ANCliCalf Awish Periodical Cotter 1946. 'eSS WSJ 'oastnias- :hairman , Ight C011.• irds the iship of N'Ir• and ten, of st year 'Motions he erec- Founda. iwestern vanston, iditional hat the c facill- Friday, November 15, 1946. DETROIT JEWISH 'CHRONICLE and The Legal Chronicle Strictly Confidential Anti-Fascist Students ';rack Press Barrier How College Folk, including Detroit's Rovetch, Founded Group Is Detailed By PIIINEAS K. BIRON HIS IS THE REAL story of the founding of the International T Union of Students (IUS) in Prague, Czechoslovakia, a few months ago. It is a story that the American press surrounded with Its own special brand of iron curtain. And It is a story of International student cooperation against fascism that bridged the mythical chasm between "Eastern" and "Western" clivilizations. United States students sent 25 delegates to Prague, four Jews, in- Democracy and a host of other cluding one Detroiter, Warren Ro. student governments . . . A con- vetch of Wayne University, three vention has been called for Dec. Negroes, six 27 in Chicago. American students have needed Catholics and r e presentatives something like this for a long of other minor- time . . . Because American stu- ity groups which dents of all faiths, colors and together, are creeds are the only group that can destroy the fascist "quota" sys- America. In Prague tems . • • • • they met with delegations from MALICE UNDONE all over the PRAGUE HAS THE oldest Jew- world. They re- 1 ish synagogue in Europe . . . P. K. Biron ceived a mes. The synagogue where the legend- sage of solidarity from students ary Golom was created to destroy of the Hebrew University of Jeru- medieval Jew halters . . . When salem prohibited by the British the Nazis were decimating the from attending. They participated Jewish people of Czechoslovakia, in framing the IUS program based the chief rabbi of Prague called on the students' need for democ- on the Gaulieter in charge . . . racy at the scholastic and the Persuaded him to build a museum world level. to show the people what the Ger- A book on the fallacies of racism mans were destroying. With typical Teutonic efficien- is being compiled, and plans made to fight discrimination in colleges cy the Gaulieter gathered a col- lection of Jewish cultural ar- and universities. The 25 American delegates re- ticles from all over Europe .. . turned home with plans for the Now, after the Czech govern- organization of a National Asso- ment has removed the libels and ciation of American Students the lies, the Jewish museum at (NAAS) . . . . Based on a Prague is the largest and most world. program of student self-govern- complete in • the • • ment, -Federal aid to all students on a merit basis, and the strong- HEBREW SCIENTIST est possible opposition to "quota" y EW SLOTIN WAS the atom- scientist who stopped a dan- systems inucation, the NAAS gerous chain reaction which men- !ll Include 1,3nat, .„„f his colleagues ;elation, A merican Youth for a lie Ne a He'"' - Sephardic Centers Personal Problems in America Adoption Processes (Editor's Note: One of the least known of the groups in Jewry are the Sephardim. Their con- tributions to our religious life and culture have been great and incalculable. Some of our most famous rabbis, codifiers, philos- ophers and poets were Sephar- dim. The author is the executive director of the Central Sephardic Jewish Community of America. Inc.) By JOSEPH M. PAPO VEN A BRIEF glance at the history of the Sephardic Jews history in this country follows the pattern established in the Bal- kans and the Near East following their expulsion from Spain and Portugal nearly five hundred years ago. Their different language, modes and ceremonials — in short, all that constitutes their specific Sephardic heritage—prevent them from sharing intimately the so- cial life of their fellow Jews. The first Jews who settled in this country were Sephardim who arrived from Brazil :n 1654. They were followed by other Sephardic immigrants from the European continent. For 200 years this small group played an important part in the building of the commerce and trade of this country. Now there are but few Sephardic descendants of those early sett- lers, for as strong Ashkenazic con- tingents of immigrants arrived in the 1840's and 1880's, the early Sephardic group became engulfed by them. • • • NEW IMMIGRANTS and Perils Explained Dangers in Picking Up an Infant in Baby Black Market Disclosed By DR. W. A. GOLDBERG 44WE HAVE BEEN MARRIED for a number of years and have TT no children. We want a chilid earnestly and can offer him unusual surroundings and advantages. How do we go about getting a child?"