A- 12 First Village Unit Assured: Mrs. Aaron DeRoy Gives $6,000 For Fresh Air Camp Expansion — THE JEWISH NEWS Friday, January 7, 1949 Speaks Here Jan. 17 4K:p; •:':rw,zmy Early construction'of the first village unit in Fresh Air Camp's new expansion program has been assured by a gift of $6,000 from Mrs. Aaron DeRoy. Announcement of Mrs. DeRoy's gift was made this week by Barney Smith president of the Fresh Air Society, sponsor- ing agency of the Brighton, Mich., camp. Mrs. DeRoy has been a .member of the Society's board of directors for almost 20 years. The gift will provide for five cabins and a wash house, grouped together in village fashion, hous- ing 40 campers and five coun- selors. Expansion of Fresh Air Camp along these lines is in ac- cordance with the newest trends of decentralization in children's camping and group work, Irwin Shaw, Fresh Air Camp director, explained. The Fresh Air So- ciety has long been interested in the development of decentralized camping, Shaw declared, not only for its group work possibil- ities, but as a means of gradual expansion of camping facilities, to help ease the current crowd- ed conditions at the camp and to provide additional facilities for accomodation of many chil- dren _who must be turned away each summer. In honor of Mrs. DeRoy's ef- forts in behalf of Fresh Air Camp, the new unit will be nam- ed the Helen DeRoy Village, Smith announced. This gift is in accordance with Mrs. DeRoy's long-standing interest in youth activities in the community, he stated, noting her previous gifts to the Jewish Community Cen- ter. In addition to membership on the Fresh Air and Center boards, Mrs. DeRoy is active on Jewish Welfare Federation Board of Governors and on the board of its Women's Division. The DeRoy village will be a self-contained unit, for housing and programming, with camp- ers in one age group, either boys or girls. Their only regular con- tact with the rest of the camp will be at meals and at special all-camp activities, Shaw said. This decentralization will make possible more individualized at- tention for each camper, as well as allowing for more camper- planned activities he added. Fresh Air Society has been providing summer vacations for children . of the Detroit Jeikish community since 1903. The present campsite on Blaine Lake, seven miles from Brighton, was established in 1925. Last sea- son, 625 different boys and girls, 51 per cent of whom received part of full camperships, were cared for at the camp. Further camp expansion in the village unit plan may be made possible by similar gifts from members of the community, Smith stated. In Israel It is `Who WAS Who' The practice of changing_ names • and the adoption of Hebrew names in Israel by prominent educators, lead- ers, government officials and military men is causing minor difficulties. There have been so many name changes, that, to avoid con- ' fusion, it has been suggest- ed that the country's "Who's Who" should be called "Who WAS Who." Purely Commentary By PHILIP SLOMOVITZ Religion and State to be Separate in - Israel Interesting assurances come from Israel that religion and state will operate as separate entities and that there is little to fear from the warnings that have come from some quarters against theocratic threats in the Jewish State. - Israeli leaders, interviewed for the Bnai Brith National Jewish Monthly by the noted Jewish author, Prof. Joseph Patai, made their. positions very clear. Rabbi Judah L. Fishman, Minister of Religion_ in the Israeli Cabinet, dispelled the expressed fears and declared: "We will not rule the State with the power of religion, but we will use the spirit of religion to uplift our people and our land and to raise its place as a moral force among the nations of the world. We will not force our way into the private life of the individual, either by religious law or religious taxation; but we want to see to it that the taxpayers' money will not be used against religion." Rabbi Fishman was emphatic in his statement that there is nothing in Judaism "which strives to impose theocratic rule on the State of Israel. There is nothing to justify any fear of casuistry. We do not seek the imposition of the 613 command- ments. We request that only three be recognized. The first of these is that the State shall not oblige a person to break religious law against his will, such as he might be forced to do in main- taining public services. Above all, therefore, we demand that the Sabbath be the official day of rest for the people of Israel. When we demand kashrut, we do not intend to snoop into the housewife's kitchen, but we do feel that State institutions should consider the feelings of the observant Jew . . . The third point concerns Jewish jurisprudence. Every nation has its typical law and we too have ours . . . I do not recommend the rejection of international law, but the source of our jurisprudence should derive from Jewish law." A qualifying statement made by Yitzshak Gruenbaum, Minister of the Interior, adds the following interesting comment to these views: "Israel's sages have always interpreted the letter of the law to the spirit of the times and to conditions prevailing in their day." The Chief Rabbis of the Tel Aviv AShkenazic and Sephardic com- munities corroborated Rabbi Fishman's statements, thus giving them authoritative status. Prof. Patai expresses the view that Rabbi Fish- man's interview "left me more with a feeling that Judaism, far from being on the offensive for the