Thursday, September 8, 1949 DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE Page Three STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL Peekskill Rioters in Best Storm-Trooper Form By PHINEAS J. BIRON THE PEEKSKILL RIOT on Aug. 27 against the Paul Robeson concert sponsored by the American Civil Rights Congress has a deep significance. Not because the audience which assembled on that Saturday night at Lakeland Acres to hear the famous Negro singer was to a large extent Jewish. And also not because there were several Jewish men and women among those injured. • • ... No—the rather substantial per- centage of Jews among the victims of this organized outrage is not the main reason for our concern. What frightens us is the fact that • the assault on innocent men and women was carried out in the tradi- tional style of storm-troopers and that the authorities of Westchester, although fully aware that trouble was brewing did nothing to guaran- tee the safety of these American Biron citizens and their Constitutional right to freedom of assembly and freedom of speech. • • operated with the perpetrators of this disgrace, or in any case, invited what happened by their actions. For an official permit to "parade" was granted to the Westchester Joint County Council of Veterans Organizations In the face of public statements that these organizations were preparing to stop—if need be by physical force—the holding of the Robeson concert. It is a terrible indictment of Jewish leadership that the Jewish War Veterans were among the partici- pating veteran groups in this un-American exhibition of fascism. • • A LYNCHING SPIRIT dominated the misled youngsters and mature men who attacked elderly mer and women, smashed cars, destroyed and burned chairs, made a bonfire of music sheets on the stage and generally carried on in real Nazi style. But there is still a more sinister aspect to this riot. The organizers of this storm-trooper festival worked hand in hand with the Ku Klux Klan. All around the auditorium KKK crosses blazed and KKK slogans were heard. It is worth mentioning that county assistant district attorney Leonard Ruben- feld is chairman of the veterans council which orga- nized the riot and that county clerk Robert A. Field • BY NOW IT IS established beyond any shadow of doubt that the Westchester County authorities co- Joe Practices Tolerance and Is Better Jew for It By ALFRED SEGAL Y FRIEND, Joe Marx, is not often seen in the Synagogue. I say this in no fault-finding of Joe Marx. If I pointed critically at Joe because he is not often in the Synagogue, he would well does justly, loves mercy and point back and ask, "How often walks humbly. Such a Jew doesn't go around preaching this are you seen there?" Nor is Joe Marx one of the but in the way of his own life loud-speaking big shots of Juda- he tries to follow it. This way of Jewish life leads him to the ism in our town. rr , higher and quieter places; in his That is to say, e path of Judaism • he is far from I have never the tumult of Jewish dialectics. seen Joe in tux- • • • edo-clad emin- UNDERSTANDING HEART ence at any of the speakers' JOE'S MIND worries itself tables of the about the people who work for Jewish affairs in him. There was the matter of our town. hiring a new stenographer a Nor is Joe while ago. heard in th". Well, yes, all he needed to do . Segal controversies of was to call up the employment Jewry or seen in contests for service and in short order some honors, such as being elected nice-looking girls would be at vice-president or secretary of this the office applying for the job. Jewish organization or that; nor That's the easiest way to get a is he among those who are con- stenographer. tinuously in a state of being mad Joe Marx was thinking of a at somebody who disagrees with harder way. lie was thinking him on this or that of Jewish Jewishly in the way Jews think life. (I am sure that Joe knows when they get prophetic. Joe little about the current quarrels was saying to himself, we Jews in Zion and cares less.) justly complain when our boys Joe Marx doesn't take it upon and girls can't get jobs because himself to find fault in the ways they are Jews. of other Jews, Joe carefully "Shouldn't we as employers be 'minds his own way of being a first among those who make no Jew. As I understand him, his point of race or religion in hiring idea of being Jewish has to do people to work for them? with ethical living and doing. Shouldn't I myself, as a Jew, To be a Jew is to be a man who practice in my business the con- M cept of brotherhood that, as we are told, is of our religion." * • • A NEGRO FOR VACANCY THERE WAS this the job of stenographer vacant in his office and why shouldn't he hire a Negro girl to do it? Negroes were fetv, if any, in offices in Cincin- nati. Negroes were hired only for the more menial tasks. Negro girls and boys had been training for stenography and bookkeeping in the high schools, but they