Purely Commentary By PHILIP SLOMOVITZ Theodor Herz! Year On this, the fiftieth anniversary of the death of Theodor Herzl, the name of the great leader, who founded the World Zion- ist Organization, emerges anew as an inspiration to a generation that knows about him and his creations only through history books and through his diaries. Few are left who had met him ' and knew him, but the recollections of will stand historians in good stead *In gathering data revealing the genius "igof a dreamer who had a vision And was '''''''' that it would become a reality. IIsrael became a fact almost at the hour 'he predicted. Perhaps the finest tribute to Herzl's i iiii :memory was paid by Louis Lipsky, the ''brilliant Zionist leader, at the recent con- gliivention of the Zionist Organization of lAmerica. Mr. Lipsky spoke of him as the "good reporter and commentator," as the "writer of light and easy, entertainment in the theater," who "found his way back to his people through the provocations of anti-Semitism." Referring to Herzl's pres- ence at the trial of Alfred Dreyfus in. 1894, Mr. Lipsky said: "He read anti-Semitic periodicals and books with avid curiosity and rising indignation, with contempt for Theodor Herzl the Jews for enduring their inferior status He heard the cries of 'Down with the Jews' in the streets of , Faris. He was obsessed by an inner unrest. He fell into a mood If restlesS agitation and uncertainty." Out of this brooding he developed the theme which was in- corporated in his historic pamphlet, "The Jewish State." • Mr. Lip-. aky spoke of his "startling self-assurance" and made this inter- *sting observation: . "Here's distinction was that he gave the Jewish problem form, dramatic content and passion. He provoked a general international disc -ussion." This is the root of Dr. Herzl's great contribution: he had pro- voked discussion of the need for a solution of the aggravated Jewish problem. Then he proceeded to found the organization Which was responsible for the ultimate solution,Ahrough the cre- •tion of Israel. Once again we quOte from Mr. Lipsky's tribute: "All his unrevealed talents converged to provide the audacity to become the first Jewish diploMat, the first to negotiate the cause of re-establishing the Jewish State on practical, political levels. The man of letters became a political strategist and diplomat. He seemed to carry the credentials of an ancient people who had regained old political manners and came straight to the throne - Of public opinion, seeking not special favors or mercy, but the righting of an ancient wrong. The heart • of his plea was sovereignty, freedom, home. He was not an economist.- He was not a financier. But he had the gift of an extraordinary imagination and amazing resourcefulness. He was able to find harmony in discord, unity in diversity.! Herzl was personally an unhappy man. His wife "resented She adventure, she was cold to its surprises, its passion. It was estranging the father from the children. There were disagree- ments and reconciliations. He gave too generously, to the move- ment." Protector of JNF—No Task Too Menial For Him The reference to hi,s generosity forms another interesting chapter in his life. We learn a great deal that is new about Herzl from a communication' released by the information office of the Keren Kayemeth Lelsrael (Jewish National Fund) in Jerusalem over the signature of Dr. H. Freeden, who informs us: "On the fiftieth anniversary of Theodor Herzl'sdeath, Herzl Year—Shnat Herzl—is ceremoniously proclaimed in Jerusalem. "I would like to draw your attention to just one side of his Zionist activities which, strangely enough, has remained unlcnown, namely his work as a 'practical' Zionist. For it has almost entirely escaped public knowledge, that in the last three years of his life, he held an office which resembles today that of Chairman. of the Keren Kayemeth. "Due to certain legal difficulties, the proposal for the estab- lishment of the Jewish National Fund net at the fifth Zionist Congress in 1901 with opposition. The father of the idea, Prof. Hermann Schapira, was no longer alive, and it seemed as if this plan should again be postponed. As a matter of fact, at the first reading, while Herzl was absent from the hall, the proposal fell through. When Here returned, he found a legal flaw in the voting and requested the reopening of the discussion. During the ensuing debate, he threw the entire weight of his personal authority in favor of the resolution which was finally passed unanimously—with one abstention. "One year later, the sixth Zionist Congress allowed the Fund to start with the practical work in Palestine and Herzl personally took charge of the negotiations for land purchase. After Eliahu Sapir and Yehoshua Hankin, two land experts, had toured the country, he heard of the possibilities to buy the tracts of Ben Shemen and Hulda. In a letter to . Mr. Levontin, Director of the Anglo-Palestine Co., Herzl - stated: 'We are of the opinion that these lands ought to be bought by the Keren Kayemeth, if they are considered suitable for this purpose • we have in mind a contiguous tract of land which should alto- ,gether contain 10,000 &imams, on which a model colony could be - established according to Oppenheimer's system.' At