Herzl Dreamed and Israel Gained Hope of Redemption Hebrew, the Prophets°Tongue, A Living American Influence By ROBERT SEELAY By TINA LEV ITAN The wheels of the railway train were beating out a staccato of hard sounds upon the metal rails which re-echoed "He's a Jew! He's a Jew!" with evenness and regu- larity. 'Theodore Herzl trembled, moved about, opened his eyes and stirred a little. Then into his ear came the hammering words, actual and not dream-like, "He's a Jew", utter- ed by one passenger to another. With the hissing "Jhid" of the Russians, and the frighening "Hep, Hep" of the Germanics, France has now made its contribution to the Trilogy of hate. That concludedthe consolidated ann. of all the bigots of Europe toward Israel. Israel appeals for a Messiah that does not ar- rive and hopes for a Palestine to be created in the midst of barbaric Europa. In the meantime Israel awaits death and decimation. Herzl avoided all eyes. His thoughts revolved as in an anaesthetic vapor. What is it that makes man wish for an ex- change of thought? Whatever it may be in ori- gin our cultured friend Herzl yielded to the same instinct. He transmitted his thoughts and expected their return to him in words. Pathetic as it is and humiliating to the high . mind, Herzl too talked and "heard", from beings Of fact and fancy. "I am Palestina", came a voice and our friend unconsciously smiled. "I first saw Earth when it broke from Mother Sun, an insignifi- cant chunk, whirling off independently into space, only to find that a magnetic power placed it where it is and holds it within the orbit. "I chose a zone of Earth upon which I bes- towed my name. Out of the rainbow I sliced colors which I embodied into soil and produce. With my hands I shaped the rolling hills and moulded the sloping terraces; and beneath the soil I placed the seeds for wine, fruit and sus- tenance. "Then appeared my son, Abraham. Dignified in form, stalwart and strong, black hair adorn- ed his head and his beard cascaded in fullness. He possessed human courage over animal brav- ery. His manner was all grace and a majestic appearance. Then followed the dutiful Isaac and his spouse Rebecca, Jacob the Devout with Leah and Rachael and their sons. Thus was laid the firmness of Israel and the foundation of Pales- tia". Herzl rose and mirrored himself. He paid no heed to the others, the mimicking and the abuse. The man who presumed in the past that Israel Will be assimilated and be lost and for- gotten forever already felt solidly the self-re- liance that is the mainstay of Israel. Hebrew is thousands of years old, yet it is very much alive today. The language of the Bible is being spoken today not only by students learning the language, but by thousands of people in Israel. Throughout the long night of Jewish wanderings, Hebrew always remained alive even if not spok- en. Jews wrote commentaries without number on the Bible THEODORE HERZL "I am Abraham", he mused, as he saw his image. It is I", he repeated over and over again. ''Beautiful land", he continued, "and I have never seen it, nor have my people or my forebears for two thousand years. Herzl now saw Israel, in all his historic trag- edy, wending his way to the land of Abraham. Mournfully he greeted in his mind and 'imagin- ation the returning "tribes", the remnant of a proud people. Israel rests his hand forlorn on his breast, his eyes to the ground, his face wan. A shadow of Moses, Solomon and David. Only a monosyllable, framed in a sigh, escapes his lips. He is weighted with sorrow but he senses the hope of a return—a tortured body, a dejected mind but still a triumphant Man. Herzl speaks, almost aloud, his own mind reflecting the smile torture and degradation. At last he hears a faint voice, "Abraham, I have tarried too long." YOUNG LILIENTHAL SPEAKS : Israel Proclaims Unit y of Man EDITOR'S - NOTE: The following are excerpts from an ora- they are one, that they have one tion delivered 31 years ago by David Lilienthal, then a senior loving Father. at DePauw University, in a six-state-wide collegiate oratory contest. It was reprinted last spring in Liberal Judaism, organ of the Union of American Hebrew Congregations, as a timely note on the occasion of the admission of the state of Israel .