Monsky's Wife, Close Associate, Describe His Life in Biography A Review of "Henry Monsky: The Man and His Work" by Dr. Abram L. Sachar Henry Monsky was cut off in his 57th year, just when he was coming into undisputed leader- ship of American Jewish life. He had built a superb service instru- ment, Bnai Brith, into the largest and most popularly rooted or- ganization in American Jewish history, a disciplined phalanx of nearly 300,000 men and women. He had pioneered an over-all representative Jewish body, the American Jewish Conference, to carry with authentic voice the Jewish people into the councils of the nations. These were seminal achieve- ments which climaxed a host of lesser ones and they fructified every area of Jewish life. And they were accomplished in less than 10 years, in a whirlwind of energy and resourcefulness, from the time he took over the Bnai Brith presidency at 47 until his untimely passing. The volume under review tells why. It is written by the two people who knew Henry Monsky best, who shared his thinking, and who helped him in the ful- fillment of his ends. The first part is an intimate memoir by 'his wife which concentrates on personality and the basic motiva- tions of the man. Daisy Monsky has the same dignified restraint and the whimsicality point up all the more clearly the inner springs of the man. The second portion of the volume is more formal and rep- resents Henry Monsky's public career, the side of Monsky best known' to his close collaborator, the Bnai Brith secretary, Maurice Bisgyer. The task is harder here for it was necessary to bring to- gether a vast amount of corres- pondence and to synthesize a world of experience. Bisgyer has proven most skillful in distilling the essentials of Monsky's policies in every field of his interest. Here the man is revealed as the consummate negotiator, the brilliant advocate, the courageoui crusader for many causes. Bis- gyer takes the story through Monsky's relationships with con- temporary leadership. In all these relationships Monsky saw his goal clearly. It was to bring unity into the chaos of Jewish institutional life; to utilize the resources of organization for service, to the dispossessed and the disinherited, to the war effort and the needs of peace, to the defense program, to Jewish edu- cation. Both portions of the volume, then, dovetail into an admirable symposium. The wife's intimate understanding, the astute woman- ly touches, and the secretary's more official account of steward- ship, the appraisal of achieve- ment. This is not the kind of volume that has popular glamour. Its subject was not a prima donna whose eccentricities made good publicity and had states- manship. But it is an extremely useful volume for the light that it casts on Jewish life in one of the fateful decades of modern history. It belongs in the library of those who are deeply con- cerned with the fate and future of the Jewish people and of those who look for integrity and selflessnes in Jewish leadership. Honor 5 For 'Democratic Legacy' Silver medallions for "distinguished contributions towards Ameri- ca's Democratic Legacy" will be awarded by the Anti-Defamation League of Bnai Brith to the five prominent Americans shown above: (left to right), Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt, U. S. Delegate to the United Nations Commission on Human Rights; Barney Balaban, who organ- ized the spectacular Freedom Train; Darryl Zanuck, producer of the film "Gentleman's Agreement"; Dore Schary, whose production of "Crossfire" pioneered in bringing the problem of anti-Semitism to the screen, and Charles E. Wilson, chairman of the President's Commit- tee on Civil Rights. Presentations will be made at ADL's annual con- ference in Los Angeles. The presentation ofthe awards will be the basis for a coast-to-coast broadcast over the CBS network, Saturday, May 8, 8:30 p.m., EDST. The program will feature Hollywood stars Robert Young and Celeste Holm. Stars in UJA Films and Radio Three outstanding Hollywood stars (left to right), EdWard G. Robinson, Glenn Ford and John Garfield, are among the many top personalities of the entertainment world who are contributing their services to the current $250,000,000 United Jewish Appael. Mr. Rob- inson appears in a new campaign film, "Where Do You Get Off?" which presents a compelling panorama of the Jewish people in Eu- rope Cyprus and Palestine, while Mr. Ford, in the motion picture, "Make It Real," dramatizes the plight of the Jewish children in Europe. In the radio play, "And in the Meantime," Mr. Garfield por- trayed a newspaperman who accompanies a group of homeless or- phaned Jewish children on their odyssey across Europe to Palestine. The $250,000,000 UJA supports the worldwide relief, rehabilitation and resettlement programs of the Joint Distribution Committee, the United Palestine Appeal and the United Service for New Americans. It receives its funds in Detroit from the Allied Jewish Campaign. General Clay Warns Of Nazi Resurgence FRANKFURT, (JPS) — Warn- ings of Nazi resurgence in Ger- many came from two quarters last week — from Lt. Gen. Lu- cius D. Clay, American Military Governor, and from part of a group of 78,former German pris- oners of war who received school- ing in democracy during their detention in the United States and were sent back to Germany as missionaries of democracy. General Clay, at a press con- ference here, predicted that Ger- many's surviving Nazis will try a strong political comeback. At the same time it was reported that U. S. and German officials skispect that a fraud in the Weis- baden city elections helped the National Democratic Party, al- legedly supported by ex-Nazis, win unexpected success. Hamlin to Address Arlazaroff Victory Affair on Wednesday Isaac Hamlin, national secre- tary of the Histadrut Gewerk- shaften campaigns, will be the guest speaker at a victory .affair at Lachar's next Wednesday eve- ning, arranged by Arlazaroff branch of Jewish National Work- ers' Alliance to celebrate the branch's exceeding its .