As the Editor Views the News ... Un-American M. Levin's 'In Search' Tisha b'Ab Another Tisha b'Ab will be observed on Sunday. Although • the Jewish state is a reality, Jewish communities continue to ob- serve the anniversary of the destruction of the First and Second Temples as a day of mourning. It is not an improper observance, although the ritual undoubtedly will be changed, prayers may be altered and new ones added. One of the saddest days on the Jewish calendar can not be forgotten so easily and so quickly. It remains a landmark in Jewish history. But there will be less lamenting in the years to come and greater dedication to service for the highest ideals of our people and in support of the Jewish state. If aband- onment of mourning on Tisha b'Ab is to be justified by fact, it must be rooted in efforts to prevent the recurrence of previous calamities and in a determination that Jews shall never again be homeless wanderers on the face of the earth. Tisha b'Ab traditionally has been made an occasion for contributions to the Jewish National Fund. This year, the JNF also is appealing to synagogue worshipers on Sab- bath Chazon, in a plea for continued support for the fund that redeems the land of Israel to make it the prdperty of the Jewish people. On the anniversary of the destruction of the Temple, Jews have another opportunity to aid in the reconstruction of the Holy Land. The JNF remains the important instrument for this purpose and Tisha b'Ab should be made an outstanding occasion for the exten- sion of American Jewry's help in land-re- clamation activities. Threat to Peace Nazi criminals frequently are exonerated by German Courts and their victims are "treated as outcasts in present-day Germ- any," an analysis published by the World Jewish Congress reveals. A typical case included in the analysis tells of the recent trial of two Nazi police officers who admittedly kicked, whipped and otherwise maltreated an "Aryan" woman in order to extort from her a false confession that she had associated intimate- ly with a Jew. The judge in the case, in- structing the jury, found that although whipping and kicking went beyond the "limit of permissible pressure," it should be taken into consideration that a police officer "could not fulfil his duty if he were not per- mitted to use certain means of coercion." The jury acquitted the officers. This incident typifies the arrogance that again is in evidence in the Germany which was to be denazified but which is today ris- ing anew as a power in Europe. It is no wonder that the World Jewish Congress repudiates as unjustified the contention of assistants of John J. McCloy, U. S. Commissioner for Germany, that "Nazism has been destroyed never to rise again." It is pointed out in the World Jewish Congress survey that of the 11 German provinces, five already have promulgated laws ending denazification and similar bills are being considered by legislatures of three other provinces. In German quarters, speech- es are made by Germany's leaders in defense of Nazism and openly expressing distaste for democracy. Dr. Franz Richter of the German right-wing Deutsche Rechts Partei referred to denazification procedures as "disguised thievery" and some Germans are even more brazen in their expressions. Is it any wonder that we continue to be concerned over the situation in Germany? Between the Nazi terror and the Communist menace, the universe is in an unstable posi- tion for peace and justice-loving peoples. THE JEWISH NEWS Member: American Association of English-Jewish News. Papers. Michigan Press Association. Published every Friday by The Jewish News Publishing Co. 708-10 David Stott Bldg., Detroit 26, Mich., WO, 6-1138. Subscription $3 a year: foreign $4. Entered as second class matter Aug. 6, 1942 at Post Office, Detroit. Mich.. under Act of Manc.13 3, 1879. PHILIP SLOMOV IT2,. Editor SIDNEY SHMARAK Advertising Manager RUTH L. CASSEL. City Editor Vol. XVII—No. 19 Page 4 July 21, 1950 Sabbath Chazon Scriptural Selections This Sabbath, the eighth day of Ab, 5710— Sabbath Chazon—the following Scriptural sel- ections will be read in our synagogues: Pentateuchal portion—Dent. 1:1-3:22. Prophetical portion—Is. 1:1-27. On Sunday, Tisha b'Ab, the following Scrip- tural selections will be read: Pentateuchal portions: Morning, Dent. 4.25- 40; afternoon, Ex. 32:11-14:34:1-10. Prophetical portions: Morning, Jer, 8:13-9:23; afternoon, Is. 55:6-56:8. An Author Finds Peace Is Epic Story of Israel Since his first visit