•Paige Sixteen T'HE JEWISH NEWS Mitoses, Strike That Rock Again A True Passover Story by DAVID SCHWARTZ (Copyright, 1944, Jewish Telegraphic Agency, Inc.) P RIVATES MOSHE YAARI and Richard Saunders were very unlike as far as superficial appearances are concerned. Moshe was a Jewish soldier from Palestine and Richard Saunders was an Australian. Moshe was a brunet and Richard was a blond. Moshe had 2,000 years of Jewish life with all of its suffering bottled up - in him and Richard had that background of freedom from op- pression, which the non-Jew enjoys but only the Jew can fully appreciate. Yet despite all these differences, there was much in common between Moshe and Richard— beside the fact that they were both members -of the same company of engineers in the British forces in the Western Desert • under the command of Brigadier Frederick Kisch. Richard, for one thing, had a peculiar interest in things Jewish. He was a rare mixture of the realist and mysticand the Jew appealed to the mystic side of him. On furlough some months back, Moshe and Richard had gone together to Palestine and Rich- ard had stayed at the home of Moshe. He felt that this acquaintance with Palestine had made him a great authority on Jewish affairs—he was alm.cAt an amateur Jew himself. He had seen the Wailing Wall and Tel Aviv—and above all he had met Rivkeh, Moshe's sister, in Tel Aviv. When Richard and Moshe talked together, yoU wouldn't exactly suspect that they were friends, for Richard had a light, almost sarcastic way of talking to Moshe. But the sarcasm was a cover. Richard was just afraid of allowing himself to get sentimental. It was the day before Pass- over that Richard entered his tent where he and Moshe - camped, and found the latter opening a box. "Look what Rivkeh sent,' said Moshe, "Matzohs, and she writes, that you must eat them with me. She said that now that you are in the desert fighting for freedom, as e did our ancestors fleeing from Egyptian slavery, you are a Jew too in the funda- mental sense of the word and must observe Passover also." Wants Something Else "Good old Rivkeh," said Richard. "Thanks for the Mat- zohs, but I wish it was some- thing elSe, eh what, Moshe?" Moshe paused and said noth- ing. He knew, of course, what was on Richard's mind. There was only one thing on every- one's mind in the desert. "You know, Moshe," said Richard, "what I dreamt last night?" "You don't have to tell me," said Moshe. "Everybody in this company had the same dream. They dreamt they walk- ed along and lo and behold a fairy stepped out and beckoned them and pointed to a great fountain of water and then you opened your mouth and drank and drank and said you would spend the rest of your life drink- ing water." "Right," said Richard." That's exactly the dream I had. You know, if you will permit me to change the subject back to your Passover—you Jews are a disap- pointment to me." "How is that?" said Moshe. It's Very Simple "It's very simple,". said Rich- ard. "Way back there in olden times, you Jews would not go along wishing for water. If you came to a situation like this, you would get water. Why in the old Biblical days, you even parted the waters of the Red Sea in order that the Jews might cross. Where is your magic power to- day? Di the old days, Moses A when he needed water, struck a rock and there gushed forth a strewn of water. `Strike That Rock Again' "Moshe," wound up Richard, "strike that rock again." Moshe listened—but said nothing. The desert sun was beating down furiously. Ah, if only there were a Moses, he thought, that could strike a rock again—and bring forth a stream of sweet cooling water. Seeking to forget the situation, Moshe turned to rereading Rivkeh's letter. "You know, Rivkeh is working in a factory now. She says she is helping make pipes." "They had better be making more guns," said Richard. "You know what they are saying Moshe. They are saying that without water, we will not be able to go on—that the British forces are doomed. Rommel will push on—in a few weeks he will be in Palestine. The -whole Near East is - dooined—the whole cause of the Allies—but the vengeance that the Nazis will let loose on Pales- tine will make everything they have done. in the past look tame." Yes, Moshe knew that Richard had not exag- gerated the picture. If Rommel pushed on, Pales- tine and the entire Near East was lost—and once the Near East was conquered, a junction could be formed with the Japanese and India could be con- quered. The whole war might be lost—for the want of water. FrIcIaY, April 7- , 1944 Moshe thought about all these things—but like the other soldiers—always their thoughts came back to their own parched spirits—Oh, for a drink of water! As Richard and Moshe lined up for evening call, they found only about half the members of the company present. The rest were either lying on their cots, parched for want of a drink or wer in the field hospital. Moshe took out- his gun: "If this were not a fight for freedom, we could solve this problem," he said. "This gun could go off. A shot in the leg - and we'd be in the hospital. They still have a little water there." . . Richard and Moshe turned in. The lights went out and restlessly, they sought sleep. It was still dark, when they heard .4 noise out- side of their tent. How could this be? It was still too early for reveille. Could the enemy be attack- ing? No—it couldn't be that. It was simply a sound of quiet talking they heard. They arose and poked their heads outside. Everyone seemed to be stand- ing in front of their tent, saying only one thing. Water. They Have Found Water They went to the next tent. "What is it?" they asked. • The men simply said: "Water." "Water, water—what about water?" The men scarcely could speak. - "Water—water they have found water." "Found water. Gfeat Heavens. Where have they found Water?" MoShe looked on thoughtfully. He understood. Now he understood the letter of Rivkeh. Under- stood about that pipe factory in which she was working. Moses had struck that rock again. The Jewish brigadier, General Kisch, had con- ceived the idea of piping water through a hundred miles of desert. Thanks to this, the British were able to forge ahead—and the whole Near East and the Allied cause was saved. • EDITOR'S NOTE: The above is a fictionalization of a true incident told by Peter Rainier in his new book "Pipeline to Peace." It was the Jewish Brigadier Kisch, who later fell in battle, who conceived the idea of bringing water to the desert soldiers, which at a critical time saved the whole Allied cause. Jewish Community's Post-War Problems (Continued from Page 14) We rightly assume that our social problems require our spe- cial efforts. It. is also wise to recognize that our special Jew- ish problems will not be solved independently of other prob- lems to which they are related. This important lesson should have been taught us by the World War. If anti-Semitism had been the only serious prob- lem created by Nazi aggression it would have been easier to solve since it would have been the irrational element in an otherwise normal situation. On the contrary, it was the total situation created by the, Nazis that was abnormal. While the organization of ac- tivities dealing with anti-Semi- tism locally and nationally is go- ing to call forth vigorous efforts during a period of social flux, it is important to recognize that the special functions assumed by national and local agencies in this field are properly only a part of a much larger program of Jewish action. Still Unanswered Questions Many of the basic world ques- tions are still unanswered. The forms of national organization for small nations in Europe, their economic and political re- lationships with the Great Pow- ers, the way in which minority ethnic and religious groups will be adjusted in the societies of the future, the extent to which economic problems are going to be determined in the post-war settlement, all of these are basic questions for the statesmen and for all of us. The characteristics of the post- war world in Europe; -in the Orient, hi the Near East, in the United States, and elsewhere will shape the future environ- ment here and abroad. It is ex- tremely doubtful whether Jew- ish ideological viewpoints as such are going to have an ap- preciable effect on the decisions which are going to be made on these major issues.