rely. 0d060 Page Thirteen THE JEWISH NEWS T, 1943 Palestine or °utopia'? By HARRY SACHER Leader Of League Of Religious Labor Is Visiting City Bnai Brith Sets $2,000,000 As Quota In 3rd Bond Drive Philologists have argued whether -when Sir Thomas More called his ideal State Utopia he meant Eutopia, good place, or • Outopia, no • place. There is no doubt that when kind friends offer us substitutes for Palestine they mean Outdpia, nowhere. They may give it a geographical name, fluttering on the winds of chance from Madagascar or Libya or Guiana, 'but as soon as you attempt to pin it down it reveals itself as nowhere, and the pin is lost in the void. Inaugurating a new $2,000,000 War Bond drive, the Michi- gan Bnai Brith Council, meeting at the Hotel Statler, Sept. 19, issued a call to lodges throughout the state to assist in oversubscribing Michigan's quota in the Third War Loan. Harvey Steadman of Lansing was chosen chairman of the Council's war efforts committee. * * * Michigan Council at Conference in Detroit Announces Plans for Campaign; All Lodges in State Urged to Help Oversubscribe Goal Now ()utopia has very excellent qualities which comrhended it to the politician. . When he makes the offer to the Jews of .Outopia a, warm glow of moral content suffuses him. He has shown a Sensitive heart and a broad humanity; he feels for the travail of the Jewish people. The offer has the further advantage that 'it costs him nothing. Outopia does not belong to him. It has the further ad- vantage that he does not have to ask the co-operation of any other country, for Outopia not only does not belong to England, it belongs to nobody. Again, it is free from internal complications, for it has no inhabitants. It is as large as your fancy cares to make it, and, therefore, can take as many immigrants as you desire. It has an ideal climate, the best of soil, and the maximum _ of natural resources, and, therefore, can employ the maximum number in the most various and profitable occupations. Beyond doubt Outopia is Eutopia for the politician who wishes to push the Jewish problem out of his sight. Nor are these all the advantages of Outopia. It helps the politician to cast off the shackles of his real obligations, to prove the inadequacy of a vulgarly real land like Palestine. Seated on the brightly coloured clouds. of Outopia, he can contrast Outopia'c limitless space, vast resources, and freedom from problems and • complications with Palestine's only too measurable area, straitened resources, ineluctable problerhs. And as he makes the comparison 'a double process operates in favour of Outopia and against Pales- tine—Palestine is made - to appear more and more ,meagre and the Jewish problem infinitely more swollen. Palestine diminishes in his eyes to a point and the persecuted Jews seeking a home multiply to tens; perhaps hundreds, of millions. What a happy . chance ()utopia _offers him—release from the reality of Palestine and absorption into the mirage of Outopia. Now all this might well be. agreeable to those with the -appropriate taste for- .make-believe---if only the Jewish • people consisted of imaginary individuals and the Jewish tragedy was but a play. You can still the imaginary weeping -of imaginary women and children with imaginary • comforting; you can feed the imaginary -hungry with imaginary bread; you can cover the _imaginar-ynaked. with imag#1,ary 4 clothes; you can bind up With. -imaginary ;bandages you can bury. imagitary dead in imaginary graves you can cleanse imaginary Stains with imaginary _ perfumes. But what if the tears be real the hunger stark, the nakedness Lbitter ; the wounds gangtene4,-- the dead corilsps, and the stains of political perfidy veritable and f oul?' That :is the .reality Which cannot be . shaken off by any ramblings in the irridescent nothing- Tress: of °utopia. DAVID ZEITANI David Zeitani; resident of Tel Aviv for the past 15 years, is in Detroit in behalf