—Mr. and Mrs. F. You may or may not have heard about the black market in babies. No one knows all the details because the principals will not talk. There is now a scarcity of ba- bies for adoption. Perhaps this is with greatest emphasis upon the so because the demand is so great child. • • • - and money so plentiful. B u t There is protection also af- enough Is known forded to the prospective par- about hasty ents. Often they need it against adoptions to possible blackmailing by the cause people of mother or unscrupulous persons. good judgment The furtiveness of many current to go slowly. adoptions has swept aside these Adopting a child protections. Such furtiveness In- Is a conclusive vites unnecessary heartaches and and final step, disappointments. t here is no Most states have found it wise backing out and to protect the three parties to an Dr. Goldberg no returning of adoption, the mother of the child, unwanted children. and the adopting parents. Women Many people have suffered un- who give their children out for necessary heartaches in their adoption are generally young and haste, in by-passing the usual pre. unmarried. cautionary steps in adoption. Under the stress of the discovery The probabilities of your getting their pregnancy, they often take a child are limited and more so, of the easiest way out and often the since you have apparently set offered first. The persons your mind on a boy. The recog- solution benefiting nized child - care agencies are deals in financially from such humanity, the modern swamped with applications. Many slave-traders, have been found to of them have stopped taking new be unscrupulous. applications. • • • Because of the dangers involved, we feel it may be helpful to many CHILD IS PROTECTED people like you to explain the THE STATE PROTECTS the mother because it wishes her usual steps and the reasons for them. to realize well the finality of her • • • act and to preclude the possibility of her wanting the baby after she DELAYS OF THE LAW has determined to give it up. It WISELY AND WITH good ex- has been held' by many persons perience, every state has working with the unmarried moth- thrown safeguards around the er that, wherever possible, she adoption process. The reasons are should keep her child and bring it many and generally they seek to 11.0 CriirtiT • • (Conti- nued oliPale 12) AT THE BEGINNING of this century, however, a new wave of Sephardic immigration took place mostly from the Middle East and the Balkans. Speaking neither Eng- lish nor Yiddish they were virtu- ally shut off from American life in general and the larger Ashke- nazic Jewish community in parti- cular. They therefore had to rely upon their own resources. Today 40,000 of the 55,000 Seph- ardim live in New York; the rest in organized communities in De- troit, Atlanta, Cincinnati, Chica- go, Indianapolis, Los Angeles, Montgomery, Portland, Rochester •, Sart .4rweindsliteattet .1 and Wash Whereasa generation ago their economic level was low, today sub- stantial numbers of them have made their mark in business, in- dustry and the professions. At present there are 15 Sephar- dic mutual-aid societies in New York City, all providing burial privileges and a number of them offering religious, cultural, health and aid benefits. • • • BUILD COMMUNITY THE ARRIVAL IN this country in 1941 of Dr. Nissim J. Ovadia, who had been the chief rabbi of the Sephardic community of Paris until his flight from the Nazis, marked the birth of the present By CHARLOTTE WEBER Sephardic community structure. WASHINGTON—President Truman's statement of Oct. 4, when it Dr. Ovadia immediately succeed- " is seriously considered and not taken as a political By ALFRED SEGAL maneuver, ed in drawing all the Ladino, turns out to be a well worded, forceful document setting forth both Greek and Arabic speaking socie- A PAMPHLET ENTITLED "There are no Jews" by our hopes and our committments regarding the solution of the Pal- ties into one all-embracing organi- M. Chanis, of estine problem, zation: the Central Sephardic Jew- Columbus, 0., has been going around the country. It is intelligently The statement brought reaction from all quarters, including a ish community of America, Inc. handled and well-written and its title is Chanis' interpretation of the letter which King Ibn Saud of His untimely death in 1942 proved ideas of the anti-Zionist Council for American Judaism. Saudi Arabia forthwith sent off to a tragic loss to the infant com- It means to suggest that these anti-Zionists are people who are government would tako no action munity. President Truman. Ibn Saud's let- trying to establish that there are no Jews in the sense of peoplehood, that would be hostile to the Arab Following the pattern of the like Scotchmen or Irishmen; that ter said, in effect, that the Presi- people. dent, by his statement, had viola- old world Sephardic Kehillah, Jews are just Americans or En- as no sign of intellectual weakness Was this country then, abandon- the community, composed of all glishmen or Swedes of the Jewish but as a symptom of a youngish ted previous promises made to the Arabs. ing the policy of President Roose- the New York mutual-aid socie- faith. mind and heart of which he is Chants insists rather proud. In making public his answer velt in taking such a stand? The ties, several out-of-town Sephar- • • • to Ibn Saud, the President has question must have been