••. Page Sixty-four THE JEWISH NEWS From Carnpiuts To Camp Milers Program for Jewish Students in Uniform By DR. A. L. SACHAR through the Hillel Foundations and their carefully developed program. To these Jewish stu- dent constituencies, Hillel sent trained leaders, usually rabbis, whose superb Jewish back- ground, dynamic personalities, and administrative skills, were to be utilized to create a kind of kehillah on the campus. For 20 years, the "normal" years be- tween the wars, Hillel labored to make Jewish cultural and re- ligious values vital and relevant for the college generations. The transformation of the campus into a military reserva- tion brought . new and challeng- ing opportunities for Hillel serv- ice., The War Department and NaVy Department both found it inexpedient to . send military . chaplains to the campus. college communities. The sol- diers, in their off-periods, wel- come the respite to come to a campus with its widened oppor- tunity for companionship with young people. The primary re- sponsibility for the camp pro- gram rests with the Jewish Wel- fare Board. The Hillel Founda- tions have gladly offered their co-operation in this program. At the University of Illinois, for example, only 13 miles from Chanute Field, v ■ There there are often more than 1,000 Jewish men in training as air me- chanics, the Hillel building is used as ancillary headquarters by the Jewish Welfare Board. The J. W. B. representative and the Hillel director work out joint plans to serve hundreds of Chanute Field men each week. Admirably Fitted Areas of jurisdiction, were quickly cleared with the Jewish Welfare Board officials. A series of conferences resulted. in a gratifying co-operative arrange- ment. It was - agreed that the long •experience and the special- ized facilities which the Hillel Foundation possessed, admirably fitted Hillel to assume the larg- - est responsibility for the Jewish trainees on the college campus. At the present writing, 118 uni- versities are in the Hillel orbit. The Hillel program for the trainees is a highly diversified one. Of course, the young peo- ple, under strict military disci.-;- pline, have only a limited amount of free time. Regular religiods services are available for those • who want them. On some campuses, by special arrangement with the training. commandant; it is possible to _hold such services . on Friday Rigid Discipline evening. In most cases; such a These youngsters, who will special service interferes too number 150,000 by the end of Much with the military routine, 1943, are all part of the armed and therefore the religious exer forces. They receive basic pay; , cises are, generally held on Sun- they are under rigid military day morning. The JeWish holi- discipline: But they are back in days are a very, welcome break school for the concentrated in routine, and Bnai Brith's Hil- training that will weld them into lel directors and their student an indispensable part of the spe- cabinets go to great lengths of cialized staffs that are so desper- - resourcefulness to - devise attrac- ately • needed in a war that has tive techniques so that the become largely technical. day periods may be aesthetic Jewish life on the American and refreshing. campus, inevitably, has been as Always Available raditally transformed. In pre- - . The Hillel director is always War days, there were more than available for personal counsel- 105,000 Jewish students register- ing. Trainees come more fre- ed in American universities, ap- quently than do boys in civilian ,proximately 11 per cent of the life, because their new experi- total registration. They com- ence has rendered them infinite- prised the most strategic area ly more serious and there is re- from which future. Jewish lead- newed interest in religious and ership could be drawn. To sus- social problems. Besides, the di- tain the Jewish loyalty of these rector is a valuable link with privileged young people and to normalcy, and the boys welcome train them for community re- the period of informal conversa- sponsibility, Bnai Brith, Amer- tion and counsel. . ica's oldest and largest Jewish A great many of the Army ser vice organization, provided camps are in close proximity to guidance and stimulation, U. M. Foundation . The Michigan Foundation is similarly utilized by hundreds of men who come in from Fort Custer: They take advantage of a program ' which is organiied primarily for the many trainees in the Judge Advocate General's