6—THE.JEWISH NEWS Friday, September 3, 1948 `Welcome to Tel Aviv' A. M. Klein Honored By French-Canadians For His Poetic Work A. M. Klein, eminent Canadian Jewish poet, member of McGill University faculty, is receiving high commendations for a set of his poems which have been issued for French-Canadian readers. in a special pamphlet with a tribute to his genius in an essay in French by Jean-Marie Poirier. Mr. Klein's splendid poems in- cluded in this pamphlet are: "Grain Elevator," "The Cripples (Oratoire de St. Joseph)," "The Breakup," "Air-Map," "For the Sisters of the Hotel Dieu," "M. Bertrand," "Frigidaire," and "Pa- rade of St. Jean Baptiste." Of special interest in connec- tion with Mr. Klein's excellent poetical works is the following editorial in the Saturday Night of Toronto under the heading "A Cosmopolitan City": "It is not without significance that —International News Photo Arriving in a convoy from Jerusalem, a tiny refugee is wel- comed to Tel Aviv by fighting men of the Haganah forces. The infant arrived in one of the first convoys since the truce to pass from the Holy City, through Arab lines, under UN supervision. Apology for the South Cohn's "Where I Was Born and Raised" Condones Segregation David L. Cohn writes well and knows the South. He was born and raised there and loves the place. He proves it in his "Where I Was Born and Raised" .(pub- lished by Hotighton Mifflin Co., Boston). In a sense, he is an ap'ol- ogist for his birthplace, as Prov- en by the following: "Since the deep-seated mores of a people cannot be changed by law„ and since segregation is the most deep-seated and pervas- ive of the Southern white mores, it is evident that he who at- tempts to abolish it by law runs risks of incalculable gravity. There are nonetheless whites and Negroes who would break down segregation by Federal fiat. Let them beware. I have little doubt that in such a case the country would find itself nearing civil war." He admits: "This is obviously less than de-' mocracy . . . . It squares neither with the nation's Christianity nor its constitutionalism. It is expediency . . . And let us bear in mind that there has never been a government—indeed, no organized religion — which has not at some time compromised with the logic of its own institu- tions." So—it is expediency!. But the story he tells is most interesting. Actually, his book is in two parts. The first is a re- print of a volume he wrote in 1935 and the second tells of his return visit to the Delta, to his Mine town of Greenville, Miss. He refers to the Jews in the Delta: "The Jews, by legend both intellectual and shrewd, seem` in this soft climate to have lost both these qualities. They a r e distinguished neither by learning nor by riches. The na- tional frenzy for uniformity is at work here as elsewhere in the United States." We learn that "this is the land of the Democratic party, come hell and high water." It remains to be seen what Mississippi will do in the coming election. Here is another explanation for the anti-Negro attitude of t h e South: "It is obvious that there can be no Negro problem where there are no Negroes. Nor where there are few Negroes, as in Ver- Mont." To Cohn, the Negro is a well-. treated person whom the South loves but must keep segregated. He relate numerous stories about Negro intelligence and thrift, Negro looseness and habit for ly- ing, the sex problem and other issues affecting the race prob- lem. There is a very good story about Simon Levy, the Jewish peddler, and there are tales, sub- stantiated by names and places, which make excellent reading. It is a beautifully written book which will enchant t h e reader and will make many a person mad because of the pro- segregation attitude of the au- thor. In any event, it is a book eminently worthwhile reading. JDC Aided Cyprus Jews With Sum of $1,555,000 On the approach of the second anniversary .of its assistance pro- grams for Jewish refugees in- terned in Cyprus, Moses A. Lea- vitt, executive vice chairman of the Joint Distribution Committee, reported yesterday that the JDC had appropriated more than $1,- 555,000 in behalf of the 50,000 Palestine-bound Jewish Trier* women and children who have passed through the island in the past two years. . In a review of the Cyprus op- eration, Mr. Leavitt pointed out that 'every' Cyprus refugee has been assisted in one form or another through JDC relief and rehabilitation aid - in the camps." At the present time, he said, 11,000 Jews remain in the Cyprus camps. 