of the League for Religious Labor in Palestine to continue the work of the league which was organized last year under the chairmanship of Dr. A. M. Hershman. . Representing 22,000 organized men and women who pursue the ideology of Torah. v' Avodah (Torah and Labor) and recog 7.. nized as one of the important forces in the ,upbuilding. of the Jewish Homeland, Zeitani, . al- ready has contacted many De troit leaders who cooperated in the- project last' year. • The Religious Labor :Move: ment has 40 branches and has a large youth organization, Bnei AkiVah; which has 35 . brandhes' and 4,000' in.einbers. " Rabbi Jerome D. Folkman, the State of Michigan's delegate to the American Jewish Conference, reported on the Conference ses- sions. New Officers The Michigan Bnai Brith Coun- cil inaugurated the following new officers: Sam Goldfarb, Jackson, presi- dent; Harvey S. Steadman, Lans- ing, 1st vice-president; Jess Feller, Detroit, 2nd vice-presi- dent; Milton Weinstein, Detroit, secretary; John _Merdler, Sagi- naw, treasurer; A. B. Roman, Bay. City, and Sam Leib, Detroit, corn :. mitteemen. Other Council members who attended were: Harry Yudkoff, Isadore Starr, Rudolph Meyer- sohn, David I. Rosen, _ Arthur Kaufman and Sam Maza, Detroit. From Out of Town Samuel J. Levine, Mt. Clem ens; Joseph. Burry, Marty Gor- don, Jack Rabinowitz and Rabbi Morton Applebaum, Flint; Paul Bernhardt,' Saginaw;. ,Isadore L. Goode, Pontiac; Rabbi Jerome D. Folkman, A. H. Fleck, Grand Rapids; Samuel Meisel, Jackson; Walter Block, Bay City; Justin Morrison, Charlotte; Morton Davis, Battle Creek; Sam Abrams, Lansing. • Flint was chosen for the semi- annual convention to be held Sunday, Nov. 14. Men's Wear Open Evenings 4 4 DEXTER • at WEBB (From the "Manchesier Guardian") . _ . Halevy Society Hears Address By Rabbi Adler dent, Eugene _Franzblau, who an- nOtinced, 'that. the 19th- annual Concert will be. held Jan. 16 at the Masonic Temple. A:feature of this concert will be the pres- entation : of the oratorio "Die Tzwei Erid.er." : T The: mo§ical :porticm of ,the pro- gram was provided by several members of the Halevy: Anna Warren sang a group of soprano solos and Jerry Robbins was heard " in several baritone num- bers. Accompaniment was pro- vided by Bella Goldberg, who was later heard singing a group of- selections .fór mezzo-soprano; her accompanist was Rebecca Frohman. The instrumental fea- ture was the appearance of Dan Frohman, Halevy musical diree- tor, as cellist, with Mrs. Froh- man at the piano. Halevy rehearsals are held every Tuesday at 8:30 p. m. in Roosevelt school auditorium, Lin- wood at Burlingame. All singer's are invited. • - Famous Singing Group Holds Banquet Opening 19th Year of Activity Rabbi Morris Adler delivered an address on ."The Relation of Jewish Music to the Problems of Today," and Moishe Dombey read• some _ humorous Yiddish selec- tions, at the banquet at Pereira's . on - Sept. -19, which marked the- opening of the 19th year of ac- tivities of the - Halevy Singing Society. The gathering sang patriotic songs. Jack Rosberg was master of ceremonies. - - Plans for the coming year were outlined by the - Halevy presi- Buy— War Bonds Buy— Life .Insurance . 19434704 BUY BONDS ..„ '1943-5704 New Year Greetings This is the New Year Greeting of the Officials and _Direc- tors of The Great-West Life Assurance Company and the members of its agency organization in Detroit: GREETINGS That the New Year may bring you happiness . . that if on-The • may find you reunited with those in your family who are NEW YEAR Le Shono . , ,. fighting the Nation's battles for the liberation of Mankind. • : ., , We ' • appreciate the dpprtiouties , the to ... , . have:had . . . serve our ... friends . in - the Jewish ' Community ToV.6 fikosevu- . _ . • Sam Granaclier Custom TailOr, 5th Floor Unifed.: • fs Building GREAT-WEITME itt!. 11.1911 CE COMPANY PENOBSCOT BLDG., DETROIT ARTHUR P. JOHNSON, Braich. Manger . . . . . •