upper- dic communities and individual that we are a added another significant cog to most in Ibn Saud's mind when he members, placed a chief rabbi, people with a TYPICAL EXAMPLE good family tree I N SHORT, SEGAL is like a great our rapidly coagulating policy sent his pointed message to Presi- Dr. Isaac Alcalay, at its head. dent Truman. One of the primary tasks facing whose roots run toward Palestine. I many other humble men in Is- • • • Just as the practice of law is the community is to improve the deep In the spir- rael. They are rather confused in founded on the great body of le- NOT HOSTILE ARABS status of the Sephardic Talmud itual history of all this tumult of Israel's leaders gal precedent, so this latest state- A DROITLY THE PRESIDENT Porahs to make religious education man, even as riding in many directions of be- ment of the President adds an- .1-1. answered the unspoken ques- available to a larger number of the roots of the ing Jewish. So when we consider other solid block in our attitude tion. "I do not consider," he said, children and to raise the educa- Greeks reach the case history of Segal we may deep down to toward the difficult problem in the "that my urging of the admittance tional standards. be looking at an authentic sam- Pericles and '', '[ addle East. • • • ple of the common man in Israel. of a considerable number of dis- Alfred Segal Plato. • • • Segal's idea of being Jewish placed Jews into Palestine or my SCHOOLS UNITED Well, that brings up an old ques. 111S AT BRITISH UNDER THE SPIRITUAL lead- statements with regard to the so- tion: Just who and what are we? is a spiritual concept. He be- HIS STATEMENT of Oct. 4 lution of the problem of Palestine ership of its chief rabbi, the com- For answer I shall try to give the lieves that Jewish statehood be- " the President let it be known in any sense represent an action munity has brought about an case history of a Jew whom I lies that idea and puts him in a amalgamation of two synagogues shall call Segal. What does Segal class with a Yugoslav or Italian to the British that he was an- hostile to the Arab people." yearning for Trieste or a Bul- noyed with their failure to effect Mr. Truman, in a gently chiding and their respective Talmud To. make of his status as a Jew? garian demanding a slice of a decision at the London Confer- way, called Ibn Saud's attention rahs In one section of Brooklyn Segal is not an Important man Greece. ence and jabbed at their con- to the independence that all the where the Sephardim are concen- in Jewry. He is seldom seen at He knows very well that the science with increased promises of other Arab states enjoyed as a trated in large numbers. the speakers' tables in Israel. He The community also has launch- pays his proper dues to Jewish Jews were a nation in Palestine American aid. result of their liberation by the only a short time compared with In his letter to Ibn Saud he Allies in World War I. "I am ed a youth program with a full causes. He prefers to stay at home has tried to make our stand happy to note that most of the time professional youth director in on those evenings when Jewry in their long history. Sometimes he clear to the Arabs and by the l iberated peoples are now citizens charge. Today there are five chap- his town is summoned to one of thinks that their dispersal may stress placed on American sup- of independent countries," he said. ters of the Sephardic Youth those interminable d e bat es in have been in the benificent design Dort of a Jewish National Home "The Jewish National Home, how- League, with additional chapters which Israel likes to have a good of God. He wonders whether Jews planned. the second statement comple- ever, has not as yet been fully time, without ever settling any still would exist if all of them had Only in maintaining and devel- thing. been allowed to remain under the ments the first. developed." oping their heritage can Sephar- of successive conquerors in The letter is the first public He is a man in middle age and, feet The fact is that three out of the dim live a fruitful life. And cul- Palestine. Pr onouncement along this line, di- therefore, almost If not quite set- four states that were 'placed un- rected to the By being scattered they man. Arabs themselves, der mandates by terms of the tivating their particular heritage tled in his convictions. This is to to live. since President Roosevelt told the Treaty with Turkey in 1920 are will be their greatest contribution say that even at his age he is still ged Are to the wealth of the whole Jewish willing to change his mind we a nation? Well, Segal Saudi Arabian monarch that this now independent states. in a people. changing world. He regards this a}'s, that's what Hitler said. He (Continued on Page 4) Capital Letter Pap Answer to Ibn Saud Bolsters U.S. Policy Truman's Adroit Reply to Monarch Strenghtens Position on Palestine „ Plain Talk Nationality: American and Religion: Jewish Statehood Belies Spiritual Concept of Jeivishness, Columnist Declares A - mu •