and many followers were flocking to the banner far as he knows, he is the only Jewish chairman of such a hoard. ish boys and of the apostles. girls are real- He is a Zionist almost by inheritance. To combat this sect, Hadrian conceived the idea of sending the istic enough to "My father," he said, "became the first secretary of the first Zion- actress and the director to Antioch to foil Christianity through the want to choose ist organization in Rumania in 1895 in a chapter that was organized medium of a series of satires calculated to make the new religion look other fields for by Theodor Herzl himself. I have been a member of the Zionist organi- ridiculous in the eyes of the citizenry of this eastern metropolis. this reason, they have the privi. zation for many years. I believe in the creation of a Jewish national However, the author of the satires is, in secret, sympathetic to lege of doing so. But the very idea homeland and the immediate rescue of all the unfortunates in Europe. Christianity. The same is true of the governor of the city. Towards of barring them makes my blood It may take time before the creation of such statehood but I feel that , the end of the book, the satire writer declares -himself openly a fol- boil. prospects are good." lower of the Nazarene. Emperor Hadrian finds himself baffled but his When asked what in his opinion the greatest needs for the Jew- problem is settled by a timely earthquake which also takes care of ANNA ROSE, 4002 Clements. ish community of Detroit were, Leib replied thoughtfully. all the characters in the book. No. I think on the contrary that A number of novels follow this pattern. Sinkievich in'"Quo Vadis," Jews should go into the profes- "I think the greatest need for Jews in Detroit is a sense of unity. Florence Marvyn Bauer in "Behold the King," Sholom Asch in his un- sions and become outstanding in The Detroit Jewish Community Council is a fine organization around fortunate "Nazarene" and a host of others depict the struggle be- them. A professional man has as which this can be done. Every Jew in Detroit should feel obligated to tween Christianity and Judaism or between Christianity and paganism. his ideal service to humanity. cooperate with the Council. In all these books, the Christians are idealists, saintly persons, and In a way, he "Next, we need adequate recreational and cultural facilities for the Romans, Greeks, Jews and other nationalities arc pictured as is a necesary our youth. As soon as there is money to spare from overseas needs, inspiration, completely without any f crass materialists, lacking in divine evil. By that I that money should be set aside for this purpose. In the entire city refinement of the soul. mean he usual- there is a sad lack of educational facilities. as The one exception to this threadbare pattern is Kingsley's "Hy- ly gives some "Another great need is for more active work against discrimina- patia." Here the writer also portrays the struggle of Christianity to pain because he tion against Jews in the schools and colleges of this state. I come In assert itself. However, he is a little more honest and makes no is called when contact with this discrimination through my work in the anti-defama- ignorance of the prosely- attempt to hide the coarseness, cruelty and you are in tion league of Bnai Brith and through the Community Council. I trouble. The "stizers. think anti-Semitism should be fought openly and vigorously. The fact In "Hypatia," there is again the struggle. This time it is between dentist hurts ,i ) that it exists particularly in medical colleges ought to be brought to he fight for survival of Greek culture with its worship of beauty when he drills the attention of the public in general and to the tax authorities in against the confining narrowness of Christianity which, with its "mor- but he does you particular. ality," fights against the worship of beauty. Through the treatment of good. The doc- characters, the author makes the heroine, Hypatia, much more sym- "Another great need is for adult education in Jewish lore. How- tor comes when f pathetic and saintly than the victims of Roman oppression. At the you are sick. The lawyer is seen ever, this ought to be done more on an individual basis than on the theocratic becoming a community level." same time, the author shows how a religion in when there is trouble. power turns from a meek, persecuted cult into a persecutor and op- Because people rely on the pro. For a hobby, Leib works on a fifty acre farm which he owns. His ° Book Review ANTIOCH ACTRESS 4, pressor on its own account. Of all the novels on the subject of this struggle between religions, perhaps the weakest of all from both the literary viewpoint and from its ideology is this same "Antioch Actress." The theme is flimsy and the plot not only lacks subtlety but is positively naive. Had this been a simple narrative, one could accept it for what it is worth. But to use this canvas to portray a whole idea, an idea of such dimensions as the struggle between Christianity and all the other religions, was very un- fortunate. It missed its mark by a great distance. - - Hebrew, English and Jewish books available at the Zion Book Store, 9008 12th Street, near Clairmount. fessional man for help in time of father, Joseph Leib, manages and operates the farm, staying there need, there is a great deal of pres- all summer long. tige that goes with the profession. On weekends, Leib himself comes out to the farm and digs right Jews need this prestige and are in at hard physical work. He plants and cultivates and reaps the actual entitled to it. harvest. There always has been, there There is a private lake on the farm and friends of the Leibs always will be jealousy in the pro- gather there for a lot of fun on weekends and holidays. He finds that fessions. A part of that jealousy the farm is a paying proposition, not only from the standpoint of naturally expresses itself in anti- actual cash, but from the point of view of health and recreation. Semitism. But to ASC this to bar Jews is positivey outrageous. Leib is married and has two children.