Books Combat,Intolerance its the Editor Views the ATews... Douglass Story Symbol Of Struggle for Liberty The Stratton Bill Next Wednesday, the Judiciary Committee of the U. S. House of Representatives will commence public hearings on the measure introduced by Rep. John Stratton of Illinois, providing for the admission of 400,000 dis- placed persons—of all faiths—rover a period of four years. An effective educational campaign is in progress. Liberal newspapers like the Detroit News, the New York Post, PM and the N. Y. 'Herald Tribune have been very helpful edi- torially in this great humanitarian effort. EP, The campaign organized by the Michigan Committee on Displaced Persons with the assistance of labor, religious and hon-sectar- ian groups has helped to bring the issue to the attention of large numbers of people. The appearance here of the outstanding national backer of the measure, Earl G. Harrison, was an important factor in the local activities in behalf of the DPs. But the battle in behalf of the dispossessed survivors from Nazism is far from won, and it is of the utmost importance that overcon- fidence should be avoided in conducting the campaign to open America's doors to Hitler's unfortunate victims. Unless the humanitarian fighters for justice for the DPs are on the alert, the rising difficulties may become insurmountable. . * Proof of impending danger to efforts to liberalize immigration laws is provided by the outburst of Paul H. Griffith, national commander of the American Legion, who, in an angry tirade against immigrants, told the racist Daughters of the American Revo- lution last week that immigration has be- come a "lawless torrent," robbing the vet- eran and creating a fifth column, and that it is a "racket of specific racial, religious or economic groups." He claimed that immi- grants were entering the United States legally at the rate of 154,000 a year. and that "a fantastic number" were entering illegally. Principal opponents of immigration, in Congress, among them Senator Chapman Revercomb (R., W. Va.), who compiled a derogatory report on displaced persons after a brief visit to Europe last year, demanding an over-all survey of the DP problem before present immigration laws. are altered, iri or- der to promote "selective" immigration. Thus the Stratton bill is far from rescue. Shirley Graham, great-great-granddaughter of former Negro slave who had transformed his farmhouse into a station for the underground rail- way that was used to free slaves, has earned the $6,500 prize for her great book, "There Was Once a Slave: The Heroic Story of Frederick Douglass:* The award came from the publishers, Julian Mess- ner, Inc., 8 W. 40th St., New York 18, "for the best book combatting intolerance in America." Miss Graham, who has held a Julius Rosenwald Fellowship, not only has produced a splendid biography but has rendered a great service in presenting the life story of a great Negro in an unusually fascinating style and with a sympathy which must make friends for the oppressed. The completeness with which she relates the story of a great American who fought for freedom and or- ganized the masses—white and colored—for the cause of liberty will win admiration for the Negro and must enlighten 'Americans regarding the heroism of Douglass' race. - The Douglass biography will prove interesting to Jewish readers because of its .parallellisms to the Irgun today. The "madness" and martyrdom of John Brown is outlined by the author in detail, presenting both sides of the issue as to the wisdom of the attack on Harpers Ferry. In the end—in spite of Douglass' refusal to countenance Brown's madness of an attack on a government arsenal— the martyr emerges as a hero whose act provided the motto for the great battle for liberation of the Negroes: In reviewing the history of the fight for liberty Courtesy lastihrte foe Aiworicast Daamerocv. Isis. in Maryland, Miss Graham points out that "not until 1826 were Jews allowed to voN*3. This was just two years after thin, stoop-shouldered Ben- jamin Lundy came walking down out of the back- woods of Tennessee, a printing press on his back, Detroit's great 1947 Allied Jewish Campaign had many and began tOrning out the Genius of Universal merits which marked the setting of new standards for giving Emancipation, first antislavery journal to appear to overseas causes and for the support of our local social in the whole country. After the `Jew Bill' got by, Baltimoreans paid more attention to Lundy's service and educational activities. journal. There was talk of `outside influence': and Although we are not reaching the high goal assumed in one day Austin Woolfolk, a