Pisgah Lodge Centennial 100 Years of Bnai Brith in Detroit Banquet Sunday to Climax Pisgah Lodge Centennial BY RUDOLPH MEYERSOHN' creased J e wish immigration closed and the activities of the Past President, Pisgah Lodge and extension of the frontiers. lodge were curtailed. As eco- Fr When Pisgah Lodge received its charter in 1857, it became the 34th lodge in a national or- ganization which had its start in New York City on Nov. 12, 1843. At the time of Pisgah's formation, by German - Jewish pioneers, who seven yea Ts earlier had established Teniple Beth El,• Detroit had only 200 Jews. The lodge membership then was 25. The founders and officers of Pisgah Lodge and Cong. Beth El were the same in the early years and for many years after- wards. In fact the synagogue and the lodge were so closely allied that the sole difference lay in their immediate aims and purposes. Both were rever- - ently religioUs and devoted to everything concerning Judaism. The members of the cdngrega- tion felt the need of an organi- zation that would give help and support not only to members of the community, but also to the newcomer and stranger. The need to augment the congrega- tion by charitable and social means became apparent and when an opportunity was pre- sented to organize a lodge of Bnai Brith with its broader principles and wider scope, Pis- gah Lodge had its inception. In selecting a name for the lodge the founders chose Pisgah, which is a mountain Moses climbed to view the Promised Land as recorded in the Book of Deuteronomy, Chapter 31, Verse 1, "And Moses went up to the plains of Moab unto the mount of Nebo, on the top of Pisgah, that is before Jericho; and the Lord showed him all the land from Gl'ad unto Dan." The pillars of Jewish religi- ous and communal life in De- troit appear as the petitioners e. r s oric document which bears 'the date of Novem- ber 24, 1857, lists the following: Jacob Silberman, Marcus Coh- en, Louis Benfy, Herman Freed- man, Samuel Sykes, Simon Hea- venrich, Emanuel Schloss, Se- . ligman Schloss, Louis Bressler, S. Schwab, A. Hart, Morris Hershman and M. E. Fech- heimer. The charter was signed by Isaac M. Wise, founder of Re- form Judaism in America, as president of District Grand Lodge No. 2. The charter was countersigned by Julius Bien, president of the Constitution Grand Lodge of Bnai Brith. Although the charter does not list the name of Dr. Liebman Adler, rabbi of Temple Beth El from 1854 to 1861, the records disclose that he was one of the prime movers for' the forma- tion of a Bnai Brith lodge in the city. Jacob Silberman was elected the first president of Pisgah Lodge and also served as presi- dent of Temple Beth El from its inception in 1850 to 1857. (A list of past presidents ap- peared in the Sept. 6 edition of The Jewish News). In its early years, Pisgah Lodge like all other Bnai Brith lodges combined mutual aid benefits with fraternal features. There was a sick benefit fund for members and their families as well as a fund for the sup- port of widows and orphans of deceased members. Another im- portant feature was an endow- ment insurance plan. Lodge revenues in this era were de- voted exclusively to concrete helpfulness. The initiation of members was given with elaborate re- galia in ceremonies comprising three degrees and was strictly oathbound to secrecy. Today there is but one initiatory de- gree which is given with open doors, all secrecies have been removed. Bnai Brith and its lodges, in- cluding Pisgah, grew with in- The immigrant might peddle nomic conditions improved so his way through life, or toil did the progress of Pisgah with his hands, or engage in Lodge. retail trade; once a week, how- In 1933 a concerted effort ever, he forgot that he was a was made by Pisgah to or- stranger in a land he did not ganize a ladies auxiliary. In understand and that did not un- that year a charter was derstand him. He went weekly granted to Pisgah Auxiliary. to the place of his lodge meet- In 1942, by action of the Su- ing where social relations preme Lodge the Auxiliaries among members was encour- were encouraged to change aged and distinctions along eco- their designation and the nomic lines were opposed. For group is now officially known a good number of years the pro- as Pisgah Chapter. From an ceedings of the lodge were car- original membership of 42, ried on in German. English re- Pisgah Chapter has grown placed German as the official and today is the largest Wo- langauge of the lodge at the men's Bnai Brith group. insistence of the younger mem- With the increased activity bers. In 18'77, a second Bnai and a rise in membership the Brith lodge was organized in bylaws were revised and com- Detroit, known as Peninsular mencing with July 1, 1937 the Lodge No. 2'72. The competi- presidents of the lodge were tion of two Bnai Brith lodges elected for a period of one year in a small community, instead of six months. prompted Pisgah Lodge to With the assistance of Pisgah reorganize and strengthen its Lodge and the transfer