the same time, he instructed the Anglo-Palestine Co. to start nego- tiations for the Kfar Hittin lands, situated above Tiberias. "Yet another historical fact deserves special mention—Herzl himself initiated the negotiations for the purchase of Emek Jezreel. At that time, an unknown personage appeared in Vienna, who turned out to be Sursuk, the largest landowner in Palestine under the Turkish regime. He came with the inten- tention of offering for sale the Jezreel lands. That Herzl recog- nized at once the significance of this region is clear from the prophetic description in his utopian novel `Old-New Land' in which he portrays the Emek Jezreel as the fertile, prosperous; flourishing valley it is today, 'the steep slopes terraced with vines, pomegranates and fig trees.' "All this shows that Herzl in fact directed the day-to-day work of the Keren Kayemeth. He was not less interested in the fund raising aspects of the new institution. When the Golden Book was opened, Herzl contributed the first inscription, and the importance which he attached to that Book of Honor was so great that he signed all the Golden Book Certificates in his Own hand. It is also said that he suggested the design for the . , Workshop, Laboratory, Aimed at Stimulating Employment Conditions; Becomes 14th Agency of Federation 2—DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, July 16, 1954 Calendar Reform Proposal Opposed Before UN Body WASHINGTON, (JTA) — Rep- resentatives of the League for Safeguarding the Fixity of the Sabbath, composed of represen- tatives of 63 major Jewish or- ganizations in the United States, have called on the diplomatic envoys of 10 nations. in Wash- ington and at the United Na- tions to present the views of the Jews in opposition to a proposal to change the calendar in such fashion as to unfix the Sabbath, it was announced here by Isaac Rosengarten, secretary of the League. Rosengarten said that he had visited the delegations of India, China and Norway at the United Nations and that representatives of the League and of the Sev- enth Day Adventists visited the Embassies of Argentina, Czecho- slovakia, Ecuador, Pakistan, Tur- key, Venezuela and Israel to ex- plain their crpposition to a pro- posal placed by India before the current session in Geneva of the UN Economic and Social Coun- cil for reforming the world cal- endar through the device of a "blank day." The various diplomats showed little awareness of the opposi- tion point of view, Rosengarten reported, and all promised to forward the League's memoran- dum and the Seventh Day Ad- ventists' views to their govern- ments for further study. Rosen- garten asserted that few people realized the danger of. the pro- posals being adopted by the UN body. He also said that few people, including foreign diplomats con- cerned with the problem, real- ized the economic and other .dis- advantages which would accrue to Jews in the United States if they attempted to follow their religion under the kind of cal- endar proposed by India. . Welling Cohen The Community Workshop, a recently developed sheltered workshop facility, has been es- tablished as an affiliated agen- cy of the Jewish Welfare Feder- ation, it is announced by Sam- uel H. Rubiner, Federation president. This new agency brings to 14 the total of local agencies now affiliated with Federation. After a year of trial operations, action to establish the workshop as an independent agency fol- lowed consideration of a report by a joint . study committee con- sisting of representatives of the operating committee of the Workshop and the Jewish Voca- tional Service, Rubiner stated. Co-chairmen of the study com- mittee were Samuel S. Green- berg for the Workshop and David M. Welling for JVS. The Workshop will serve as a work laboratory" to stimulate actual employment conditions for persons with certain compli- cations interfering with place- ment or adjustment in private employment, Sub-contracts are secured involving various light assembly, packaging and sewing machine operations, which are perfprmed by the clients' at piece rates equivalent to private in- dustry. In the protected setting of cover of the first volume, a golden sun rising over Jerusalem's Mt. Moriah. "Herzl took every .opportunity of personally collecting funds for the Keren Kayemeth. One of the delegates to the Congress recalls a convivial gathering one evening in Basle, when no meetings had been scheduled.-Herzl was immediately surround- ed by dozens of delegates asking for his autograph, which he gave willingly; when he finished, he suddenly took off his top hat, and hat in hand s`arted collecting contributions for the JNF. Then he poured the coins on the table, showed the entire gathering his empty top hat, even turning out the inner hat- band, and said: 'Gentlemen, you can see that I haven't con- cealed anything'. "It was, therefore, in Herzl's spirit that first attempts at reafforestation in Eretz Israel were named in his honor. By now, the `Herzl Forest' has become a battered woodland of which Arab marauders took their toll throughout the decades. Zionists the world over, no doubt, will wish to take Herzl Year as the occasion to make the forest worthy of the name it bears and transform it into a mighty symbol of green, extending from Ben