Page Four Friday, January 23, 1948 DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE Detroit Jewish Chronicle The Need of the Hour Published Weekly by Jewish Chronicle Publishing Co., Inc., 548 Woodward, Detroit 26, Mich., CA. 1040 SUBSCRIPTION: $3.00 Per Year, Single Copies, 10c; Foreign, $5.00 Per Year Entered as Second-class, matre ∎ March 3. 1916. at the Post-Office at Detroit, Mich., under the Act of March 3. 1879 SEYMOUR TILCHIN, Vol. 50, No. 1 ROBERT KRAUSE, Business Manager President GEORGE WEISWASSER, Editor-in-Chief Friday, January 23, 1948 (Shebat 12. 5708) Contemptible! An excerpt from a United Press dis- patch from Jerusalem concisely sums up the situation in Palestine. "In the near- anarchy that prevails," says the dispatch, "British troops and police often are not present when Jews and Arabs fight. Se- curity forces are under. instructions not to `interfere' by taking sides." So we have the situation where the British piously assume the responsibility for keeping order and then let their 75,000 troops and the honor of the British em- pire be mocked by tiny Syria and a few thousand mercenaries of a satanic relig- ious panjandrum. The ridiculousness of British policy can be assessed from the armed forces' grovel- ing plea to the Arabs and Jews that Jerusalem be declared an "open city." This is patently a confession that the British have no intention to clean out the few nests of the Arab snipers beleaguering the Jewish quarter of the Old City and would rather be held up to contempt by the world than perform a simple military sortie to oust the guerillas. When the Jewish State is finally estab- lished, and let no mistake be made about it, established it will be whether by legal means or by upheaval, the government of the Jewish State should be ready to cite Great Britain before the International Court of Justice for flagrant crimes against humanity which cost thousands of Jewish lives under their Mandate. These lives can never be paid for, but reparations should be demanded from Bri- tain to facilitate the growth of a State she attempted to sabotage with every contemp- tible trick of a decadent empire. The UN Commission's twiddling of the past 10 days can hardly inspire much con- fidence. To do an effective job, the Pales- tine Commission should either demand that an international police force be ready to take over in Palestine by May 1, just before the British finally leave, or that llaganah be fully armed forthwith. The Stratton Bill The hubbub and the fanfare over the Jewish State had shunted aside the pro- posal to move a big proportion of the DP's to the United States. President Tru- man in his State of the Union message revived interest in the Stratton bill which seeks the admission of 400,000 DP's, Jew- ish and non-Jewish, during the next four years. Our paramount concern with Eretz Israel should not permit us to overlook the prospect of easing American immigra- tion restrictions. Palestine will never be able to absorb all the Jews who want to put Europe far behind them. Other hav- ens must be found and reasonable ones— no hell-holes like Madagascar or impossible equatorial regions like Dutch Guiana, well- intentioned as plans for the latter might be. The DP's who would come here under the Stratton measure can be easily inte- grated into American life. President Tru- man has been seconded by labor leaders in his declaration that the• newcomers will be an asset to this country. Phillip Murray of the CIO and William Green of the AFL have testified that the admission of the refugees would not affect the employment situation. On the con- trary, Green went so far as to assert that their entry would alleviate shortages We should flood our legislators with telegrams and letters urging the passage of the Stratton bill. Indeed, our appeals for the DP should be as urgent as our plans for Zion. It is chiefly because of the plight of the DP that we struggle today to build our Homeland. God only knows, there will always be enough DP's who will look for a haven of refuge in Eretz Israel. If some of them can be brought to the United States, the immediate load on the budding State would be so much the lighter. And to America will come the boon of thousands DETROIT 26, MICH. of newcomers with vision and hope and with gratitude and love for the land that befriended them. Home Relief Society A few weeks ago we had occasion to allude to the sefiless deeds of service of the ladies of the Zedakah Club. Earlier this month, we pointed to the benefactions of the Youth Education League. Today we speak of a third women's service organization, the Home Relief So- ciety which will mark its 25th birthday at a dinner Jan. 31. Formed at a time when organized Jew- ish charities were still in the groping stage, the Home Relief organization per- formed a necessary function in easing poverty, illness and despondency among Jewish families who had no other recourse for relief. It is idle to talk about the tireless la- bors the group's membership performed through the years to bring comfort and hope to hundreds in our community who would otherwise have been faced with re- jection and despair. Their generosity and their unselfish works are so well known. We do speak for the entire commu- nity, we are confident, in congratulating the Home Relief Society and its founder, Mrs. Harry Shulman, and in wishing them many more quarter centuries of devotion to the ideals of neighborliness and brother- hood. The Visiting Editor International Dishonor War is being waged upon the United Nations by its