of some forces. History records that of its members, Louis Marshall a few years later Peninsular Lodge was created in March Lodge was merged with Pis- 1935; Detroit Lodge, June 9, gas Lodge chiefly through 1939; and Theodore Herzl, June the efforts of Adolph Freund, 22, 1939. East Side Lodge. was a leader in Pisgah Lodge and founded March 15, 1941. Pisgah Bernard Ginsberg, a leader Lodge was also active in the of Peninsular Lodge. organization of a governing At the beginning of the twen- body to coordinate the activi- tieth century a concerted effort ties of lodges in the city and was made to interest all facets the Greater Detroit Bnai Brith of the Jewish Community to Council was founded in 1939. join Pisgah Lodge. Several In 1942, in honor of the 85th meetings and drives with this anniversary of the lodge, a quo- objective as the goal were in- ta of 850 members was set, ten stituted. A "revival meeting" members for each year of the was called in 1902 to encourage lodge's existence. The quota younger men to join. About this was made, being the largest time the mutual aid and insur- membership gain in many ance benefit program of Bnai years. Pisgah; at that time, had Brith was abandoned. the largest paid-up membership In 1908 Pisgah Lodge was in its history. It also embarked host to the fortieth annual con- on a war service program and vention of District Grand Lodge engaged in War Bond Drives. No. 6. At this meeting it was The following year wao proposed that a new standin , Irtflth. The arges membership drive in anti-semitism in. the United the lodge's history was launched States. The plan was accepted in honor of Bnai Brith's one and out of this committee grew hundred years. The quota was the present Anti - Defamation ten members for each year of League, founded in 1913. Bnai Brith's existence. The A ladies Almiliary of Pisgah drive went over the top and Lodge was, organized in 1922 more than 1,000 members were and received its charter from brought into the lodge. War the Supreme Lodge in 1923. Bond Drives and War Service This auxiliary functioned up to were the primary programs of 1929 when it went out of exist- the year. ence. The formation of additional The movement to attract new lodges was undertaken younger men into Pisgah Lodge with the sponsorship of the gained momentum shortly be- Greater Detroit Bnai Brith fore World War I, but the out- Council; Harry B. K e i d a n break of hostilities interfered Lodge, Feb. 1945; Louis D. with this plan. Many members Brandeis Lodge, May 31, 1945; joined the armed forces and Rabbi Mandel Zager Lodge, the lodge joined in the war ef- June 1946; Downtown Lodge, fort as the local unit of the July 1,' 1946. The following six American Soldier's and Sailor's were organized one year later: George Gershwin, Ivan S. Bloch, Welfare Board. From the close of World War Henry Morganthau, Cinema I to 1924, Pisgah - Lodge passed Lodge, Tikvah and Dov Frenkel. Pisgah Lodge's B owling through a period of reconstruc- tion and rehabilitation. In 1924 League was created in 1938 by work was commenced on a com- Sam Maza. From a small begin- munity building. On May 2, ning it now ranks as one of the 1926, Bnai Brith Community largest Bnai Brith leagues in Center, the home of Pisgah the country, and has won top Lodge on Ferry Avenue, was honors in the national Bnai opened. It was the first lodge Brith Bowling Congress as well in the District to have its own as state and city tournaments. building. The building soon be- During the past ten years the came the center of social, cul- following Bnai Brith lodges tural and philanthropic activi- were 'founded: Israel Lodge, ties. June 1948; Philip Handler, June One of the highlights of this 1948; Donald Fox Lodge, June era was the organization of a 1949; Rex Lodge, December 70-piece Bnai Brith Symphony 1949; Motor City Lodge, March Orchestra under the direction 1952; Oak-Woods Lodge, June of Dr. Mark Gunsburg. During 1952; Louis Stone Lodge, June this period of activity Pisgah 1953; Eddie Jacobson Lodge, Lodge had the distinction of April 1956; Detroit Suburban being the largest lodge in the Lodge, May 1956; Albert Ein- world. stein Lodge, June 1956; and Pisgah Lodge formed and Yuster-Rosenberg Lodge, Feb. sponsored the first two AZA 1957. Pisgah Lodge has succeeded Chapters in the city which were housed in the Bnai Brith Com- in maintaining an enviable rep- munity Center. The boys had utation in the life of our city the advantage of all the facili- by virtue of bearing its proper ties of the building making share of all undertakings. To good use of the large audito- recite the intellectual, cultural, rium, the gymnasium, the li- civic, social and charitable ac- brary, the lounges and the tivities of the lodge during its many other club room features. lengthy career, would without During the depression of exaggeration fill a large vol- 1929, the community center was ume. . At a Lodge birthday party celebrating its centennial anniversary, Pisgah Lodge of Bnai Brith presented a