THE JEWISH NEWS Page Two Between You and Me By BORIS SMOLAR (Copyright, 1944, Jewish Telegraphic Agency, Inc.) POLISH TRENDS Is it true that Polish officials in the U. S. are sending reports to their gov- ernment in London to the effect that anti-Semitism is increasing in the United S tates? . . And is it true that some of these officials are making special efforts to meet Jews in high positions in order to furnish their government with per- sonal impressions of them? .•. . The Jew- ish Labor Committee is now receiving praise - from all sides for the outspoken attitude it has taken with regard to the anti-Semitism in the Polish Army . . . Less admired, however, are other Jewish bodies in . America which are keeping quiet on thiS subject for some mysterious reason. * * * Quotation of the Week "A Fascist is one whose lust for money or power is combined with such an intensity of intolerance toward those of other races, partieS ., classes, religions, cultures, regions, or nations as to make him ruthless in his use of deceit or violence to attain his ends. The supreme god of a Fascist to which his ends are directed may be -money or power; may be, a race or a class; may be a military clique or an economic group; or may be a culture, religion, or a political party. "The perfect type of. Fascist throughout recent centuries has been the Prussian Junker, who developed such hatred for other races and such allegiance to a military clique as to make him willing at all times to engage in any degree of deceit and violence necessary to place his culture and race astride the world. In every big nation of the world are at least a few people who have the fascist temperament. Every Jew baiter, every Catholic hater is a Fascist at heart. The hoodlums who have been desecrating churches, cathedrals, and syna- gogues in some of our large cities are ripe material for Fascist leader- ship." . —VICE-PRESIDENT HENRY A. WALLACE Purely Commentary RESCUE TALKS The latest appeal for rescue of Jews is now being 'sounded by the Women's By PHILIP SLOMOVITZ International League for Peace and Free- dom. . . . From its Washington office the DAVID SCHWARTZ AND LUKE League is conducting a campaign de- David Schwartz of the staff of the manding that our immigration laws be administered so as to place the fewest Jewish Telegraphic Agency is your Com- mentator's favorite among his journalis- possible obstacles in the way of refugees tic confreres. He is a splendid fellow, a seeking to enter this country under the good newspaperman and is usually very immigration quota. . . . It also demands accurate. that the British authorities, in the light of the changed military situation, admit But David pulled. a blunder in his la- more Jews to Palestine. . . • At the same test release. Writing on the meeting of time, the League also advocates the Jewish publishers held in Indianapolis sending of food to Jews in Nazi-occupied he used the famous quotation from the territories. . . . The League urges every Second Book of Samuel (1:20), "Publish American to address letters to the State it not in Judea, proclaim it not in Gath" Department and to President Roosevelt ("Al tagidu b'Gath . . . "), and then pro- asking for urgent alteration of the U. S. ceeded to state: "'Proclaim it from the Immigration laws. . . . Such letters, the housetops," says the prophet. League points out, can be a powerful and Your Commentator f o u n d the latter constructive factor in speeding action to quotation not in the Prophets but in save many Jews in Europe. Luke 12:3. - * * * • The closest his quotation comes to Old ON. THE JOB Testament references are the following: Though the Joint Distribution Com- Proverbs, 9:3: "Proclaim upon the high- mittee planned a $17,009,000 budget for est places of the city"; Amos, 3:9; Pro- this year, it seems that it -Will need at claim it upon the palaces in the land of least ,$25,000,000 . . . It is too bad no de- Egypt." ' tails can be released of the reports de- And so, David, thou hast blundered. livered at the JDC conference in Chicago But thou remainest a good fellow, nev- _ . . . But one can reveal that these reports ertheless. * * presented a picture of rescue activities of • which Jews in the United States should "FREE PORTS" FOR REFUGEES feel proud . . . Sufficient to say that The plan for the establishment of many millions of dollars have been al- "free ports" for refugees in this country lotted by the . JDC for ships carrying had been introduced on several occasions: Jews from Balkan countries to • their Mordecai Ezekiel spoke of it several freedom in Palestine through Turkey .. . years ago. Perhaps the best analysis of And similar staggering figures are spent on getting Jews froln inside Nazi. Eu- the plan was made by Samuel Grafton • rope to Spain . . Thousands of these in - one of his syndicated columns in which he stated: . Jews will soon proceed from Spain to Casablanca for permanent residence "We need a system of free ports for there until the war is over, or -until they refugees. These would be reservations, secure immigration visas toAmerica or. fenced and guarded, which any person Palestine . . JDC is especially active in. could enter without formality, no mat- saving children from Nazi lands . . The ter