THE JEWISH NEWS Progress Report Incorporating the Detroit Jewish Chronicle commencing with issue of July 20, 1951 Member American Association of English-Jewish Newspapers, Michigan Press Association, National Editorial Association. Published every Friday by The Jewish News Publishing Co., 17100 West Seven Mile Road, Detroit 35, Mich., VE. 8-9364. Subscription $5 a' year. Foreign $6. Entered as second class matter Aug. 6, 1952 at Post Office, Detroit, Mich., under Act of March 3, 1879 PHILIP SLOMOVITZ Editor and Publisher SIDNEY SHMARAK Advertising Manager CARMI M. SLOMOVITZ Circulation Manager FRANK SIMONS City Editor Sabbath Scriptural Selections This Sabbath, the tenth land of Iyar, 5717, the following Scriptural selections will be read in our synagogues: Pentateuchal portion, Behar, Lev. 25:1-26:2. Prophetical portion, Jeremiah 32:6-27. Licht Benshen, Friday, May 10, 7:22 p.m. VOL. XXXI—No. 10 Page Four May 10, 1957 Is Discrimination Becoming U.S. Policy? This is a harsh question, but it must be asked in the best interests of American principles. Is John Foster Dulles incorporating discrimination against Americans of the Jewish faith as a basic American policy? There is no other way of facing the issue involved in the Saudi Arabian dis- criminations against Jews. All Americans who possess a sense of fair play must join with the American Jewish Committee, the American Jewish Congress, Bnai Brith, the Jewish War Veterans and many other Jewish organ- izations, together with Christians who sense the dangers in Dulles' stand, in con- demning his latest pronouncements in which he said that the exclusion of Amer- ican personnel of the Jewish faith from the Dhahran Air Base was "partly" due to New York Mayor Robert Wagner's re- fusal to greet King Saud upon his arrival in New York. The protests are now a matter of record, but the case has not been closed, much as the Secretary of State may wish to see it closed. Therefore we return to some of the arguments. We deliberately undertake to revive them, in the hope that Americans of all faiths will join in mobilizing protests against the new State Department policies. * * * The American Jewish Committee, known as a very conservative and very cautious body, did not hurry into the matter. It studied the situation and found it intolerable. When Secretary of State Dulles made his shocking explanation that Saud was acting anti-Jewishly because of Mayor Wagner's stand, the Committee ex- pressed its amazement, pointed out that Saudi-Arabian discriminations did not date back to last January but were in practice for six years and declared: "Secretary Dulles has employed an irrelevant cir- cumstance rather than acknowledging our own government's failure to prevent as- saults on American citizenship." This is calling a spade a spade, and we commend the Committee for its actions; just as we endorse the actions of the other national organizations in calling Dulles' bluff. The Committee charged in its state- ment that "the U. S. Government has ac- quiesced in a flagrant policy of discri- mination by the Arab states against Amer- ican citizens of Jewish faith," and added that by negotiating treaties with Saudi Arabia which explicitly "excluded Amer- icans from that country on the basis of their religious beliefs" our- Government is "upholding discriminatory policies." Anyone who dares to forget our State Department's affront to all American Jews by pursuing such policies is inviting trou- ble for future generations. Any American who permits the condoning of religious discrimination as established American policy helps to write a death warrant to our Bill of Rights. We therefore invite organized protests against such actions, and we encourage condemnation of Dulles' acts and policies. New York's Republican Senator Jacob K. Javits has called the "concession" to King Saud, to discriminate against American Jews, "intolerable." To us it is incredible. What is more, it is un-Amer- ican. We protest against the anti-American acts in Saudi Arabia, and the toleration shown their bias by American officials. * • * * Full credit must be given the Ameri- can Jewish Congress for its courageous efforts to forbid the Arabian American Oil Company (Aramco) to discriminate against Jewish applicants for jobs in Saudi Arabia and elsewhere. A 31-page legal brief has been filed by the Jewish Con- gress with the New York State Commis- sion Against Discrimination (SCAD). In it, attention is called to the fact the plat- forms of both the Democratic and Repub - . lican parties contained protests against such discriminations; and that the U. S. Senate, on July 26, 1956, unanimously adopted a resolution sponsored by Senator Herbert H. Lehman,, which declared: " . . It is a primary principle of our Nation that there shall be no distinction among United States citizens based on their individual religious affiliations and . . . any attempt by foreign nations to create such distinctions among our citi- zens in the granting of personal or com- mercial access or any other rights other- wise available to United States citizens generally is inconsistent with our prin- ciples." Secretary Dulles' letter declares, "The Department of State has made known to foreign governments on many occasions that the United States does not recognize discrimination based on reli- gious faith among its own citizens, and that we do not condone the practice of discrimination among American citizens which certain of these countries follow." But public sentiments and the view- point of the United States Senate are being flouted. It is not pleasant for Americans to be so critical of their Secretary of State. But the intolerable situation calls for severe condemnation. - It