plaque to HYMAN CRYSTAL (center), executive director of the Greater Detroit Bnai Brith Council and assistant secretary of District Grand Lodge No. 6, for "consecrated devotion to Bnai Brith." Making the presentation is JACK LEEDS, Pisgah pres- ident, while MILTON M. WEINSTEIN, a past president, looks on. * * * Several months of activity in celebration of the 100th anni- versary of Pisgah Lodge, Bnai Brith, will culminate this week- end with a Centennial Banquet and Dance. The banquet, scheduled for 6:30 p.m., Sunday, in the Grand Ballroom of t h e Sheraton., Cadillac Hotel, will mark 100 years of continuous Bnai Brith service in Michigan. The affair is jointly spon- sored by Pisgah Lodge and the Greater Detroit Bnai Brith Council. Sen. David A. Croll, one of Canada's leading political fig- ures, will be the principal speaker. The first Jew to serve in the Canadian Senate, he has been Mayor of Windsor, a mem- ber of Parliament and a lieu- tenant colonel in the Canadian - 4.47440440- 44v400.61e*Waroadr.,- - The banquet will open with the singing of the National Anthems, led by Alf r e d H. Bounin, member of the District No. 6 board of governors, and the invocation by Dr. Richard C. Hertz, rabbi, of Temple Beth El. Samuel W. Leib, chain/Ian of the centennial committee and a past president of Pisgah Lodge, the Detroit Council and District. 6, will be toastmaster. Following dinner, there will be a welcome extended by Jack Leeds, current Pisgah pres- ident, and greetings from Gov. Williams, Sen. Charles E. Pot- ter and Mayor Louis C. Miriani. Bnai Brith greetings will be extended by Dr. Abe Greenberg, representing the Supreme Lodge; Harry Epstein, pres- ident of District Grand Lodge No. 6; Harry C. Katz, president of the Detroit BB Council; and Mrs. Philip Fealk, president of the Women's Council. Others in the community who will offer felicitations are • Judge Theodore Levin, pres- ident of the Jewish Welfare Federation; and Samuel J. Rhodes, president of the Jewish Community Council. Vocal selections will be rendered by Cantor Nicholas Fenakel, of Adas Shalom Syna- gogue, accompanied at t h e piano by Betty Kowalsky. A special presentation will be made by Harry Yudkoff, past District president. The benedic- tion will be given by Rabbi Morris Adler, of Cong. Shaarey Zedek. .Dinner music will be played throughout the evening and for dancing at the conclusion of the banquet program. Guests at the banquet will receive a bound volume called "The Pisgah Story," edited by Rudolph Meyersohn, a past Pisgah president, who is the author of the story at the left. Working with Leib as his co- chairmen for the Sunday pro- gram were Milton M. Weinstein and Elias Goldberg. Others are Aaron Droock and Harry Yudkoff, honorary chair- men; Milton M. Weinstein and Hy Crystal, banquet chairmen; Victor Bloomfield and Meyer W. Leib, se a tin g; Nathan Rubenstein and Sol Steinberg, tickets; Louis Barden, special guests; and Rudolph Meyer- sohn, publicity. Nixon Lauds BB at Dedication of New Headquarters in Washington • WASHINGTON, (JTA)—The activities of the Bnai Brith were lauded by Vice President Richard Nixon in an address 'delivered at ceremonies mark- ing the dedication of Lie organ- ization's new $1,600,000 nation- al headquarters building here. President Eisenhower, in a message addressed to Bnai Brith president Philip. M. Klutz- nick, said that the new struc- ture "is a welcome addition to the nation's capital.", Nixon drew attention to the fact that .Bnai Brith charitable activities were not limited to the Jewish area. . Such charit- able assistance is extended to the world at large, he said. Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt spoke later at a dedication luncheon. A. number of • dignitaries partici- pated in the ceremony. The service organization ad- opted a resolution at its 114th annual meeting here ' saying that President Eisenhower's new Civil Rights Commission can give "powerful support" to "law-abiding millions in the South who, regardless of their feelings about integration, have displayed a fundamental respect for constitutional authority and the decencies of American life." In other resolutions, .Bnai Brith condemned "the growing tendency" toward sectarian reli- gious instruction in public schools and criticized Congress for failing to deal with "funda- mental inequities" in the Mc- Carran-Walter Immigration Act. Klutznick told the annual meeting that "the Bill of Rights, as the core of American policy, can travel faster than sputniks." A record' budget of $5,290,000 was adopted for activities in 1958. Among other projects, it was announced that Bnai Brith will start publication of a "great books" series and a quarterly, "Jewish Heritage." Bnai Brith may hold its next triennial convention in, Israel • in the spring of 1959 as a re- sult of a decision taken at the annual meeting. An invitation to meet in Israel, issued by - President Ben-Zvi, was present- to the Bnai Brith board by Prof. Joseph, Rivlin, president of Bnai Brith in Israel.