•• into the United Nations. * * * The most baffling force in history is the Jew. His very or- igin wrapt in the purple of ob- scurity; his strange mission down through the years never yet spelled out; his destiny still unknown—he stands as the great enigma of the world. He remains the unsolved riddle of antiquity; and amid today's world convulsions, the torch- bearer of a faith, mysterious, inextinguishable. The meaning of his tragic na- tionality is beyond human ken. For the story is not a blending of defeat and victory, but rather one of cumulative vanquish- ment. And yet, however fatal may have been the tale, the Jew en- dures. His very persist e n c e is t h e sublimest racial paradox. History, we say, pictures the rise and fall of na- tions; yet the Jew, though flung far, re- mains essential- ly the same. No less amaze Lilienthal ing than his tragedy and his persistence is the unconquerable faith of the Jew. Every national catastrophe, every racial calamity, every pe- riod of enslavement, every bloody butchery has been fed the torch he lifts against the sky. Nations have died; philosophies have given place to larger concep- 8—THE JEWISH NEWS Friday, September 23, 1949 IliT tions of truth; religions grown effete, yet through all the years of change the Jew has continued bowing his head in the .solemn celebration of the Passover, and breathing out across the world his prayer of faith, "Next year in Jerusalem." Thus runs the tragic, persist- ent story of the Jew. But what of him today, when the drunken earth lifts to heaven the scream of charging soldiery, mingling with the wail of starving women and children? Through all time the paragon of sufferers, he is today one of the most pitiful victims of all this orgy of blood (World War I—Ed.) A citizen of every belligerent nation, he is in the army of every country now at war. No wonder that an age-old shroud of mystery gathers about the thoughtful Israelite; no wonder he lifts the cry Jews in every age have lifted: "Why has my nationality been delivered from the greedy maw of time?" The Jew will help establish enduring harmony, because uni- ty is the major tenet of his re- ligion, therefore of his life. The creed of divine unity, "Hear, 0 Israel, the Lord thy God is One," is the eternal foundation of his spiritual temple. In the Unity of God, the basic principle of his religion, we find also the dominating idea of the Unity of Man, of his common brotherhood and com- mon Fatherhood, the true basis of democracy. and Talmud in Hebrew. Prob- lems of philosophy, physics, mathematics, on all subjects to fall within the scholar's realm, can be found recorded in a mas- tered perfection of the Hebrew language. It is a mistaken notion to assume that only of recent times is Hebrew again regaining something of the importance it held. Anyone with a sense of history and language cannot but be thrilled to hear the ma- jestic sounds and sylldbles of the language spoken some 35 centuries ago, today spontane- ously and majestically roll off _the tongues of , little Israeli children. * * * IN EARLY COLONIAL Amer- ica, Hebrew was a favorite sub- ject of study. To the early Americans the Hebrew language was something very living. The Bible was the one familiar book being read morning, noon, and night and everywhere its words kindled a sparkling en- thusiasm. These early colonists found in it a strong analogy between themselves and the Is- raelites seeking freedom in the Promised Land. America was called "The Promised Land," the Pilgrims were referred to as "our happy Israel in America." * * * THE EVERY DAY SPEECH of New England was the lan- guage of the Bible and this in- fluence of the Hebrew language has found its way into Ameri- can speech to this, day. The study of the Hebrew lan- guage occupied a prominent position among the New England clergy, the main profession for which our earliest institutions of higher education were founded. It is interesting to note that Harvard, Yale, Princeton, and Johns Hopkins have been teach- ing Hebrew without interruption since their inception. After the Revolutionary War, education generally was shifted from a religious to a political basis. * * * BIBLICAL INFLUENCE had helped not a little in favoring and strengthening opposition to the parliamentary claim. The contest with England hinged upon construing of language, the meaning of statutes, the essence of practice and customs. The t w Adams, Madison, and Jefferson and their brethern were at home in the field. They knew the Bible and were emi- nently capable in the exposition of all its justifications for re- bellion. They were the victors over their antagonists across the waters, because they were the more powerful in elevated dis- cussion. Several decades before the Declaration of Independ- ence was made, the abhorrence of monarchy expressed in the Bible was made the great watchword of the American people — "Proclaim lib e r t y throughout the land unto all the inhabitants thereof", and was inscribed, on the Liberty Bell. Today we do not know whether or not history has