in Israel, more than 25 years ago, which resulted in his writing his splendid novel "Yehuda," Meyer Levin has been traveling and visiting in Israel. His latest work, "In Search," published in Paris (Authors Press, 4i Quai Henri IV), and now being distributed in this country by Horizon Press (1123 Broadway, New York 10), is a self- evaluation, an auto - bio- graphical review of his life's work, an expose of difficulties an author has with publishers who are afraid to publish frank books by Jewish authors about Jews and a final peace-finding as a result " of Israel's rebirth. Levin's work is not • Meyer Levin limited to Israel. It deals with Chicago, his early experiences there. his attempt to make his mark in the literary world, the interference of reactionary forces and of veiled anti-Semites. Expose of Anti-Semites Princeton Uni -Versity's Public Opinion Quarterly, in its current issue, exposes the work of six right-wino- propagan- dists whom the author, Stanley K. Bigman, of 'D the Bureau of Applied Social Research of Columbia University, labels as anti-Jewish. Merwin K. Hart, Gerald L. K. Smith, Grace L. H. Bros- seau, John B. Trevor, Myron C. Fagan and Walter S. Steele are the six anti-Semites whose writings were analyzed by Mr. Bigman as containing references to a "world govern- ment conspiracy" compounded of "Socialist plots, Jewish plots, British plots and Communist plots in fascinating pro- fusion." Hart is the man who, more than any other person in the group listed by Mr. Bigman, recently emerged as a fomenter of discord. Hart, who is president of the National Economic Council, went so far as to state that U. S. Senator Herbert H. Lehman of New York misused the term "democ- racy." He told the Buchanan Lobby Investigating Committee that "democracy" is mainly a Communist idea and that Sen. Lehman is following the Communist line by shamelessly using such subversive terms. He advocated the erasing of the word "democracy" from our political vocabulary. The Christian Science Monitor, one of the great Ameri- can newspapers, whose conservative policies are a matter of record, took up the issue and pointed out editorially that the attack on the term "democracy" is "no mere academic quibble. It has motivation behind it." The Monitor's editorial points out that "the more purposive (motivation) comes from those who distrust the people—who believe the nation would be better governed were the electorate narrowed by property or educational qualifications. They can make a reas- onable case. But let them make it directly and in the open." The editorial proceeds to show that "there are those inno- cently persuaded by this campaign against a word . . . These are groups which represent, in the main, the less prosperous, the less well educated." And the Monitor asserts: "Not all these demands serve ' the nation by any means. But government by the people—not by a select fraction of the people—is here. We must learn to work with it, to make it a better tool. It has come only in what we rightly call the free nations." We wonder whether the Harts and the Smiths ever will learn the truth of this assertion. Father Coughlin, before them, also attacked "democracy" and preferred to use the term "republic." The Monitor had an answer for this claim in its editorial. which we quote again on this point: "We would like to dispose of the matter simply by recalling that the word 'republic,' which he (Hart) prefers to 'democ- racy,' forms part of Russia's official name—Union of Socialist Soviet Republics .. . "The United States is a republic. No one we know of dis- putes it. And—the United States is also a democracy. "The term 'republic' refers to a form of government—gov- ernment by officials chosen by those who possess the right to vote. "The term 'democracy' also denotes a form of government. But it also embraces a great system of values, a way of life. And those who fix upon it -only its classical connotation—that of direct legislation by the citizens themselves—ignore all the richness of meaning with which the centuries since Aristotle have endowed it. "Democracy, as a form of government, means government resting upon the consent and participation of a Large proportion of the people governed. As Lincoln put it, 'government of the people by the people.' "A republic c,an be an aristocracy, an oligarchy, or a democ- racy. And the measure of the distance between ancient Sparta, medieval Venice, and the United States today is largely the measure of progress toward