THE JEWISH NEW S See, Israel Is Attacking Us Again incorporating the Detroit Jewish Chronicle commencing with issue of July 20, 1931 1/4. ....,.... ,,, ,..4, Member American Association of English-Jewish Newspapers, Michigan Press Association. Published every Friday by The Jewish News Publishing Co, 17100 West Seven Mile Road, Detroit 35, Mich.; VF.. 8-9364 Subscription $4 a year, Foreign $5. . Entered as second class matter Aug. 6, 1942, at Post Office, Detroit, Mich., under Act of March 3, 1879 SIDNEY SHMARAK Advertising Manager PHILIP SLOMOVITZ Editor and Publisher Page .:Four VOL. XXVI, No. 11 Sabbath Scriptural Selections • . :• FRANK SIMONS City Editor • .44 - • ..ve-r.4.,:iv_Et1"...:Ar..L. - • • rya November 19, 1954 .. This Sabbath. the twenty-fourth day of Heshvan, 5715. the following Spriptural • selections , • will he read in ow- synagogues: ■ Pentateuchal portion, Gen. 23:1-25:18. Prophetical portion. I Kings. 1:1-31; On Friday, '.ash Hodesh Kislev ...Num.,' 28:1-15 will be read during morning services. • Refugee Bluf High Tim - e to-Call the 'Arab cared for where they are. being fed and "The contrast, to what was mea.nwhile.lhap- pening across the border in Israel was striking .. •There. millions of trees were being planted annually to replace those cut down through • the centuries by the Arabs who destroyed their. Oe:• ..1 The swamps in Israel, which had served as A breeding places for mosquitoes through the 7 Al tigor 7 d (4,44.4 - ;;;;C".- ages, were being drained and cultivated; steep 0 TA hillsides were being terraced and tillable land cultivated according to the most modern i'TheDeath of Hitler's Germany' practices; roads were being built and kept in •• repair; sanitary villages were being built on the barren hilltops while the land below bore crops; schools, when permanent buildingS were not yet 1 available, were held in tents. Everywhere was evidence of industry and a determination to better conditions of labor and The last days of Hitler are re-created in "The Death of Hitler's. "The same things needed to be done in . Germany" by George Blond (Macmillan). Frances Frenaye is the Jordan, yet no Arabs seized the opportunity. book's translator from the French. The loitering men could have raised eucalyptus Recapitulating the nine crucial months of World War Ili seedlings and then transplanted them in the Blond describes the events from the attempted assassination of barren hillsides behind their camps. Never have Hitler on July 20, 1944, until the surrender in March of 1945. I seen such destruction. The Arabs do nothing The book is a factual account of events in Germany. The but complain to a sympathetic world." author bases his report on briefs from the Nuremberg trials, - This statement is a redeeming feature in i captured German Supreme Military Command archives and eye-. a sad situation. Others, Mrs. Franklin D. witness statements. The author's skill as a novelist adds color to Roosevelt among them, have returned from this interesting story. Describing the Teutonic beliefs, Blond points out: "The Latin the afflicted area with warnings against the poor Arab exiled from his native Palestine by a people held to be of secondary interest; the Jews, scum and perpetuation of the state of misery existing vermin. were combination of fate and his own action, war Christianity was presented as a • religion impregnated. and flight. It was easy to be sentimental about . among the Arab refugees because of their with Judaism and indeed a Jewish product intended to humble the matter and most Americans are. But a visit unwillingness to go to work and the en- mar by convicting him of original sin." to refugee camps in Jericho . was a shock. couragement given them in such an attitude An interesting incident is recorded about Heinrich Himmler, : . Esoteric emotion was replaced by a revulsion of by the Arab nations whose "statesmen" de- Gestapo Chief, who was "famous above all as the director finally feeling, if not justifying their exile at least sire thereby to perpetuate a weapon against responsible for the atrocities and massacres in the concentration freshly understanding it. Israel. It is time to call a halt to such a prac- camps." Blond, stating that "responsibility is rightly his," tells. "There in Jericho, in camps created to tice! Let the truth be known and let the cul- the following: shelter them, sat thousands of .Arab men, smok- "Upon one occasion, Himmler's demon seemed briefly to waver... prits stand exposed in their villainy! ing and endlessly talking as they lounged. They He was present at an execution of Jews in the Russian city of sat in a filth which a little labor could have Minsk when he. saw a fair-haired, blue-eyed young man stand eliminated, but made no move to better their proudly in front of the firing squad. condition. What little work had to be done, such "Are you a Jew?' Hiramler asked him. as bringing water to the camp and thorny " 'Yes.' bushes from the mountains for fuel, was done " 'Were both your parents Jews?' The call issued to Detroit Jewry by the by the women. Meanwhile there was work " 'Yes.' Tercentenary Rabbinical Committee for ob- crying to be Clone: roads full of holes which "At this point Himmler hesitated. servance of Tercentenary Sabbath on Nov. d land which needed needed to be " 'Isn't there any non-Jew among your ancestors? 