Alifetialll lewisti periodical Ced ------ 111111111.1111111.1 .1.1011111111.11.111.17"1111.1111111 DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE Page 4 Detroit Jewish Chronicle A Glance at Freedom n ^venArtw,.. ■■ ••••-•• ■ ••• ■ ••••••±,n. Published Weekly by the Jewish Chronicle Publishing Co., Inc. WOodward 1-1040 900 Lawyers' Building, Detroit 26, Michigan SUBSCRIPTION $3.00 Per Year. Single Copies, tOc; Foreign, $5.00 Per Year at Entered as Second-class matter March 3, 1916, at the Post Office Detroit, Mich., under the Act of March 3, 1879 Friday, July 6, 1951 Survivor Tells of Life, Death in Nazi Camps By DR. FRANK ROSENTHAL Temple Beth Israel, Jackson . I CAME BACK, by Krys- tina Zywulska (Roy Publ. Co., New York, $2.50.) SEYMOUR TILCIIIN Publisher GERHARDT NEUMANN Editor During these days of general pardon that is being extended to a vast number of Nazi criminals, a book like "I Came Back - ," is greatly needed. • The world seems to need each In full-page advertisements in New York's daily year a rehearsal of the bloody papers, a committee by the name of American Friends of memory, so that those millions the Middle East recently made its existence known to of innocent will not have died the public. in vain. Its chairman is columnist Dorothy Thompson, and During past years, we needed among its charter members we find a few names of well the observations of Zewerina Grandfather and grandson recently arrived from Iraq, stand at Zmaglewska's "Smoke Over Bir- known personalities, such as Dr. Philip K. Hitti, professor the site of their new home in Israel's latest movie, "Tent City," kenau" or Olga Lengyel's "Five at Princeton University; Vincent Sheean, author; W. L. which had its midwest premiere recently in Chicago. The feature Chimneys" to remind us of the White, editor of the Emporia Gazette, and Dr. John A. documentary is being distributed by the United Palestine Relief: untold sacrifices of blood and Wilson, director of the oriental Institute of the University tears and dear ones that were of Chicago. offered to the moloch of man's The comtnittee believes that the people of the Middle inhumanity to man. East are in great peril and "need the assurance of Ameri- And now, we read the story can awareness and the demonstrations of practical friend- of a Polish woman who worked ship that go with it." in the Polish undergrodnd, and who was caught and shipped "Most Americans," the advertisement states, "have steel, windowless com- from Warsaw to various camp long, were never had an accuratae picture of the Middle East. Too By WILLIAM B. SAPHIRE partments, sucking air through sites, and finally to Auschwitz often they regard it in the romantic terms of the 'Thou- Jewish Agency for Palestine ventilators which reared over the (Oswiecim). sand and One Nights.' Or they conceive of it as simply We hear of the sadism of the DECENTLY I TRAVELED from top deck of th ship. a vast petroleum reservoir. These misconceptions have • • guards at the camps, yet we " Marseille to Haifa with 600 been exploited by partisan propaganda which has lowered immigrants from the ghettos of SOUTH OF CRETE the sea also learn of the strange per- a curtain of misunderstanding between the peoples of the Casablanca, Oran and Algiers. smoothed out and the air warm- verse expressions of love and west and the peoples of the east." They had 'come in small groups ed. The immigrants came on deck tr , .derness that sometimes brings Noting the resurgence of nationalism in the Middle from North Africa to France, and squatted Arab fashion on the together guardsman and pYis- collected at a transit center out- hatch covers, taking in the sun, oner. East, the committee asserts that the nations of that area side of Marseille, put through watching the distant island, nib- A piece of stale bread passed "are moving toward democratic institutions. In their '- routine medical examination and bling food for the first ,time in between lovers or a hopeful fort they are entitled to American support, free fn organized into a single transport four days. A few had Hebrew word and soft caress may add political pressure and racial or religious discrimination." for the ocean trip. primers, and with others leaning years to the lives of the doomed. While on the surface the purposes of the committee over their shoulders, they began The author is able to describe From the promenade deck of seem to be impartial and with malice toward no group, how even the prisoners lost their the Israeli steamer Negbah I to study. it becomes apparent from the advertisement that the sense of proportion in accepting watched them arrive by the The first sight