notoriously mean this year's campaign, the large sum we, are raising is so slave-trader, beat up the editor on the street and far above any previous total reached by Detroit Jewry in an nearly killed him." Disraeli, whose political activities Douglass Allied Jewish Campaign that there is good reason for rejoic- Watched in - London, is described (in quotation ing over a genuine triumph in fund-raising. We can assume from Richard Cobden) as: "He will sacrifice -any- that the goal set at the outset was a bit too high and that the thing for power." great Americans and Europeans introduced actual achievement came much. closer to the community's in The the book, the eminent figures Douglass met capacity for giving. here and abroad, the eminent Negro's rise to im- The most encouraging factor in the drive; which was so portant positions in our government—these and well managed by the general chairman, Mr. Fred M. Butzel, numerous other elements place Miss Graham's among the "musts" on every American's and the able director, Mr. Isidore Sobeloff, was the enrollment book reading list. Our Drive's Educational Merits of thousands of workers and the elevation to community leadership of many young people whose devotion to our people's needs has proven a real inspiration. The determination of the campaign workers • to carry on the campaign solicitations beyond the allotted time, in order to assuretotal coverage, is a clear indication of a strong community obligation. a - * Our campaign's educational merits have proven especially valuable in the training of leadership, in. cementing unity and in the enrollment of cooperation Which has resulted in the postponement of other community efforts so that nothing would be permitted to interfere with the drive's mercy ob- jectives. Whatever has been done until now must Men and women who either have personally survived be considered as a mere beginning in this the tragedies that were inflicted upon Jewry by the Nazis or great obligation to the men, women and who have visited displaced persons camps to study the situa- children who must find havens of refuge if tion in Europe, and messengers from Palestine addressed they are not to perish. Those who have called thousands of contributors. , upon members of Congress to act must renew a * their appeals. Those who have not yet acted There was a mingling of emotion with practical ap- must do so now. There is very-little time left, proaches in the drive, and the contrast between the two was either for action by Congress or to retain the especially in evidence at the campaign meeting at which Mr. will to survive among the DPs. Robert MacRae, managing director of- the Detroit Council of President Truman, the Justice and State Social Agencies, and Miss Molly Picon, noted Jewish actress, Departments have endorsed the Stratton Bill. were the guests. Now it is up to Congress to act. And it is OUR Mr. MacRae; the non-Jew, spoke philosophically—and duty to let Congress know the sentiments of certainly most sympathetically—about the spiritual values of all liberty-loving people. If WE -do not act, giving to the drive. Miss Picon, having recently returned from the bigots who become panicky, over the a .tour of displaced persons camps, expressed envy that she sound of the words "refugee," "immigrant" or could not discuss the _immense problems of the people who "DP" may succeed in keeping the doors to were dispossed by Hitlerism with calmness and detachment. America—the traditional Mother of Exiles— Then Mr. Butzel stepped in to indicate the need for a fusion shut tight for those who need her so badly. of all objectives in the drive, to impress his fellow-workers Determined action may win the battle for with the inseparability of our obligations to the overseas justice for the oppressed. Let us all have a causes with our duties to the agencies which retain strength share in such a victory. for the organized Jewish community of America. It is out of such discussions that our community emerges more understanding and stronger. a - a * Member Jewish Telegraphic Agency, Independent Jewish On three occasions, campaign workers heard the singing Press Service, Seven Arts Feature Syndicate, Religious News Service, Pateor Agency. of melodies that were brought to this country from concen- Member American Association of English-Jewish News- papers and Michigan Press Association. tration camps by survivors and by Americans who visited in Publisned every Friday by The Jewish News Publish- Europe since the end of the war. One of these songs—the ing Co., 2119 Penobscot Bldg., Detroit 26. Mich., RA. 7956. Subscription, $3 a year; foreign, $4. Club subscription. Song of the Partisans—was heard twice in Yiddish, in inter- every fourth Friday of the month, to all subscribers to pretations by Emma Schaver and the Gottlieb Brothers who Allied Jewish Campaign of Jewish Welfare Federation of Detroit. 