.Dettzda-Lt HRIINICLE Vol. 49, No. 49 Ago. Dream Realized 52 Friday, December 5, 1947 loo a Copy, $3 Per Year Hagana14stnaces Mass, Issue Ultimatum to Arabs; Detroit Hails New State First President of Jewish State? THEODORE IIERZL 9 Blocks , Burned in Arab Riot FLUSHING MEADOWS (WNS)--The day for which Jews had been waiting for 1900 years came at last at 5:30 P.m!: Saturday Nov. 29, the 16th day of the Hebrew month of Kislev. At that hour the United Nations General Assembly, meeting for its last session of the year, finally gave its approval for the establishment of a Jewish State in a .part of Palestine for the first time in 1877 years. As the vote was announced, 33 to 13, more than the necessary two-thirds, there was no applause, there was onl• solemn, tense silence. s the meeting neared its end Jewish rejoicing, in the corridors of the Assembly as well as all over the world, gradually became vocal and swelled to a crescendo. In the corridors a Rabbi, echoing the sentiment of world Jewry, repeated the Hebrew prayer: "This is the day the Lord hath made: Let us re- joice in it and be glad." JERUSALEM (Special)—Haga- nah, militia of the, Yishuv, came out in the open for the first time in eight years to help stem pil- laging Arab mobs who went on a rampage in Jerusalem and in the Tel „Aviv-Jaffa border zone in protest against the UN par- tition plan. At least 12 Jews are dead in the rioting. Nine Jewish blocks were burned down. Iiaganah forces were massed throughout the land to guard iso- lated settlements pdl•icularly in the Negev and in the Syrian bor- der areas. AVERT PITCHED BATTLES In Jerusalem, Haganah mem- bers armed with pistols rescued Jews from buildings threatened by Arabs and helped police to restrain Jewish mobs from insti- gating a pitched battle. Officers of Haganah issued a 24-hour ultimatum to the Arabs 4o stop their attacks or suffer the consequences. The ultimatum was to expire Wednesday night. • There was no evidence that the Arab attacks were organized. They seemed rather to have been brought about by the call for a three-day protest strike and by their spontaneous indignation at the UN decision. POLICE ARE'SLOW A rigid curfew was clamped down on the Arab quarters of Jerusalem. A barricade at the entrance to the shopping district of the city was manned by Ha- ganah patrols. Behind it, Jew- ish youths who attempted to break into the Arab areas were halted by the militia who insisted that the police be permitted to deal with the situation' until an extreme emergency occurred. 4t first police took few pre- autions to prevent Arab attacks, 'but they finally undertook strong measures when the death toll began to mount. In the Chronicle Bnai Brith 25 Editorials 4 JWV 27 Obituaries 31 Rothschild 28 Teen Age 27 Women's Clubs 31 Eretz Wildly Greets Birth of the Nation Yishift, Celebrates All Night and Day DR. CIIAIM WEIZMANN Permanent Jewish Body Set Up by U.S. leaders CHICAGO (JTA)—A perma- nent organization to succeed the American Jewish Conference as the central representative Jewish organization to act as spokesman for the Jews of America on do- mestic and foreign issues was voted here by 435 delegates rep- resenting 82 national Jewish or- ganizations and hundreds of Jewish communities throughout the country. of the new State, Dr. Stephen S. Wise declared: "We go forward to give help and counsel to our Jewish brothers to build the Jewish State, but we in Ameri- ca must not dominate those who have suffered and fought in Pal- estine to build the Jewish state." He proposed Dr. Chaim Weiz- man as its first president. The UN decision to set up a Jewish state provided the neces- sary impetus to win over waver- ing delegates to support the idea of a permanent Jewish organiza- tion. Statesman Detroit's representatives were Rabbis Joshua Sperka, Max Wohlgelernter and Leon Fram and Aaron Droock, Jewish Com- munity Council president, and Isadore Starr, Bnai Brith leader. Among the important phases of the scope of the new organi- zation, which were adopted was a proposal that on major issues on the domestic scene, particu- larly on fighting anti-Semitism, the organization would carry out its program through the estab- lished civic defense groups. Word of UN broke up the pre- conference caucus meetings and merged the Zionist and Ameri- can Jewish Congress blocs, meet- ing in adjoining rooms, in a victory celebration pledging to work together in a new area for Judaism. Proposing "Judea" as the name There were embraces and kisses and tears and excited laughter in the Assembly corridors. In Palestine itself Jews were up all night celebrating the arrival of their statehood after they received the news from New York around midnight Palestine time. Police armored cars, used recently in battling the Jews, rolled through the streets with singing young peo- ple on top, on the sides, wherever they could hang on. Thousands milled in front of the Jewish Agency building singing "Ilatikvah" and dancing the Hora• A A Nation Is Born IS jubilation in Israel, for Zion has been redeemed. T HERE On such a sacred occasion one can only bow to the wisdom of the Psalmist who sang: ,"When the Lord brought back those that returned to Zion We were like unto theniceiat dream. Then was our mouth fill, pith laughter And our tongue with singing." Yet the occasion demands more than rejoicing. It re- quires awe, silence, contemplation. For how can we, who escaped the fate of the six million Jewish martyrs, dance to the tune of cymbals without pausing to remember that it was their martyrdom which gave life to our dreams. But there is consolation in the process of history. Our Jewish generation, which beheld a display of brutality un- matched in the annals of mankind, has also been fated to witness the great moment of deliverance from Galuth. We, who not long ago faced the imminence of extinc- tion, are on the threshold of national rebirth. Our feet are standing within the gates of Zion. "May they prosper that love thee, Peace be within thy walls!" DR. EMANUEL NEUMANN, president of the ZOA, whose statesmanship was largely re- sponsible for the happy UN outcome. squad of British soldiers stacked their rifles, joined hands with the Jews and danced around the weapons in the street. The crowds continued the celebration all day Sunday. In Detroit, Wednesday night, a public meeting of the Shaarey Zedek Men's Club to hear Dr. Stephen S. Wise was converted into a spontan€ous community demonstra- tion in honor of the creation of the Jewih State. - A spirit of rejoicing and thankfulness stirred the overflow. audience and there was much prayer and song. "We are going to allow ourselves a short period of jubilation, then go back to work to see this plan through to fruition", Rabbi Morris Adler said earlier. "The decision marks not only the beginning of a (Continued on Page 2) jl