de- creed that Israel, now restored after 2000 years .of exile, should give another Bible to the world. It is certain that humanity may look to a new efflorescence of Jewish culture on the old soil of Israel. Americans generally and American Jews in particular would do well to prepare them- selves to share in this great religious-cultural heritage which in the years to come will grow in world significance. o9e if 3or R oih —naihanalt By I. ZAAC {Copyright 1949, JTA, Inc.) Reducing worries: A Jew came to the rabbi shortly before New Year's sighing that he had no money to properly provide for the holidays. "I have six children and they are in rags and I must get new suits for them for the holidays and I've got other worries. My wife needs an operation and that will cost $200, and there are other worries, too. I need five hundred dollars to pay the mortgage on the house. Oh, rab- bi, so many worries, one worry • after the other." "Calm yourself,'; said the rabbi, °'God will provide." "How can I calm myself r asked the man. "Well, I'll show you. How much money will you need to take care of these various obligations you have enumerated?" The man thought a moment and said: "A thousand dollars would take care of all of them.' "See," said the rabbi, "already you have reduced all your wor- ries to one worry—that of get- ting a thousand dollars." Rosh Hashanah's Universal Theme By DR. MAEANNA CHESERTON-MANGLE "And the Lord spake unto Moses, saying, Speak unto the children of Israel, saying, in the seventh month, in the first day of the month, shall ye have a sabbath, a memorial of blowing of trumpets, and holy convocation." (Lev. XXIII:23-25). With these words the observance of Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year, was ordained. Unlike most Jewish holidays, which commemorate some torical or seasonal event, Rosh age men and women. The right- Hashanah has a universal sig- eous are immediately granted nificance. It celebrates the an- life, the wicked condemned. to niversary of the Creation, which, death. according to the Jewish calen- The fate of the others hangs dar, occurred 5,709 years ago. in the balance until Yom Kip- And from the depths of his Down through the ages, pun, when, if they merit for- being comes a sure reply: "This Rosh Hashanah has been ob- giveness, they are "inscribed" gruesome night shall have an Served as a Day of Judgment for a bounteous year. From this end. The day toward which my —a time when God, seated on belief stems the traditional fathers yearned draws nigh. the throne of mercy, hears greeting among Jews on Rosh The ideals of my scattered peo- men recount their deeds, and Hashanah: "Leshanah Tovah ple shall prove the saving spirit avow their sins. Tikasevu V'tehatem"—"May you of the word, and lead to univer- Rosh Hashanah marks the be- be inscribed and sealed for a sal brotherhood and peace ever- ginning of the High Holy Days, good year." lasting." a 10-day period of repentance, Jews observe Rosh Hashanah It is the Mission of the Jew to ending with Yom Kippur, the by abstaining from their daily help establish among men, as Day of Atonement. According to occupations and participating in the inexorable principle of all the Talmud, the Lord opens religiouS services. A distinguish- life, the law of Unity. The mis- three books on Rosh Hashanah, ing feature of these services is sion of the Jew is to teach the one listing the names of the the blowing of . the "Shofar," a reunion, the refraternizat.ion completely righteous, one list- primitive type of trumpet, made and internationalization of man- Mg the wicked and the third from a ram's horn. kind; to make all men feel that .containing the names of aver- Ceremonies in the home also stress the outlook for the New Year. On the eve of the holiday, the Kiddush (sanctification prayer) is recited, and the fes- tive lights are kindled. As a symbol of the hope which char- acterizes the obserVance of Rosh Hashanah, a piece of sweet ap- ple is dipped in honey, to the accompaniment of the words: "May it be God's will to grant us a good and sweet year." The lesson, of Rosh Hahanah is one of humility and hope. Aithotizh God is merciful and recognizes that it is human to err, He expects His children to be penitent. The spirit of self-examination and rededication to the way of God, which characterizes the age-old observance of Rosh Ha- shanah, finds expression in our observance of the civil New Year, when Christians similarly reflect on their actions of the past twelve months and resolve to live a better life in the year ahead. Editor's Note: Dr. Cheserton Mangle, a non-Jew, is associated with the Religious Press Com- mittee.