4,000 Jewish Houses Unclaimed WARSAW, (JTA...)—The sim- rlifiediJ 1 oceaure for filing claims for the restitution of property in Poland owned by the victims of Nazi persecution, or their heirs, will be discontinued after Dec. 31. A government announcement revealed that in the Warsaw dis- trict alone there are still 4,000 buildings which belonged to Jews before the start of World War II that are listed as unclaimed. • Tri-Lingual Jewish Book Annual NEW YORK.—The seventh volume of the tri-lingual Jewish Book Anpual, which contains articles on . English-Jewish, Yid- dish and Hebrew literary produc- tivity, literary anniversaries, bibliographies and trends in the United States, Palestine and Europe, is in the press and due for publication in September. This has. been announced by the Jewish Book Council, which pub- lishes the work. one of the best pieces of criticism of Canadian English-language poetry to appear in Canada this year should be in French, in a French-language re- view ("Relations" of Montreal), and from the pen of • a French-speaking member of the Society of Jesus. It is combined with an appreciation of an artist of the, brush who is also not of the 'French group; and it is not with- out even greater significance that both the artist in verse and the artist in paint are Jews, and that both have exhibited the extraordinary capacity to penetrate sympathetically the mind and soul of French Canada. The poet is A. M. Klein. now of the English Department of McGill University. The painter is Louis Muhlstock, whose studies of the poorer quarters of Mon- treal have been seen in many Canadian exhibitions. Both Are members of Eastern European families which set- tled- in Montreal about the turn of the century. "Father Albert Regimbal, S.J.. pays glowing tribute to the sensitivity of these artists, members of • a race so different from the two which for cen- turies have -dwelt on opposite sides of the English Channel, and have come together in the modern Montreal of which both are citizens. The book of Klein on which he comments is the "Poems on French Canada," and he finds in it "a soul which vibrates in unison with ours.' that is with the soul of French Canada. And Muhl- stock, he finds, likewise "consecrates his inmost self to the task of recording in beauty the things that we have most intimately cherished." "Few 'native' writers in English have earned, and we fear not many have deserved, this generous praise from a French Canadian source for rich understanding of French Canadi- an matters. We are the more delighted to draw attention to this article, be- cause there is an impression among Canadians of English tongue that the French Canadians are even less dis- posed than ourselves to render justice to the immense contribution which our citizens of Jewish origin are making- to a broad Canadian culture. It . may be interesting to add that Mr. Klein has recently received an award, the Edward Bland Fellowship. from a Foundation created and financed by American Negroes." JSSB Stresses Continuing Need Of Foster Home Care for Children . One of the constant community demands for which the supply is never adequate is the need for foster parents who will provide the love and security some Jewish children have been unable to re- ceive in their own homes. The Jewish Social Service Bureau Chil- dren's Department had under its care 130 boys and girls during the past year, but the statistics mean little until they are translated into 130 individual children, all dif- ferent, all lonely, all needing af- give her a home and she needs a fection and a family life to help permanent place to live. them grow into normal and well With a place to come home to adjusted adults. Take Elsa for every day and the security of a example . . . foster family where she can feel Now 12 years old, Elsa has she "belongs," Elsa will be able known more adventures already to continue with the excellent ad- than the average American ex- justment she has made so far. periences in three times that long. She is a little shy with people at Her story is not really unusual first because the shifting around