creation of a theocratic state, was on the defensive to maintain its rightful place in Israel." An important problem appears to have been clarified by these views. Equally as important are the attitudes of other members of Israel's Cabinet. Thus, the Israeli State Council recently decided, by a vote of 29 to 7, to approve a kosher food ordinance for the Israeli army, and the Ministers of Defense and Religion were authorized to put the new law into effect, thereby fulfilling one of the wishes of the religious community. By continuing such policies, conflicts on the score of religious differences should be avoided in the Jewish State. Another interesting point which should be mentioned in this connection is the provision in the Israeli constitution that: "The Sabbath and the Jewish Holy Days shall be days of rest and spiritual elevation and shall be recognized as such in the laws of the country. The Holy Days of other religious de- nominations shall equally be recognized as legal days of rest for the members of such denominations." The constitution also provides for the establishment of religious courts which should have "jurisdiction in matters of personal status and of religious foundations and endowments." With such guarantees in force, the fears of suppression among religious elements should be allayed, just as the anxieties of those who desire to separate state from religion should similarly be relieved. An important issue appears to have been solved, by the state- ments of the Israeli leaders and by the Israeli constitution itself. NATHAN AUSUBEL Nathan Ausubel, eminent au- thor, traveler and translator, whose latest work, "Jewish Folk- lore," is rated among the best works of its kind ever published, will speak in the Butzel Hall of the Jewish Center at 8:30 p.m. Monday, Jan. 17. Admission will be free. Congress Leaders File Protests on Cyprus Detentions A delegation representing the Michigan Council of the Ameri can Jewish Congress, headed by Mrs. Samuel Green and Albert Silber, presidents, on Monday met with Detroit British Con- sulate officials to protest the policy of the British government in forcibly detaining thousands of Jews on the Island of Cyprus. A statement addressed to Sir Oliver Franks, British' Ambassa- dor in Washington, left with the local Consulate, denounced the British government for flaying the articles of the Magna Carta, the original manuscript of which was returned to England last week. "There are thousands of Jews forcibly detained on the Island of Cyprus,. by order of your gov- ernment, where they are lang- uishing in concentration camps . . . Their only crime is their pasSionate belief in and dedica- tion to the principles ‘ of the Magna Carta. Yet they continue to be imprisoned, in violation of every principle of law, justice and humanitarianism and in de- fiance of the guarantees of in- dividual freedom your fore- fathers won . . . unless your gov- ernment immediately provides for their release it will have to suffer inevitable judgement of mankind" . . . the statement de- clared. Midrasha• Opens Second Session The second quarter of the Mid- rasha (College of Jewish Studies) will open on Thursday evening, Jan. 13, in the Rose Sittig Cohen building. In addition to Hebraic courses, there will be offered courses in the teaching of Jewish history, arts and crafts and music. These courses are especially designed for Hebrew and religious school teachers. A series of lectures and discus- sions on the American Jewish community will be given. Thurs- days, from 8:10 to 10 p.m., the subjects will include: "Jewish Community Organization," Jan. 13, 20, 27, Isidore Sobeloff, ex- ecutive director, Jewish Welfare Federation; "Community Rela- tions," Feb. 3, 10, Oscar Cohen, director, Jewish Community Council; "Social Agencies," Feb. 17, 24, Harold Silver, director, Jewish Social Service Bureau; "Religious Trends," March 3, 10, 17, Rabbi Morris Adler, Rabbi Leon Fram. Registration will continue through Jan. 13. There will be a $2 registration fee. The Midrasha is conducted under the auspices of the United Hebrew Schools. For further information call TO. 8-0063. Dr. Ruth Gruber to Addres s JNF Women's Event on Jan. 16 Dr. Ruth. Gruber, noted jour- nalist, lecturer, author and world traveler, whose last book, "Des- tination Palestine: The Story of Haganah Ship Exodus 1947" has been hailed as one of the most important volumes dealing with the Palestinian issue, will be the guest speaker at the annual donor event of the Ladies' Auxiliary of the Jewish National Fund, at 2:30 p. m. Sunday, Jan. 16, in the main auditorium of the Masonic Tem- ple. Mrs. Jack Rosenthal, president, Mrs. I. Walter Silver, chairman of the program committee, and Mrs. Peter Chodoroff, fund-rais- ing chairman, stated this week that more • than 4,000 people are expected to attend this gather- ing, every donor being entitled to bring an escort to the annual event. They stated that admis- sion cards still are available to all contributors who may send their gifts. either to =members of the auxiliary, the fund-raising workers or through the JNF Council office, 11816 Dexter, TO. a-7384. •Featured Artists The Jan. 16 program will fea- ture Shoshana Damari and Joseph Goland, Israel's outstanding mus- ical revue stars, in "Israel Fights, Sings and Smiles," with Mosheh Wilensky, Israeli composer, at the piano. D'r. Gruber recently returned from Israel and Europe where she has visited many times. She covered the United Nations Spe- cial