of Israel was and observing human suffering. group is just another attempt by the Arabs to offset the truckload at the quayside, a rag- Cape Carmel light piercing the While these helpless masses influence of the Jewish state in America. ged segment of the tens of thous- pre-dawn sky on the sixth morn- ands of Jews who have been and ing of the voyage. The Negbah marched by these "Canada bar- If there is a movement toward democracy in the Arab world, it is hard to find. Naturally, democratic aspirations still are streaming to the shores took a slight list as she steamed racks," as a never ending stream of Israel from the pestholes of into Haifa's horseshoe bay, her from "Sauna," the reception cen- ought to be supported by Americans, but we are afraid ter to the gas chambers, pris- the Arab world. that the committee misrepresents the true political pic- passengers crowding the star- oners and Nazis alike appropri- Watching the embarkation board rail from end to end. East. ated for themselves some of the the Middle ture in from the upper decks, we few spontaneous roar of "slialoin" possessions. It takes no notice of the fact that the existence of A cabin passengers felt strangely greeted the pilot boat as it came Within the light of the fiery the Jewish state has changed materially the political neglected, but hardly resentful. alongside and the same for the furnaces, fashion shows were realities in the Middle East. It also fails to note that the Though still in France, we were tugs which nudged the vessel held, cabaret performances tried Arab states—despite a few weak reform efforts—are still witnessing a process which was around the breakwater into the to dispel the thought of death. living in thei,.. feudal past and are unwilling to admit as much a part of the building of Mme. Zywulska tells us of one that their social and political outlook must eventually Israel as digging a drainage ditch harbor. of these performances, where a If there was apathy at a liora in the Huleh or laying a concrete crumble under the impact of Israel's revolutionary Jewish comedian gave a mono- foundation somewhere in the Ne- in Marseille, there was wild ex- logue; impact. citement,' tears and murmumed gev. "They buried one single man. Instead of seeking to bring the Arab nations into the prayers as the strains of Hatik- Listening to their gutteral Ara- orbit of western civilization, the committee is overplaying vah rolled over the harbor from The crowd burst into laughter. bic speech it was difficult to be- a dozen loudspeakers on ship and A funeral for one man, a black the perils of Communism in the Middle East. In fact, we lieve that they were of the same suit, a hearse, wreaths, a casket, have a sneaking suspicion that the meaning behind this blood and heritage as the Jews shore. an obituary . . . but that was is the imaginary danger which the Arabs see in Israel. The gangplank was dropped. not all . . . there will be a of Europe and the west. They were olive skinned, with dark, Four generations of ghetto Jews tombstone. The actor choked The committee intends to bring spokesmen of eastern deep-set eyes and finely chiseled went ashore. The mass of friends with laughter." religious and cultural groups to this country to meet and relatives on the dock surged This is just one of the haunt- features. American audiences as well as to invite the participation The children were painfully forward, surrounding them like ing incidents in the book, which of the many Americans of Near Eastern origin in its thin, with large, hungry eyes and an all-embracing arm. And even give a graphic description of the work. rickety limbs. Some of the girls as this took place, another ship, spirit and the sense of values Why the smokescreen? Miss Thompson should have were pretty. But their elder sis- the blue and white flag snapping that prevailed in this man-made come right out with her real intention,.that is, to mobilize ters, women in their mid-twen- over her empty decks, slipped hell. American public opinion against Israel. The author leads us almost to ties or early thirties, were al- noiselessly out of the harbor ready gray, haggard and bloated bound for Bari, Tripoli and lands the doors of the gas chambers, west to pick up another cargo of tells of her observance of the from eeapeated child-bearirig. gassing of a train of newcomers, the homeless. • • • • * • whom she had to register, A recent article in the N. Y. Times pointed out that ILLUMINATED BY the cargo period of SEVERAL WEEKS later I had healthy human beings, who but lamps the scene on deck was Israel's Kibbutz movement "is undergoing a an hour later were burning in