Arabian members, covertly assisted by a member of the Security Council, Great Britain. From Nov. 29—date of the United Na- tions decision on Palestine—until yester- day, 702 deaths from bullet, bomb and bayonet directly attributable to Arabian attack on Judea had been recorded, with casualties multiplying each hour. In that time the United States, mem- ber of the Security Council most respon- sible for the organization of the United Nations, has poured money, arms, food and military advisors into Greece and China to help reactionary governments kill their own citizens rebelling against in- tolerable oppression. But in that same period the United States has never once even raised its voice in protest against the Arabian rebellion against the peace of the world ; never once offered our support to the Jews of the new Palestine State against Aritbian in- vasion and terror; never once offered our arms to the United Nations to enforce its decision; never once demanded the crea- tion of a United Nations army ; never once even indicated that we had any interest in seeing such a force created, or that we would support such a move if it were begun. Our indifference puts national honor to shame ; our inaction paralyzes the world's only machinery for peace; our silence makes a mockery of our pretentions to be- lief in international justice. . . . The Jewish Agency is demanding aid —and properly—either trom the United Nations, the United States, or both. We cannot withhold it and ever dare to speak of honor, or decency, or justice, among ourselves or in any councils of the world again. The United States must demand, at once, before the Security Council, the for- mation of a United Nations Army to en- force the peace. The United States must at once lift its embargo on arms to Palestine, so that the new state's police forces may equip themselves adequately to maintain order within the state. . . . —NEW YORK POST Letters to the Editor RAPS DR. WEIZMANN Dear Editor: In your editorial of Friday. Jan. 3, you quoted Dr. Weiz- mann's assertion that we "must find a way back to friendship with the Britain of the Balfour Declaration." It is very interesting to note that his plea for friendship with Britain came on the heels of news from London quoting "usually reliable and authori- tative sources" that the British government hopes for close co- operation between Britain and the forthcoming Jewish State in Palestine. After all, Whitehall is quoted as saying, haven't the two—Pal- estine and Britain—cooperated for the past 30 years? Did not Britain give the Balfour Decla- ration, and are, not Zionist friends in Parliament constant. ly pleading the Zionist case? Is it a mere coincidence that these two items 'allowed one another, or is it perfect timing? Dr. Weizmann is the holder of a very enviable record. He has not revised his attitude nor changed his policies and tactics ever since World War I, as far as Palestine and the British are concerned. Strangely enough, his policy always coincided with the wishes and desires of White- hall and the British Colonial Office. . . . cited the Arabs to pogroms and massacres, have issued White Paper after White Paper re- stricting Jewish rights and in- stituting a ghetto in the Jewish Homeland, have trampeled upon the most elementary principles of justice and law, have turned over most of the mandated area of Palestine to some foreign Arabs for their private pastur- age, have been instrumental to a great extent in the destruc- tion of European Jewry by closing the gates of Palestine to Jewish immigration in 1939 and are now desperately trying to abort the partitioned Jewish State before it is even, born. To Dr. Weizmann the situa- tion—even when most critical— always appeared somehow satis- factory, and instead of fighting those who were destroying our last hopes, he fought those who refused to accept his abundant optimism and his implicit faith in British honesty and good- will. LOUIS PANUSH. • CAREER GROUP THANKS Dear Editor: I would like to take this op- portunity to thank you on be- half of the Career Group for your encouragement and cooperation in advising us with our Inter-Faith Forum. PEARL DEVENOW, "Our partners in the great President, Career Group efforts of building of Eretz Yis- National Council of Jewish roel" have instigated and in- Women. Rabbis Assailed for Carol Furor (Continued from Page 3) timed the whole matter is. In a moment when there is hope of the gates of America being opened to admit numbers of dis- placed Jews, these Rabbis slap at a sentimental custom of Christian neighbors. Nor do they relent. In a moment when we plead for rescue from the bigotry of these times, these Rabbis give themselves to what to a multi- tude of Americans looks like another insulting bigotry. In a moment when we need friends they make new enemies. It's absurd to speak of uncon- stitutionality in a matter that is deeply constituted in the basic spiritual law of the ma- jority of Americans. Rabbis be- come ridiculous little men when they take steps to overthrow it. Let Rabbis devote themselves to the building of Judaism in their own congregations. Juda- ism needs to be protected not from Christmas carols but from the cynical indifference of Jews. `Voice of JWF' to Sift Foster Home Problem The problem of providing foster homes for children will be discussed by three members of the Jewish Social Service Bureau on "The Voice of the Jewish Welfare Federation" at 8:30 p.m., Jan. 24 and Jan. 31 over WJLB. They are Harold Silver, Goldie Goldstein and Mrs. Belle Baskin. ,