how homeless or statelesS he might American Government still considers be. Until we set up free ports fOr refu- valid its promise to admit to the United gees we shall be asking the refugee to States 3,000 Jewish children from stand on one foot while we solve his - France . . . Thus something is being done problem, a position in which a man to smuggle as many children out of can wait just so long, and a child less France into Spain as possible . . . Sev- "No rights would be acquired by any- eral thousand Jewish children may also one who entered such a reserved area, still be saved from the Balkan countries except the right >to sit down, which is if certain plans of the War Refugee a rare right at the present moment in Board materialize . . . The War Refugee civilization's majestic march. By an . Board depends to a very great 'extent on easy legal fiction, entrance into a free JDC for financing its • rescue activities port would not constitute legal en- .. . The JDC is even giving large sums trance into the country and stay in the of money monthly to the Histadrtith in Palestine for rescue activities . . No _, free port would not constitute • resi- dence in the country. avenue of rescue is. overlooked by JDC AA . . . But JDC is under instructions from "We have used this same legal fictio/1 International Red Cross to say, in pub- to establish free ports for goods. For' - lic, as little as possible about the rescue reasons much too dull to tell , you about plans now in operation is in the interests here, these are of great advantage to of the work in which we are all in- our foreign trade in time of peace. terested. "If we cannot give our friends at least (Copyright, 194.4, the same rights we give our enemies, Jewish Telegraphic Agency, Inc.) . then a host of questions are raised, in- cluding whither ' are we drifting and what is wrong with our heads. "The refugees could be visited by consular and other officials of their own BY• BEN SAMUEL nations in these free ports, they could (Copyright, 1944, Jewish Telegraphic Agency, Inc.) be investigated, picked over, and per- haps, in time, outfitted with papers and Chaplain Henry Tavel called on for- thus gradually raised to the lofty level , .1n-1er New York State Governor Lenman, of legal existence, as distinguished last month. The latter was recuperating from the inconsequential level of mere from an accident somewhere • in North' physical existence. • Africa. Lehman was "carrying on just as actively from his bed," according to "Meanwhile, those Americans who do Tavel. He assured the chaplain that his not want refugees here could have the "immobilization" was only temporary. - assurance that they were not legally here at all; while Americans of a more "I saw ,him for: a few moments shortly humanitarian • turn of mind and heart after he was put to bed," Chaplain Tavel could have the assurance that refu- reports. - "Yesterday I. went back . . . I gees were being cared for and this is, • carried a packet of items we are ac- therefore, a democratic solution, in customed to present to soldiers—a Jew- harmony with the traditional ingenuity ish Welfare Board prayer book, a Jewish and resourcefulness of Anglo-Saxon Welfare Board calendar, a mezuzzah, law making. • and a Book of Jewish Thoughts. The "As one looks it over, it seems, also, governor received them with thanks and Nvaiv interest." )4 be a fairly repulsive solution, But • Gift for Gov. Lehman Friday, May 5, 1944 Heard in The Lobbies By ARNOLD LEVIN (Copyright, 1044 Independent Jewish Press Service, Inc.) IMPENDING COURT SUIT The legal committee of the Emergency Committee to Save the Jewish People of Europe has decided to bring a suit against The Protestant magazine and its editor Kenneth Leslie, for carrying a re- cent article by Pierre Van Paassen against the Committee. Stating that the article libeled the Committee and its leaders, the Bergson group nonetheless is undecided about bringing suit against Van Paassen himself, but it feels that it must do so in order to sue the publisher. Spokesmen for the Committee have charged that the article was not written by Van Paassen. * * . OBJECT LESSON -It is comforting to turn away from such "Reverends" and "Fathers" as G. L. K. Smith and Coughlin and write a note about Rev. Karl M. Chworowsky of the Flatbush Unitarian Church of Brook- lyn, N. Y. In the week of the Ghetto Battle anniversary he devoted a Sun- day's service to the memory of the Jew- ish martyrs. The service closed with the playing of Hatikvah. Incidentally, his parish is in a neighborhood that seethed with Christian Front activity prior to Pearl Harbor (and probably still does). But the .Rev. Chworowsky is a courage- ous,_ defiant man. * * * ABOUT A. A. BERLE JR. A. -A. Berle Jr. is back from London. Speculation is still rife, and disagree- went is still strong, as to whether or not he is sympathetic to Jewish demands re- garding Palestine. Some will tell you that he ranks with Hurley, the oil emis sary, as an opponent of Jewish aims in Palestine, but being a good listener he has listened at length, and has shaken his head sympathetically, to pleas of Jewish delegations and that, of course, gave many the impression that he was sympathetic. * * THANK YOU, CONGRESSMAN, Thanks, from