nowadays. She is a refugee. that she has done has made Iler Just an average looking little wonder if there is a family any- girl with good , intelligence, Elsa where who would want to give her a home until she is old enough is not a problem child. She gets to take care of herself. along well in school and the If you have room in your home people who are giving her tern- for a normal, healthy, 12-year- porary care find that she is co- old girl who really needs your operative and helpful. But Elsa's help and affection, please call relatives here in Detroit cannot Grace Polansky at the Jewish Social Service Bureau, TR. 2-4080, and sate will be most happy to talk to you about Elsa or about Young Judaea Camp some of the other children for whom the Children's Department Completes First Year is seeking homes. The Jewish Social Service Bureau, which is Tel Yehudah, the first nation- a Red Feather service of the Com- al camp of Young Judaea, has munity Chest and a member successfully completed its first agency of the Jewish Welfare season of operation. Functioning Federation, pays a monthly fee on a model and experimental to cover your expenses in provid- basis, Tel Yehudah has succeed- ing a foster home. ed in creating a dynamic Jewish community of young people aged 14 to 17. ROSH HASHANA and The camp was located in the YOM KIPPUR SERVICES heart of the Blue Ridge Moun- Sponsored by the tains at Brandeis Camp Institute Downtown . Synagogue of the South, in Hendersonville, Oct. 4th-5th-13th N.C. A group of 99 campers in the with a staff of 20, under the di- rection of Norman. Schanin, ex- SPACIOUS AUDITORIUM ecutive director of National of the Young Judaea, formed the Tel G.A.R. RECREATION BLDG. Yehudah community. The camp- 1942 Grand River, Cora Cass Rabbi Herman Rosenwasser, ers came from many parts of assisted by Cantor. Call or write the country and represented a for reservations — 1205 Griswold, cross-section of American Jewish WO. 2-7307. Reservations $5.00 per person. Children welcome. youth. ,CAKES FOR ALL OCCASIONS t.4 4 Ir4 Beautifully Designed & Created In All Sizes and Shapes! • Weddings All Special Cakes ft 'r All Special Occasions! • Showers • Bar Mitzvahs, Etc. Zeman's New York Bakery Seven-Year Residents To Get Legal Status . 8735 TWELFTH ST. Call or Visit Store and See Photos of Our Work Persons who have resided' in this country for the past seven years, either as students, visitors, or as immigrants who arrived without visas, may now legalize their status in accordance with a new law recently signed by the President which amends the terms of the Immigration Act. The free consultation and af- fidavit facilities of HIAS He- brew Immigrant Aid Society), 425 Lafayette St., New York, have been offered to all who are now eligible and who wish to be assisted in their applications for legalization of their im- migration status, it has been an- nounced by Isaac L. Asofsky, the society's executive director. (1). IVO INSURE EVERY- liAtOG REGARDLESS OF LOCA110t1 .0.,(■■•(■4•4■4 New Israeli Currency For the. Good of the Nation: TEL AVIV (JPS)—A total of 6,535,000 new Israeli pounds ($26,140;000) were in circulation at the close of the second day of their issuance, according to the first in a series of weekly bal- Democrat — 15th. Congressional District ance sheets published by the is- Michigan's only member of five major 'committees in Congress; suance department of the Anglo- Member of the powerful Ways and Means Committee Palestine Bank here. The figure Congressman Dingell is a represents more than a quarter consistent and pioneer sup- of the total of 25,000,000 pounds ($100,000,000) estimated to be in I porter of the cause of Israel. circulation in Israel. He has consistently sup- ported legislation for the admission of DPs to the United States and refused to the end to compromise his stand against anti-Jew- ish and anti-Catholic pro- visions in the last DP bill. REELECT TO CONGRESS HON. JOHN D. DINGELL ICIEAC N BORSCHT ... SCHAV DELICIOUS mow AIR CHILLED I I i I i i I. To assure Progressive and Liberal Action in Congress 1 VOTE FOR REPRESENTATIVE JOHN D. DINGELL E i I I I 1 At the Primaries on September 14 and at the i November Election 1 .,...)...).....),..,-,....).-)-)-.),...)...)....),-.)-1.-,...),-.).-,-.).-,-,,...)....)....),-,).....1-)...q...)...)....),..-