$100,000 goal to the Gewerkshaften. All members are urged to participate in the celebration. Cantor Robert Tulman of Temple Israel, will present the musical program and will lead in community singing. Arlazaroff Branch recently was designated as the outstanding Farband Branch of the country in recognition of its efforts on behalf of the upbuilding of Pales- tine, particularly through its leadership and support of the Histadrut. Last Sunday, Arlazaroff branch staged a Third. Seder at the Labor Zionist Institute. The program featured songs by Pavel Slaven- - sky, accompanied by Bella Gold-. beeg; community singing, led by Louis Levine and talks by Na- hum Weissman and P. Slomovitz. David Sislin was chairman. Economic Reconstruction Mapped for Jews of Bogota Whitman's Biography Sheds Light On Personality of David Lilienthal Wilson Whitman's "David Lilienthal: Public Servant in a Power Age," published by Henry Holt & Co., throws interesting light on the personality of the man who heads the important U. S. Atomic Energy Commission. -- We learn from this very important book that Lilienthal's father was an immigrant who prepared for citizenship practically on the day he landed in this country and began to study the English lan- taken by Senator Vandenberg in guage. He was happy over the his behalf led to endorsement of fact that his son the President' ; choice of Lilien- studied 1 a w in thal for this job. preference t o He is not interested in Jewish entering t h e affairs, but has nevertheless family business. taken time to lecture on and to David was grad- support the Lowdermilk Plan uated from for a Palestine Valley Authority. Harvard at 23, He is close to many Zionist lead- specializing i n ers. public service Whitman's biographical sketch law. He handled of Lilienthal is exceedingly in- labor cases and teresting and should clarify many litigation for the points about the very able man City of Chicago D. Lilienthal who was sadly maligned when and later • together with other his name was -..tp in the Senate lawyers, appeared in a famous for confirmation for his present case against the Illinois Tele- world-important job. phone Co. He also distinguished himself in a case involving the Railway Labor Act. While he could have made a fortune as a corporation lawyer, he preferred to devote himself to public services. He was sec- Eugene Siegel, 69, chairman of retary of the American Bar As- the board of the B. Siegel Co., sociation Standing Committee on president of the American Lady Public Utilities Law, lectured on Corset Co., and president of the this subject at Northwestern Uni- Jacob Siegel Corp., died Monday versity and although very young evening at Harper Hospital. in years was accepted as an au- Funeral services were held thority on this subject. Wednesday at the Hamilton In 1933 he was named by Funeral Chapel. Dr. B. Benedict President Roosevelt as director Glazer officiated. Burial was at of the Tennessee Valley Author- Woodmere Cemetery. ity and at once became one of Mr. Siegel had suffered a heart the famous men in the New Deal attack last Saturday night at his administration. It will be recalled that when residence, 51 W. Boston. He is survived by two sisters, he was named to head the Atomic Energy Commission, Mrs. Benjamin Siegel and Mrs. there was a battle against con- Emil Amberg. firmation of his appointment in THE JEWISH NEWS-7 the U.S. Senate, and the lead Friday, May 7, 1948 Business Leader Siegel Dies at 69 NEW YORK—An urgent ap- peal for a loan of $1,000,000 to reconstruct the economic life of Bogota Jewry, which was vir- tually wrecked during the recent riots in the Colombia capital, has been issued by the Jewish Emer- gency Aid Committee of that city which was organized through the initiative of Maximo Yagupsky, director of the American Jewish Committee for South America. According to information re- JWB Leader Dies at 54 MONTREAL—Benjamin Rab- ceived by Dr. John Slai,vson, ex- ecutive director of the American inowitz, director of the Jewish Jewish Committee, the financial Center Division of the National Jewish Welfare losses suffered by the Bogota Board, and vet- Jewish community during the eran Jewish so- disturbances amounted to 9,600,- cial worker, died 000 pesos. Jewish business losses April 28 in the outside Bogota came to 1,500,000 Jewish General pesos. These figures do not in- Hospital, Mon- clude debts of several million treal, after a pesos owed by non-Jews to Jew- brief illness. He ish business men. (At the cur- had gone to rent rate of exchange, the dollar Montreal on a will purchase two and one-half field trip related pesos.) Rabinowitz to the JWB Sur- vey Report. He would have been Violinist Brought to U. S. 53 on July 4. SAN FRANCISCO: — With the violin he managed to salvage through thousands of miles of travel and yearsf*:, of cruel Jap- anese occupation tucked under his arm, Sol Krone, Berlin musician, who hopes to join an Ameri- can dance band. arrived in San Francisco from Shanghai aboard Sol Krone the S. S. General Gordon, along with his wife, Ilse, and their six-year-old daughter, Dinah. The child was bOrn in the slum ghetto of Shanghai along the Whangpoo River. HIAS issued the corporate affidavits by means of which the musician and his little family were enabled to enter the United States. Raphael ,Szereszowski Dies NEW YORK, (JTA)—Rephael Szereszowski, Jewish communal leader in pre-war Poland and member of the Polish parliment from 1922 to 1927, died here at the age of 79. He arrived in the United states in 1941, after mak- ing his way. across Asia and em- -barking at Shanghai. COLLEGE PARK CAMERA SHOP Now in Our New Location 7401 W. McNICHOLS RD. 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