School for U. S. Army men, the Japanese language contingent, the Army meteorolOgists, the Army medical corps, the engi- neering cadets, and the young- sters in many other branches. Michigan has beautiful• physi- cal facilities, created by the gen- erosity of Michigan Bnai Brith leaders. And these facilities have proven a Godsend in the dove- tailing of the Hillel civilian and military program. Little has • been said here of the general participation of Jewish students on the campus in such war activities as the sale of stamps and bonds, •the contri- bution of blood; participation - in civilian defense, Red CroSS, and other projects which • are spon- sored by._ every American com- munity.. Hillel students have an enviable record of war service on every -campus. In summary, then, it may be noted, that ,Jewish life on the college campus has definitely not become a war casualty. . It remains . Wholesome and _ vital. The normal program continues without any hiatus. For the reg- istration of girls . has not Mate- rially declined. There are sub- stantial contingents of deferred students, of youngsters under 18, and of men who cannot pass physical _examinations. All of these participate in the regular civilian program. Religious serv- ices, cultural groups ; classes, fo- rums, social welfare projects, in- terfaith seminars, all flourish. But the campus is now part of the war effort, and Hillel, with well-trained leadership, excellent facilities, a tried technique, and a respected tradition, has gladly thrown its resources into the military pool. DR. A. L. SACHAR :EDITOR'S NOTE—How the Conversion of the American college campus into training camps for students in uniform has altered Jewish life on•, the campuses and how the Bnai Brith, through its Hillel Foun- dations and Counselorships is serving the student trainees, form the theme of this study by Sachar, . national director who developed the Hillel war- time program, which is superim- posed upon its normal fabric of service. FEW institutions have been changed more radically by the war than the American college. Students are in the primary mil- itary reservoir and consequently all the physically fit have been _Subject to call. At the cloSe of the school year in the summer of 1943, virtually all the able- bodied men above 18 had been siphoned out, and were scattered through • the training camps of America • and on the fighting fronts of the world. Yet the colleges themselves were not permitted to lapse into a wartime non-essential. Their teaching staffs and their superb technical facilities could be ad- inirably integrated into the war effort. Hence, it was planned to Send back to the colleges tens of thousands of young people, an ideal quarry for officership ma- terial and for technological S/SGT. JACK SHIRAGA Sgt. Shiraga, chairman . of the Hillel Council's evaluation com- mittee while at the University Of Michigan, lost his life 'last March in an • air crash at Har- lingen Field, Tex., while serving as a gunnery ,. school instructors CAPT. GEORGE LAVEN An alumnus of the University of Texas Hillel Foundation, who led the first U. S. air attack on Japanese held Kiska Island, has received the DSC, the DFC, the Air Medal and Oak 'Leaf Cltis ters for - outstanding duty. •:kv, LT. VICTOR KARPASS The Distinguished Service Cross was awarded posthumously to Lt. Kai-pass for heroism in North Africa, where_ he was killed in action recently. • He was a University of Illinois Hillel alumnias.• • Friday, .0ctober 4 1943 Franz Werfel Sings A Song Of Israel By HELEN ZIGMOND . (Copyright. 1943. Jewish • Telegraphic Agency). THE OLD YEAR IS ENDING the blackest year in all Jewish history.' The shofar calls in the New Year. A page is turned—a clean page in the Book of Time. Will it, too, be spattered with Jewish blood? What of the Jew? Is there no hope? One man, I thought, might have an answer.. He who sang of Abraham and the Prophets; he who wrote of -Jeremiah and ancient Palestine; he who himself but recently . escaped the Hitler Hell. I would ask Franz Werfel. What of the Jew? What of Germany? What of peace in the world? I approached the door of his home -a bit timidly. A mystic, say his reviewers. How does one talk to a mystic? But the door was standing open in welcome . the house was smiling with sunshine. And when. he came into the room one felt "all greatness is unconscious." The tragedy of the Jews, his escape from death by the Nazis, his writing of -"Berna- dette," and