Shemen to Mod'in in ancient Hasmonean country, down to the Tombs of the Maccabees. For in more than one meaning have Herzl's words come true: The Maccabees will rise again." This is the man about whom Mr. Lipsky said in his memorable address that— "He did not know that he had fired a revolution in Jewish life and thought. He did not know that he had created the in- strument of redemption which would live on long after his de- parture, and would ultimately reach the goal he had missed. In the first flush of revelation he had thought freedom would come through the, contributions Of Jewish philanthropists, through foreign influence bought and paid for. He organized the Jewish Colonial Trust. He set in motion the Jewish National Fund. He made the Congress the international voice of the Jewish people. In the final hours of his life he knew that re- demption would come from the struggle of his people., their sac- rifices, their devotion, their belligerency, their passion. "It was his historic privilege to set .the Jewish people on the road that would bring them to the Promised Land—not any land, not Argentina, not Uganda, but the land which finally found a living place in his bruised heart, and in which every tree and every bare rock bore witness to the Covenant. "He said that the foundation of the Jewish State was laid at the first Basle Congress. He foretold that 50 years later the Jewish State would be a growing reality. The First Congress was held in 1897. The Balfour Declaration was issued in 1917. The Jewish people proclaimed the State of Israel in May, 1948. "In his last will, he asked that his remains be buried in the Jewish Cemetery in Vienna near the grave of his father 'to re- main there until the Jewish people take my body to Palestine." When the Russians entered Vienna in 1948 it was 'blind that the Nazis had overlooked the desecration of Herzl's grave. The new State of Israel—the reality of all Herzl had striven for— resolved to fulfill his wish. On Aug. 17, 1949, the dust of Herzl was gathered together and brought from Vienna and interred in one of the hills of the Holy City of Jerusalem where the memory of his historic struggle will be an everlasting shrine." We pay tribute to the memory of the great Prophet of our century, the state-builder, the dreamer who, at great personal sacrifice, laid the foundation for the Jewish State. His name is indelibly written in world history, never to be erased. Greenberg the Workshop, an opportunity is provided to develop work hab- its and abilities which lead irk many cases to successful place- ment in private employment. Rubiner announced the for- mation of a committee which will operate the new agency un- til a board is selected. The cornp mittee, headed by Greenberg, will draft the agency's proposed constitution and by-laws. Green- berg, chairman of the former temporary operating committee, with Theodore Bargman as his associate chairman, is a past president of JVS. Serving with Greenberg will be , Clarence L. Ascher, Bargman, Morris Lewis, Mrs. Morton Net- zorg, Fred E. Schwab and Bi- win S. Simon. Plans for the Workshop em- phasize close coordination with JVS. Only clients felt by JVS to require the Workshop's serv- ices will be accepted by the Workshop. To assure consonance, of the two programs, Rubiner . stated, the executive director of the JVS will serve also as execu- tive director of the new - com- munity Workshop agency. Albert Cohen, executive dire& for of JVS since 1945, has as- sumed administration of the Workshop. He is a special in structor in the Graduate Faculty - _of Wayne University, chairman' of the agency evaluation.. com- mittee of the American Per- sonnel and Guidance Association for the Detroit area, and a mem- ber of the Technical Advisory Committee of the Jewish Occu- pational Council, national cen- tral agency for Jewish National Services. Rubiner also announced the appointment of Joseph L. Wein- berg as director for the opera- tions of the new. agency. Wein- berg formerly was in charge of the National Council of Jewish Women-JVS of Detroit special program for the placement of the aged and handicapped and had wide experience in working with • the hard-to:-place at the Jewish Vocational Service at Newark. The Workshop is located in the Fred M. Butzel Memorial Build- ing, 163 Madison at John R. The offices of the Jewish Vocational Service are in the same building. Defeat Herut Proposal To 'Capture Jerusalem' JERUSALEM, (JTA)—The Is- rael Parliament approved by vote of 36 to 12 the stand taken by the Israel government in the Jerusalem "small war" which raged for three days last week and in which the Israel Army was ordered to display restraint and cooperate with United Na- tions observers. A proposal presented by the extremist right-wing Herut dep- uties suggesting that Israel cap- ture the Jordan-held part of Jerusalem in order to prevent further Arab attacks on the Is- rael section of the city was voted down by 70 to 8. A resolution introduced by the Communist deputies demanding that UN ob- servers be driven out of Israel and rejection of the Western Powers' security plan for the Arab-Israel borders was defeated by a vote of '73 to 3. BORIS SMOLAR'S "Between You and Me' and NATHAN ZIPRIN'S "On the 'Record" Columns.;94...Page..Z4