another opportunity to see immi- the most gigantic funeral pyre a mass of pressing bodies. great uncertainty. A number of crises have left the move- grants from North Africa, not the mountainous piles of dilapidated ever known in the history of ment's future in question." luggage and the nondescript de- group with which I had traveled, man's fiendishness. Kibbutzim, the article says, no longer attract the bris of cargo loading operations. but others who had arrived in "I Came Back" is indeed a newcomers. When the state was founded, 143 kibbutzim A group of Youth Aliyah wards Israel a few months earlier. They worthwhile book. Though sim- and 57 moshavim existed. (Kibbutzim work on the collec- were on a ma'abarah (work vil- sprang into an impromptu hora, ply written, which might be the tive principle, moshavim on the cooperative principle.) circling around their young lead- lage) on Mount Gilboa overlook- result of its translation from the 63 er on the canvas hatch cover. But ing the green , carpet of Emek Polish into English, it should By the end of 1949, 67 additional kibbutzim and moshavim had been established. In ,1950, the new immi- the dance was ignored by the rest Israel. serve as a reminder of the ex- grants set up 58 moshavim, while only four new kibbut- of the immigrants and wos soon In appearance they were a termination camps, this great lost in the mass of people mov- happy contrast to the group I Nazi contribution to the "civil- zim were opened. This ratio has even widened in the first ing slowly to their quarters be- had first seen on the dock at ization" of this century. five months of this year. It should be read by all those low decks. The kibbutz movement, the writer says, "has slipped Marseille. A British woman standing next out of its predominant elite role in the shaping of the They had cast the stoop of the who would want to let "bygones to me, bound to visit her daugh- ghetto off their shoulders; their be bygones," and see in those f uture." ter in a Galilean kibbutz, looked skin was browned by the sun; very criminals desirable part- There are reasons for this. Many of the old kibbutzim peeved. "Where's their Zionist their once thin arms and legs ners in our fight against the have grown rich and soft. After years of hard toiling spirit?" she wanted to know. Her were rugged with growing mus- Communistic menace. they prefer to relax. They are the victims of a natural This book may show that we answer came from a Tel Aviv cles. They worked prodigiously, let-down process as they are progressing in age. business man, one who had set- building houses and roads, laying ought not only judge our friends Is the kibbutz movement dead? If so, an integral by their willingness to join us tled in the city when it was still pipe, plowing up fields against something, but let us part of the Zionist movement has disappeared. mostly a sand dune. Each stroke of the pick and It is a fact that the pioneer spirit which led thousands "These immigrants don't come toss of shovel reflected the pride rather be reminded what these of young Jews from Europe to Israel is not to be found to Israel out of idealism," he said, of willing labor in a free land. new friends represent, what they are. among the Jews of the Moslem countries. They are com- "for them it's a stark need. All They spoke Hebrew now. May the last cry of anguish their lives they've known only ing to Israel in a different frame of mind. Most of them of the dying millions rise as a I approached a husky bearded the ghettos, squalor, disease, in- spent their lives far away from Zionist ideas, and when man, his hands busy on the mighty voice of warning, so that security. They couldn't possibly their native states began to expel them, it came as a rude never again need another book be Zionists in the western sense." throttle of a rumbling cement as "I Came Back" be written. mixer. "Do you like the country?" shock to them. Six days on the Mediterranean I asked. As a solemn reminder and a We probably will have to reconcile ourselves to the can be a pleasure cruise, but not fact that the reconstruction of Israel will differ ideologi- "Like it?" he repeated, "why sound testimony of an era that for 600 people living in tiers of we hope has passed forever, this cally from the spirit of the mandatory period. There will It's our country. We've been not? berths in the depths of a rolling book is highly recommended. be hardly any halutzim and, as time goes on, fewer ship. The immigrant dormitories here all our lives." Friday, July 6, 1951 Tammuz 2, 5711 Pro-Arab Propaganda Israel to Newcomers Home All Their Lives Is the Kibbutz Dead? immigrants. //I