Committee on Palestine hear- ings, UN sessions in Lake Suc- cess and Paris and was. with the Exodus 1947 passengers in Haifa, upon their arrival in Israel, in France and in the German camp where they were sent by the British. She saw them again upon their return to Israel. . When President Franklin D. Roosevelt invited 1,000 refugees from Europe to settle in Oswego, N. Y., in 1944, Dr. Gruber was sent by the U. S. government to bring them to this country. On the ship, which narrowly escaped disaster from air raids and sub- marines, she got to know the refugees individually and record- ed their sagas. Later, she helped Prepare them for life in this country. Noted Foreign Correspondent As foreign correspondent for the New York Post and later for the New York Herald Tribune, on whose staff she continues to serve, she has traveled tens of thousands of miles and covered the world scene wherever it af- fected Jewish refugees and set- DR. RUTH GRUBER • tiers in Israel. Her articles on Cyprus, where she made a study of Jewish conditions, the DP camps and Israel have appeared in Collier's, _Survey Graphic, Life and numerous other magazines. Born in Brooklyn, N. Y., Miss Gruber was acclaimed the young- est Doctor of Philosophy in the world when she took a Ph.D., summa cum laude, at the age of 20, at the University of Cologne. On recommendation of the Gug- genheim Foundation she was awarded the Yardley Foundation Fellowship by the New Jersey Federation of Women's Clubs. Open Meeting Monday The Ladies' Auxiliary of the JNF will hold an open meeting at 12:30 p.m. Monday, Jan. 10, at the Beth Shmuel Syangogue, Dexter at Buena Vista. Hostesses for the afternoon will be Mes- dames A: Ilson, B. Harrison and M. Katinsky. • Additional donors of $100 and more include: Mrs. N. Linden, $450; Mesdames J. Lipshitz, David Iwrey, I. Liebson, S. Levine, Breznitzer Aid Society, $100 each. Between You and Me By BORIS SMOLAR (Copyright, 1949, Jewish Telegraphic Agency, Inc.) Presidential Notes President Truman may attend a dinner which will be tendered in New York in honor of Israeli President Dr. Chaim Weizmann in February . . . By that time the national elections in Israel will be over and de jure recognition of the Jewish State will have been granted by the United States . . . The dinner is being arranged by the group which is financing the Weizmann Institute in Rehovoth . . . Originally, Dr. Weizmann was to have addressed this dinner from Israel over the radio . .. However, iri view of the indication by President Truman that he may honor Dr. Weizmann personally, the Israeli President will come to New York to attend the affair. Communal Affairs Will Henry Morgenthau, Jr. -, accept the chairmanship of the United Jewish Appeal for 1949? . .. This question is being asked now, on the eve of the national conference of Jewish leaders at Atlantic City where the UJA quota for the new year will be decided upon . . . Delegates at the conference will hear a report that only about $160,000,000 has been raised toward the $250,000,000 goal of the 1948 drive . . . In the light of this report the question will be what the 1949 goal should be . . . There is strong sentiment in favor of again proclaiming a $250,000,000 quota for 1949, since the JDC obligations for the new year are no smaller than of the year just concluded .. . Not to speak of the fact that the obligations of the UPA this year will be much greater than any other year in its history . . . An analysis of the obstacles met by Jewish community organizations trying to reach their goals will be made at the General Assembly of the Council of Jewish Federations and Welfare Funds which will open its sessions in Philadelphia a day after the UJA con- ferences concludes in Atlantic City. About 100 Jewish social agencies in 43 cities have enrolled in the National Health and Welfare Retirement Association plan, receiving annuity coverage and other protective provisions for their employees . . . The workers in these agencies are not now included in the Federal Social Security provisions. * * This and That Here is a tip to philatelists in the United States . . . The Israeli Government will soon issue a series of new stamps bearing the name Israel in Hebrew, Arabic and Latin characters . . . One will be a special stamp commemorating the adoption of the national flag of Israel . . . The others will depict ancient Jewish coins and Jer- usalem, Negev and Galilee . . There will also be a stamp com- memorating the 70th jubilee of Petach Tikvah .. • The philatelic services of the Israeli Post Office Department are already accept- ing orders from philatelists abroad for these issues which can be secured for approximately $4 . . . Festival stamps issued by the Israeli Government three months ago are no longer sold except to philatelists. A unique Jewish institution in the United States is the Vinaver Chorus organized by the Friends of Choral Art . . . Its concerts in New York's Town Hall, under conductor Chemjo Vinaver, are attracting great attention on the part of many non-Jewish music lovers . . . It is composed of music of the synagogue, music of Israel, music of the Hasidim and. Biblical music .. The music critics of the leading New York newspapers have nothing but praise for these con- certs . . . They consider them "exquisite" and "captivating" and pay high tribute to Mr. Vinaver's ability as a trainer and conductor .. • (The Vinaver chorus will be brought to Detroit in March by the Jewish Community Council.)