the bottom of our hearts, to Congressman White of Idaho, who for the second time has risen in the House to propose a Homeland for the Jews. Its location—Peru. He conceded that the region needs water, but still—he recommends it as a homeland. Without going into the demerits of all these "sub- stitute homelands" intermittently pro- posed for' the Jews, we would like to call the Congressman's attention to the fact that the Jewish people already has a Homeland, Palestine. We are not im- perialists, and are not seeking additional Homelands. However, we are• most grateful to him for his concern. His heart may be in the right place, but his information- is lagging . behind 1922, or he would know that the Jewish National Home in Palestine has been internation- ally recognized. by 53 governments. • - that is all the refugees ask for-7-a re- pulsive solution. Can. we give thein less?" •It is a depressing business, and at best the plan involves, 'as Mr. Grafton says; repulsive solutions.- But even the repulsive solutions have been slow in materializing. Will the War Refugee Board consider the plan sympathetically, and will it lend the matter a sense of dignity? After all, the fate of hundreds of thou- sands, possibly millions, is involved, and this country has a stake in decent solu- tion of the wor.ld's. - - - • - , Strictly Confidential By PHINEAS J. BIRON (Copyright: 1944, by Seven Arts Feature Syndicate) FISH IN TROUBLED WATERS The 30 accused seditionists on trial at Washington, • who are attempting to transform their treason indictment into a springboard for an anti-Semitic cam- paign, are only the small fry of the Fas- cist leadership in this country . . . The big fish are scared to 'death lest they be brought in as character witnesses for the defendants . . . One prominent Midwest- ern political figure got so hot and both- ered about the prospects of a subpoena that he has left for Mexico for a visit of indeterminate length. We wonder how columhist George. E. Sokolsky feels about the approval Fas- cist-minded George E. Deatherage has given him . . . Deatherage, a confirmed anti-Semite, recently described Sokolsky as "a Jew, but a fair one." Haj Amin' El Hussein, former Grand Mufti of. Jerusalem, has received from Hitler one of the fancier Nazi decora- tions, together with the promise of an independent Arab Palestine. * * * LISTEN HERE Culled from the London Jewish Week- ly: "Some of our American guests are leaving us: like the thief of Jonah, they come in the night and leave in the night . . . Almost desperately they seek pub- licity: press conferences, flying -visits, broadcasts, anything, as long as there is a story for the folks at home . . . I heard of one gentleman who made an appoint- ment to visit the Chief Rabbi and turned , up complete with photographer! . . . The group was duly photographed shaking hands, sitting around the table, discuss- ing - world problems . . . The picture hav- ing been taken, the meeting terminated - " We wonder whom the writer had in mind. * * * LITERARY DEPARTMENT What promises to be an ,excellent Brandeis biography is in the making . . Thee author is Susan Brandeis Gilbert, daughter of the late jurist. Audrey Wurdemann, the gifted young poet' who-is the wife of poet Joseph Aus- lander, is a direct_ descendent of the fa- mous English poet Percy Bysshe Shelley. Trude Weiss-Rosmarin is America's outstanding Jewish woman scholar . Be sure you read her latest book, "Juda- ism and Christianity." * * * SETTING THINGS STRAIGHT Don't put too much credence in that Washington rumor that Judge Samuel Rosenrnan may be chosen to fill the. next vacancy on the U: S. Supreme Court., Sidney Wallach is not, as we reported, a few columns ago, the publicity adviser of the Jewish Theological Seminary. * * * ABOUT PEOPLE A • probable visitor to this country in the early fall will be Dr. Chaim Weiz- mann. . .. Roy J. Stone; past president of the Co- lumbus, 0., Zionist District, may be his State's next Lieutenant-Governor . . . He is the Republican candidate . . • Fred Yenkin,. present Columbus Zionist prexy, thinks that - Roy is one of- this country's outstanding Jewish leaders. Meyer W. Weisgal was offered the ex- ecutive directorship of the American Jewish Conference we understand, how- ever, that he will decline it. 'The Common Thread' A Collection of Stories by a New Author, Michael Seide • The name Michael Side is certain to figure prciniinently on the booksellers' lists, judging by the excellence of his first collection of short stories, "The Common Thread," published by Har- court, Brace & Co. The book has 10 stories about BroOk- lyn, and . the characters, the Bellinsons and the Spewacks and the youngsters who hail from former Brest-Litovsky families emerge as interesting people who are finding their way in the Ameri- dan . environment. It is a set of stories that -reveals the conflict between the old and new gen- erations; the struggle between therelig- iotis and the ,irreverent, the magnetism of the .movie as against the poWers ,, of . Jewish _traditions. It is not a happy collection. The pathos of the newcomers to • this country, the struggle of, yoxing and ,old, the battle ,for exhiroa T stenze,_ e reflected in, "The , Common. ColleCtion is well worth reac;144.