26 and Nov. 27 inspires the hope that our to be prepared for cultivation. There were irri- - " 'None.' synagogues will be filled on that Sabbath. gation canals to be dug, planting to be begun. . "Himmler.stamped on the ground in vexation. Yet there sat the men unperturbed. Why should " 'Then there's nothing I can do for you,' he shouted, with a. In their call to Detroit Jewry, the three gesture they exert themselves? The United Nations had to the officer in charge of the firing squad. And the young spokesmen for Conservative, Orthodox and man fell dead." . taken over the responsibility of feeding. them and apparently • felt no urge to do any- Blond describes how, later, I:limmler "connived at the betrayal . • Reform Congregations appealed to us - to thing for themselves. They showe no evidence of the high priest of his religion, Hitler. "give expression to the gratitude in our of initiative, no effort to improve the conditions Blond's concluding paragraph should set people to thinking. under which they lived, displaying merely • . a hearts for all the good God has wrought for Describing. General • Jo-dl's capitulation and the signing of the 'dull acceptance or a bitter resentment of the us, and humbly; to pray that He may con- surrender papers which he handed to General Eisenhower, Bloncl- fate which had put -them where they were. • I states: tinue to guard and bless us." "They have refused any . offered solution of "Jodi saluted and left the room. This time it was really all their problem save •a return • to Palestine where, But the For the blessings we enjoy as Amer- over. So Eisenhower probably thought at the moment. caprici ous under the hated,Jews, they were better off than ceases in its flow, and its course is never river of History icans, we may well utter this prayer. It is they had ever been under their fellow Arab and meandering." . administration. They are unwilling to move to td be hoped that our synagogueS will be 1 Thus, a warning of •a possible reawakening of the. worst ele- un,:..er-populated Arabian lands and to work ments among. the L ;ermans who sought world domination - under filled on Tercentenary Sabbath in thanks- to make them fruitful. They wait passively for ivin for the blessings we enjoy in this land. Hitler. the world to offer them something better while the small One • of the weapons aimed state.of Israel by Arabs and their friends is the utilization of the Arab refugee problem as a means of :discrediting the Jewish state. Only the keen students and the truly im- partial have seen through the regrettable • trick of perpetuating a problem which should have been 'solved long. ago. By this time,_ 'the Arab refugees should • have been .integrated-into a sound economy 'of the Arab states, but their rulers insist on keeping them in a backward position. The refugees have been taught to loaf, and many poOr Arabs from the countries '.where refu- gee camps now exist have. joined the home- less, thus increasing their ranks, because of the allotments that are being given them by the United Nations, mainly with funds from the United States. One American woman, Cornelia, James Cannon, has exposed the bluffs. She vis- ited the refugee camps, studied conditions there, and has . written her impressions in Messianic Witness, a Missionary publication, as follows: "I went to Jordan steeped in pity for the . ■•■ C-"A ". . •1 4 Expose of Himmler's Cruelty, Warri•ing,_ of Teutonic Threats• • ercen enary a a ' 1 for the want of a Teacher I For want of a Teacher, a For want of a School, a For want of a or want of a Child, Citizen, a School was lost Child was lost Citizen was lost Country was lost Our Education Month The accompanying illustration tells •a graphic story. Prepared by the National. Citizens Commission for the P u.blic Schools, 2 W. 45th St., New York 36, from whom our readers can secure the ex- planatory booklet, "How Can We Get Enough Good Teachers," and issued as a public service by the Advertising Council, it calls attention to a serious problem facing our country. We -present it on the occasion. of . the current Education Month of the United Hebrew Schools of Detroit because it is also the problem of our religious and community schools. The shortage of goOd teachers is one of the basic problems in our Jewish school system. If Education Month will serve to lend strength to our functioning schools, if it will encourage the enlargement of the Midrasha, the college for Jewish studieS, and if it will stimulate larger attendance in classes of the various adult educational courses instituted by our synagogues, we may hope to see an -early solution- to the problem. All citizens owe a duty to their com- munities to assist in solving the problem— in the civic sphere and in the spiritual area. The encouragement we give to the func- tional movements—the Citizens Commis- sion on the Public Schools and our Hebrew Schools—assists in rendering great service terw ct .Qur.ecivcatinl . . = • . • 7_ l • • J J