the rumor of his. conversion to Werfel Catholicism are all bound .up in One — as. four knots on a single thread. In the horror-filled days of 1940 Werfel was reported slain - by the Nazis. He was missing . . . but he and - his wife had escaped into France. There, in Lourdes, they hid from the Gestapo. In the room next the Nazis had a supply. depot and could be heard fetching things in and Out. Cross Pyrenees On Foot Week after week they waited for their exit visa, but , red- tape delayed. Finally Werfel decided to try to cross into Spain. They actually made the trip over the - Pyrenees on foot! Despite all this . . . in spite of the ghastly carnage in Europe, he says, "Concerning the Jews, I am an opti- mist! The Jew is a Chosen People! They may slaughter him, scatter him, tear him to a thousand remnants, but the continuity of the Jew will not be broken. For the Jew has a mission—a divinely-appointed task." • To him the spiritual task of the Jew is a hundred more important than his need for a home.- Maybe fifteen or twenty per cent of Europ&s•Jews will be wiped Out, - but the -chain will not be severed. Like a stern prophet he exhorts Israel to go on living. His passionate credo is,; ."We Will Never Die!" • "The hatred and persecution of the Jew is against all moral conception. A spiritual rebirth is what 'the 'World needs today. And therein lies -Judaism's present _link with Christianity. They are inextricably bound up together. They derive from a single root. The survival of Christianity is de-•- pendent on the survival of Judaism. This is not a religious, but a historiCal phenomenon. The Jews created a great world religion. Frorn it sprang the .Christian religion. • To- gether they must recleate mankind." Werfel's efforts, climaxed by his recent book, have given rise to the story that he has embraced Catholicism. The re- port has had wide circulation without a shred of truth. "I am a'Jew," he answers simply. "I am a Jew." Mrs. -Werfel, with a twinkle confided, that when a gossiper-whispered the rumor to Stephen Wise, the latter answered, "Franz Werfel could . never become a Church, convert. Alma (Werfel's wife and a Gentile) would never permit it!" Through his works runs the theme. of Faith. I asked if he has great faith in humanity. "It is rather a great pity for human kind that I feel. I am keenly conscious of the weak- ness of human nature. There are those who believe man's troubleS are due to his economic conditions; that if condi- tions change,. mankind will change. I believe the reverse is true. Mankind creates his conditions, not they, him." This Is a Tragic World "As for peace in this world," he shOok his head. " P rob- ably never—;for this is a tragic world. In the struggle of the atoms thereiis no . peace. Perhaps we can overcome - this nat- ural bellicosity . among men by human laws—but only to a degree. Every generation since the beginning of history has begun with the same problem. What to do with Germany? First, very heaVy punishment should be meted out to the guilty ones. Then Germany should be dismembered, especially Priissia. Is it true that the majority of Germans . are Nazis, anti-Semites? - "Yes, of course," he declared. "Propaganda does it." ."Song of Bernadette" was a direct result of his flight from the Nazis. He says, "It was a time of greatdread,;but also a time of great significance: In Lourdes I became ac- quainted with the _history of the girl, Bernadette Sodbirous. I vowed that if I escaped I would put off all 'Other • -taSIKS and sing the song of Bernadette as best I could." So the story was reborn. He wrote it in Hollywood . wrote it very fast . completed it in three months. It be- came a best-seller. It has sold 800,000 copieS of the American edition, and has also been printed in English, SWedish, Hun- garian, French, and various South American editions. The film version soon will be seen by millions. - His career is sharply divided into three periods: . Poetry., Drama, and Fiction. Now in Hollywood he is beginning a fourth—screen-writing. He is enthdsiastic about the filming of "Bernadette." But this is not his first celluloid contact. ."Juarez and Maximilian" was cinematized several years ago. "Forty. Days of Musa Dagh" was actually before the cameras when the Turkish government intervened in the interest of neutrality: His play, "Jacobowski and the Colonel," is soon to appear in the films. Filmtown is proud - to have so eminent a writer added to its ranks.