is sincerely to be hoped that the l'sresident will take matters in his hands and will strive to put an end to this shame- ful episode in his administration. Stirring Our People's Cultural Loyalties Commencing its 70th year as the "non- profit educational institution devoted to Jewish culture," in the field of publishing the most valuable books of Jewish inter- est, the Jewish Publication Society of America, at its annual meeting on Sunday, directed an appeal to the Jews of this country to enroll at least 100;000 homes as members in the society. Having attained marked progress during the past few years, both in in- creased memberships and book sales, the society's leaders realistically admit to having merely scratched the surface. They direct a plea to American Jewry that the society's creative efforts, now reaching into less than 10,000 homes, should be multiplied ten-fold. Dr. Solomon Grayzel, the able editor of the Jewish Publication Society, aptly described the JPS objectives as being "to stir the loyalties of our people to Jewish life." It is not too much to ask.that JPS 295 JEWISH CgNTERS 445, 0 00 MEMEMRS Birnbaum's New Anthology 'A Treasury of Judaism' Dr. Philip Birnbaum, who already has gained wide recognition for his preparations of prayer books, with traditional texts and English translations, and for a number of scholarly books, is the author of a new anthology of Jewish ethical lore, under the title "A Treasury of Judaism," just issued by Hebrew Publishing Co. (77 Delancey, NY 2). This volume has special value in the wisdom of the selections made by the author for inclusion in the compilation. Seventy classics, covering 30 centuries of Jewish teachings, are drawn upon for this work. In his foreword, Rabbi Birnbaum refers to some of the basic principles taught by Judaism. He calls attention to the influence of Judaism "felt in the moral, social and religious behavior patterns of millions of people throughout the world," and explains, in relation to his new literary work, that "empha- sis has been laid on the unity of Jewish teachings which testily to the age-old struggle for peace and brotherhood." Commencing with the Bible, Rabbi Birnbaum includes in his anthology selections from the Talmud, the Zohar, the Prayer- book, Maimonides and many other scholars and Apocryphal writ- ings. The explanatory notes are valuable. In the instance of the Biblical selections, Dr. Birnbaum has written a prefatory note for the Holy Scriptures and introductory comments on each of the Biblical books. In addition to the five books of the Torah, "A Treasury of Judaism" contains the basic teachings culled from the Former Prophets (Joshua, Judges, Samuel, Kings), the Major Prophets (Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel) and the 12 Minor Prophets. These are followed by selections from—and explanatory notes of— the Sacred Writings, the 12 other Books incorporated in the Holy Writings. Preceding the Talmudic, Mishnaic and Midrashic quotations are selections from the Apocrypha (Tobit, Ben Sira, Twelve Testaments, Second Maccabees, Hasmonean Scroll) and Josephus. Of special interest is the explanatory note on "The Twelve Testaments": "Originally written in Hebrew or Aramaic, the Testaments of the Twelve Patriarchs are represented as a rec- ord of the dying declarations and instructions of the twelve sons of Jacob. Each in turn recounts the story of his life and asks his descendants to emulate his virtues and shun his vices." The Zohar, the Siddur, quotations from Saadyah Gaon, Solomon Ibn Gabirol, Yehudah Halevi, Maimonides and others are in the next section. The Moses Maimonides selections-- from his Mishnah Commentary, Letter to Yemen, Mishneh Torah and Guide to the Perplexed—are followed by "The High Ways to Perfection" by Abraham Maimonides, Maimonides "who succeeded his father as head of the Jewry of Egypt and physician . to the Sultan. He was 18 years, old when his father died.- Rabbi Abraham diStinguished himself as Biblical com- mentator, Talmudic scholar, and religious philosopher." Jewish homes. It is asking very little to expect that at least a thousand Detroit households should be counted in the JPS family. Such increases would reduce pub- The works of a number of other scholars follow—including lication costs and would make it possible for JPS to produce more books for more Joseph Karo, Jacob Emden, Israel Salanter, Abraham Isaac Kook, Leon of Modena, Glueckel of Hameln, Israel Baal Shem Tov people. and others. Meanwhile, under the dedicated lead- "A Treasury of Judaism" is a highly scholarly anthology. ership of Edwin Wolf II, the society's It adds immeasurably to the collections of basic literary Jewish president; Judge Louis E. Levinthal, the creations. chairman of the publication committee, and their associates, JPS is rapidly ad- JPS Announces Titles for 1958 vancing the movement's needs to the benefit of the reading public, as well as At the annual meeting of the Jewish Publication Society' of of the authors who are encouraged to America, held last Sunday in Philadelphia, Judge Louis E. produce outstanding literary work and to Levinthal, chairman of the publication conu -nittee, announced that the titles to be published in 1958 will include: carry on research in Jewish' fields. It is sincerely to be hoped that our "The Jews in Christian Spain," by Yitzhak Baer; "Judaism community, together with the rest of and Christianity," by Leo Baeck, and "Jews and the Renais- American Jewry, will continue to give sance," by Cecil Roth. JPS the support it merits, especially The meeting approved, for early pUblication, Prof. Harry through currently needecl.ipar4ased.mem ,, J. Leon's "The Jews-of- Ancient Rome" and Grace Goldin's -