Page Thirty-two THE JEWISH NEWS Friday, October I, 1943 Musi The War Chest Is Our Bond With Suffering Humanity By HERMAN M. PEKARSKY A New Year Message A BOVE THE FURY OF war in all parts of the world, through the bitter sorrow of the prison chambers of Nazi Europe, the somber and stately tones of the ram's horn will proclaim the hope of peace and freedom to the Jewish people. By ABRAHAM SRERE President, Jewish Welfare Federation of Detroit; Co-Chairman of Special Assignments Committee of War Chest of Metropolitan Detroit Throughout the world Jews will offer a prayer on this New Year's Day, that when next the shofar summons us to ush-• er in another year, Hitlerism will have been driven from the earth and democra- cy and human freedom will prevail in every corner of the globe. That is the prayer that will be on the lips of Ameri- can Jewry; that is the prayer that will be uttered by Jewish men and women on the far-flung battlefields of the world; that is the prayer that will be silently intoned by the remnants of Jewry in the Nazi con- centration camps. Jews in many parts of the world. The far- . flung rescue programs carried on by the Joint Distribution Committee, United Pal- estine Appeal and National Refugee Serv- ice—the agencies represented in the Uni- ted. Jewish Appeal—have been instrumen- tal in assuring the survival of large num- bers of the victims of Hitlerism, not only during the war, but throughout the past decade of Nazi oppression and destruction. Mindful though we are of our obliga- tions to help our Jewish people in other lands, we must not forget our local social services. Services on the home front are even now under greater pressures than ever before. W E APRROACH the New Year in the midst of war raging on the far-flung battlefields all over' the world. When we pray for victory and peace on this Rosh Hashanah, we shall bear in mind our sons and daughters at their military stations; our brethren in Europe, and on the highways and by-ways of the world— driven from their homes, persecuted and destroyed; humanity uprooted and de- spoiled—waiting and hoping for a better day. The story of Jewish suffering, martyr- dom and heroism, is one which we can . never forget. It should serve as a reminder of our obligations and responsibilities. We who live under free skies, though we are at war, cannot ,afford to lose sight of the task before us now, and of the greater task which will face us on the day after—when peace settles over the world. * * It is to the credit of the Jews of Ameri- ea that during this period of greatest suf- fering and tragedy, they responded nobly to bring hope and life to large numbers of the victims of Nazi sadism through the various overseas agencies—the United Jewish Appeal, ORT, HIAS, and others— which have dedicated themselves to the task of human salvage and rehabilitation. During the critical years of the present war, the United Jewish Appeal has been the main channel through which Ameri- can Jews have provided the means for sustaining the life and hope of millions of The Tragedy of War The wanton destruction of the Jewish people by Nazi hordes will form a black arid sordid chapter in the history of civili- zation. This tragic period in Jewish life was brought sharply to our eyes and minds by the suicide of Samuel Zygelboim, a leader of the Polish-Jewish socialists and a member of the Polish National Council. Zygelboim, in despair, cried out: "I cannot be silent and I cannot live while the rem- nants of the Jewish people of Poland, of whom I am a representative, are perish- ing." He could not forget the message which he received from the Warsaw ghetto through the underground. He could not forget the last cries for help. And the same Jews of the Warsaw ghetto, who sent a plea for the help which could not reach them, refused to die resigned to their fate. The last thirty thousand made a final stand. They did not let themselves be led to the slaughter. They knew what fate awaited them and they died fighting. Within the last year we have seen the development of a new instrument of dem- ocratic community life. The. Detroit Com- munity Fund, the Allied Jewish Campaign, the U. S. 0. and the various war relief agencies formed a partnership—the War Chest of Metropolitan Detroit,—a single, united, community fund-raising instru- ment for the needs of our social services at home, for our armed forces and their auxiliaries, and for the war-stricken pop- ulations of our Allies in Europe and in other parts of the world. The War Chest is the affirmation of the desire of the people of our community to • help those at. home who are in need, to serve our fighting men and women, and to provide immediate, concrete and practical aid to the civilian populations abroad—to keep them alive.. The War Chest is our -bond with the suffering people of our Allies. It expresses those warm human sympathies and those philanthropic impulses which. mean so Much in cementing the friendships of the local community—and of the people of the United Nations. And . so we enter the New Year con- scious of the greater responsibilities which we must assume, aware of the tasks which we must carry out, in our common strug- gle for the building of -a better world and a better community. It is our hope and our wish that the New Year will bring an end to the destruction of human life and to the suffering of our people all over the world. May it be a year of peace and hap- piness—a year which will see the redemp- tion of European Jewry from tyranny and oppression—a year which will mark the recognition by the nations of the earth of the rights of Jewry in Palestine. The Humanitarian Front Anothc4 year of war, toil and sorrow has now passed. Yet, in the midst of the despair and anguish which the passing year brought with it, there were rays of hope and of courage, signs of reaffirmation of the dignity of man. The grim business of war is to take life—with guns, tanks, bombers, battle- ships. The humanitarian business of the community is to save life and hope .. . with food, clothing, medical supplies and financial assistance. Paradoxically, under cover of the greatest war the world has ever known, the greatest salvage attempts are being made by many forces for good, organized into such agencies as the Na- tional War Fund and the United Jewish Appeal, on a national scale, and the War Chest of Metropolitan Detroit, which in- cludes the Allied Jewish Campaign — on the local scene. And if we are to win the peace, it is essential that we continue this salvage of the victims of war, starvation, dispossession, illness, confusion. We have de, help in terms o the instrumenta Appeal for Refu Palestine,'and o As President R our support of t is evidence of t men that perse racial discrimin ... The reconsti extended throug peal has been spiritual bulwa oppression." JDC The rescue al ward. Aid to neutral countrie world is extend tion Committee. the transportati gee children an havens of free refugees in Spai gal; helps thos occupation of N gees in Soviet the integration in Latin Americ The United large-scale settl estine and the Jewish homelan the promotion for the continu settlement progr large numbers thousands of Europe, and for development to forces in the Mi The National on a systematic guidance for n States. This agei to refugees in ne war work; retr short of skilled with special p provides faciliti and adjustment life. The There is a front, too, affect' own community which were dif peacetime, but difficulties since Edward R. Murr mediate "war a simple and direc He has gone off, to us. He, himsel in the normal the community; hors in need; pr leisure-time acti\ ing the depende sick; helping th entrusted this re remain at home the home front Leaders Mobilized for 1944 War Chest of FRANK D. EAMAN ;President of War Chest GEORGE T. CHRISTOPHER Chairman, 1944 .War Chest FRED M. BUTZEL Campaign Vice-Chairman HENRY WINEMAN . Chairman of Advance Gifts Unit . IRVING . Co-Chair