40 cents pei year. survived Nazism. Last week Miss Picon sang this song in an Entered as second-class matter Aug. 6, 1942. at Post Of- fice, Detroit. Mich.. under Act of March 3, 1879. English translation she had improvised. The depths to which the audiences were moved by this hymn, whose concluding BOARD OF DIRECTORS lines—"We still are here"—eloquently affirm the Jewish will Maurice Aronsson Philip Slomovitz Fred M. Butzel Isidore Sobeloff to live, should serve as strongest assurance that the affluent Judge Theodore Levin Abraham Srere Jewish community of America is not forgetting the survivors Maurice H. Schwartz Henry Wineman abroad. PHILIP SLOMOVITZ. Editor Thus, the numerous lessons of the 1947 drive provide VOL. XI—NO. 11 reassurance that our community not only is strong but is MAY 30, 1947 growing from strength to strength—in its will to contribute Sabbath Scriptural Selections and to work for important causes, in the raising of its stand- This Sabbath, the twelfth day of Sivan, 5707, ards, in its willing acceptance of respontibilities to less for- the following Scriptural selections will be read in THE JEWISH NEWS our synagogues: Pentateuchal portion—Num. 4:21-8:89. Prophetical portion—Judges 13:2-25. • /* Friday, May 30, 1947 • THE JEWISH NEWS Page Four • 111 * Two Books of Merit in Battle Against Racial, Religious Bias Two new voluMes--Bucklin Moon's "The High Cost of Prejudice" and Goodwin Watson's "Action for Unity"—are excellent contributions to the literature aimed at mobilizing the battle for justice and against racial and religious prejudices. Mr. Moon's book (published by Julian Messner, 8 W. 40th St_ New York 18) declares as a con- clusion to an able study: "The Negro has been called the barometer of democracy, but he is far more than that. So long as we have no solution for the Negro problem, we have no solution for any minority problem. And so long as our false concepts of racial superiority continue. the Negro can never be an American. but more than that, Americans can never be free men." The author proves that the Negro's tragic role in America is comparable to the miseries suffered by Jews in Nazi Germany. and he shows how the Hitlerian scheme has gained ground in the world. Considerable space is given in the book to an expose of the quota system in American colleges aimed at restricting attendance of Jews, Negroes and Catholics. and bis book is especially valuable for its objective study of "The Prejudices of Those Prejudiced Against." In this chapter he shows how anti-Semitism grows among Negroes. but he denies that it is widespread. He makes much of the interesting point that "Jews in the United States are fighting to maintain their rights, while Negroes are fighting to win theirs." Mr. Watson's "Unity for Action" (published by Harper as Bros.) is a brilliant record of the battle for tolerance. , It is valuable for its survey of the forces which fight for justice as well as for its analysis of the groups that seek to set up racial and religious barriers against minorities. "Action for Unity" incorporates the report of the Planning Survey of the Commission on Com- munity Interrelations of the American Jewish Congress. Its presentation of the patterns for the fight for liberty is a splendid contribution to libertarian literature and action. Lives of Great American Jews Emma Ehrlich Levinger, whose short stories have thrilled young and old alike, has produced another excellent book. Her "The Golden Door." just re- leased by Bloch Publishing Co., has great histori- cal merit, the stories being woven around the lives of great American Jews. There is a story about the Rev. Gershom Mendes Seixas, the rabbi of New York's Congregation Shearith Israel in the year (1776) when the British captured New York. Abram Mordecai is the hero of a narrative In which he is revealed as the first Jewish settler in Alabama. Rebecca Gratz, Judah Touro, Mordecai Manuel Noah, Uriah P. Levy, Emma Lazarus, Hayna Solo- mon, Isaac Franks and others are among the prominent American Jews to whom the 18 stories are devoted by Mrs. Levinger. Israel A. Fiedler is the book's illustrator. While the stories are reprints from two earlier works by Mrs.,tLievin . ger, "The Golden Door* tunate people, in an eagerness to be better informed. From these points of view, it must generally be, admitted should arouse:Wide - interest and deserves a large that we bad a very good campaign. sale. •