came only to frustration when they went to look for jobs in offices. Joe Marx said we give them equal education and we owe them the equal right to earn their livings at the work we have trained them to do. The white girls in Joe Marx's office mightn't at first like hav- ing a colored girl among them. But the way to do with prejudice was not to give in to it; prejudice festers and grows because people are afraid to quarrel with it. If the ,white girls could meet and face an object of their prejudice, maybe they would come around to see that the Negro stenographer was the same kind of a person as they, except for the way her skin was tinted. • • * A JEWISH FEELING JOE MARX could feel ex- quisitely Jewish as he went about to hire a colored stenog- Prescriptions and Repairs Called For and Delivered For Service at all Times Call WE. 3-3332 rapher for his office. The week before the girl came, he brought to the office a speaker to give a speech to all the office help on every American's right to equal opportunity. It was on Lincoln's birthday. Three years have passed. It worked out all right. Not just that the Negro girl turned out to be a capable stenographer. (She was promoted to the secretary to the executive of one of the de- partments.) What caused Joe Marx to exult the more was the way the early prejudice had dissolved in his of- fice. It had dissolved like some foul infection in the fresh air and sunlight. From becoming ac- quainted with the Negro stenog- rapher, the white girls had come to respect her. There was no one more popular in the office than she. The white girls had come to the highest degree of social edu- cation: They had learned to see that every individual was to be (Continued on Page 11) 3 Local Civic Leaders to Attend N. Y. Parley Rabbis Morris Adler and Leon Frans, vice-president and execu- tive committee member of the Community Council, respectively, and Boris M. Joffe, Council ex- ecutive director, will attend the conference on religious holiday observances in public schools Tuesday and Wednesday in New York. FUEL OIL No Contract Necessary Prices Reduced . . . Special Price to Those Who Fill Tanks Now Joe Sinai 24-Hour Phone Service TR. 1-4804 a woman ' s town dress of EDWARD PEVOS Ophthalmic Optician "Service at its Best" Oculist Prmeriptions Exclusive]. 321G Ewald Circle Sunglasses Safety Lenses THE CULTURE COMMISSION OF THE JEWISH COMMUNITY COUNCIL OF DETROIT PRESENTS For Presidents and Chairmen of ,Ed ucational and Program Committees of Detroit Jewish Organizations The Second Annual Program Planners' Institute THURSDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER 15, 8:30 P.M. AT THE CONG. SHAAREY ZEDEK SUNDAY AFTERNOON, SEPT. 18, 2:00 P.M. AT THE JEWISH COMMUNITY CENTER Thursday Evening Sunday Afternoon Rabbi Morris Adler, Chairman AIMS St GOALS OF CULTURAL PROGRAMS Rabbi Moses Lehrman PLANNING FOR THE YEAR Rebecca Sanders The Jewish Scene The American Civic Scene ... Esther Green AVAILABLE COMMUNITY RESOURCES Eleanor Wolf Jason Tickton JEWISH MUSIC HOW GOOD PUBLICITY CAN INCREASE Wilfred B. Doner ATTENDANCE Lawrence Crohn, Chairman Choral Music "Mastersingers" Moe Kesner "Jewish Music on Records" "Israel Reborn" Film "The Jewish Community in America"—Morris Lieberman "Songs of Friendship"—Film Radio Transcription "My Native City" Filmstrip "Man in a Cage" Demonstration of Films, Film Strips, Radio Transcriptions, Literature and Records For Reservations and Information Call Jewish Community Council, 803 Washington Blvd. Bldg., Woodward 3-1657 Plisse taffeta a value at 10.95 The new fabric sensation . rnyon plisse taffeta ON Questions, Answers, Discussion by Discussants and Audience was one of the actual leaders of the hoodlums. What is very disturbing is the indifference of the Jewish press. The Yiddish newspapers, especially, take the view that this outrage is of very minor con- cern to American Jews. Vandalism and physical attacks against innocent men and women have taken place in an American town under the benevolent eyes of the municipal authorities. The fury against these men and women had no justification. • • • THE AMERICAN CIVIL RIGHTS Congress, under whose auspices the Robeson concert was to till.: place, is on the subversive list of the department of justice. We know, however, that this so-called subversive list includes many of our most distinguished citizens and groups whose loyalty and patriotism are abovc suspicion. A dangerous atmosphere has been created in this country. . Today no minority group, whether racial, religious, or ideological is safe from mob violence. It is very late—American democracy cannot per- mit another Peekskill putsch. It is the very last minute for defenders of American democracy to speak out against the lynching spirit manifested at Peekskill which shakes the very foundations of our Constitution. ... is beautifully fash- ioned in this flattering black town dress. 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