dignity and freedom for the indi- vidual. "The American nation, therefore, might be said to possess a republic,an form of government which, with all its human im- perfections, serves a democratic way of life." This is a magnificent interpretation. The philosophy outlined by the Monitor amply interprets the type of democ- racy which has made America great. But the Harts seek to impose upon us not a new term but rather new hates and prejudices. They stand exposed in the study made in the Public Opinion Quarterly and in the Monitor editorial. The exposes may not teach Hart and his National Economic Council the truth of the ideas we have just quoted, but they admonish all lovers of freedom to expound their ideals firm- ly and not to yield to the type of lethargy, fright and com- placency which caused national Jewish organizations to "accept" an apology from the Chicago Tribune intended only for them and the Jews but not for publication in the Tribune. There also is a record of his battle for Loyal- ist Spain, his share in the war—on the spot— against Franco. The story of the DP forms another chapter of importiAce in this volume. Levin saw them in their camps. He watched them during their sad- dest experiences, saw them arrive in Israel, watched them become settled in the Jewish land. He saw them battle for their lives and foi'the security of the Jewish state. While he rebels against re-telling their story, he does it nevertheless: it is after all a story that can not be erased from history. But the major theme is that of Israel. "In Search" is, in many respects, a history of the rise of the Jewish state. It is a record of per- sonal experiences, of a share in the battle for independence. Out of it came his achievement of a "sense of peace, of self-justification. All the embroideries, all the theories, are as noth- ing beside the simple identification, the release that comes in sitting of an evening among a group of Jews, perhaps exchanging jokes about the goyim." In spite of its frequent notes of bitterness because of what happened to him during his early , days as, a writer, in his efforts to crash the gates of the holy portals of publishing houses, Levin emerges as an objective author, as a clear- .. thinking evaluator of his own lot and - that of his people. "In Search" emerges as an epic story of all Jewry as it is reflected in the life ot. a single Jew. It is a volume of great merit—to' the credit of the able writer Meyer Levin and the events which marked the rise of the state of Israel. See additional reference to "In Search" in . Purely Commentary Column on Page 2. Translator Finds Data On 17th Century Poland A Review by RUTH L. CASSEL Rabbi Abraham J. Mesch of Birmingham, Ala., has made a worth-while contribution to Jewish historical reference shelves with his translation of Rabbi Nathan Hanover's manu- script "Yeven Metzulah," or "Abyss of Despair," the chronicle of the notorious Chrnielnicki hacres which swept over Russia and the Ukraine in 1648-49. A highly scholarly piece of work, Rabbi Meseh's book, available through Bloch Publish- ing Co., New York, goes into great detail on the background of the period, and the life of Rabbi Hanover. Although much of this historical data has had to be reconstructed from widely scat- tered information, Rabbi Mesch has meticu- lously annotated the entire volume, leaving little doubt as to the authenticity of his facts. This slim volume will be of particular interest to Jewish history students and to descendants of Polish, Russian and Ukrainian Jews whose families may have been affected by the 17th century pogroms. In the preface, Dr. Solomon Grayzel, editor of the Jewish Publication Society, compliments Rabbi Mesch on "his service to those who seek to understand the history of the Jewish people." Dr. Grayzel points out that few chronicles exist of the more tragic chapters of Jewish history, possibly because the Jews of those times had an.' unwillingness to complain against God's judg- ment, or, perhaps, due to the conviction that the mere recording of events did not serve to promote piety or obedience to divine law. One of the more universally interesting sec- tions of the book is a description of the inner life of the Jews of the Kingdom of Poland in the 17th century, emphasizing the complete re- ligiosity of their existence, and citing commun- ity structure as well as family life. Illustrations show the costumes of the times, as well as draw- ings of several well-known Polish synagogues.