To Wed Nov. 2 Dr. Max Brod's Excellent Work: 'Heine: The Artist in Revolt' Leib and DeMaria with Parks Band This Week Silver-York Rites Set for September Herschel Leib will direct the Summer Parks Band next week, at Clarke, Lipke, Bal- duck, Stoepel and Palmer Parks, appearing at the latter next Friday evening. His program will include selections from Verdi, Suppe, Strauss, Bizet, Giere, Clarke, and Ponchielle. There will be selected solos by William DeMaria, baritone. Few of the many volumes published on the life and literary activities of Heinrich Heine have the merit of "Heine: The Artist in Revolt," by Max Brod, published by New - York University Press. The analysis of Heine's family backgrounds, his Jewish inter- ests, his reactions to prejudices, his literary skill, are all master- fully presented by the eminent writer who now makes his home in Israel, after having escaped from the Hitler menace. It is not only the evaluation of the life of Heine that has special merit in this volume, but also the new light it throws on Jewish reactions to the threats from their neighbors and MISS MARLENE OLEN Mr. and Mrs. Julius Olen, of Snowden Ave., announce the engagement of their daughter, Marlene, to Leonard Reider, son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Reider, of Monica Ave. A Nov. 2 wedding is planned. Flint Jewish Council Elects New Officers • Newly-elected officers of the Flint Jewish Community Coun- cil, assuming office this week, are: Dr. H. Maxwell Golden, president; Arthur Hurand, Gil- bert Rubenstein and Edwin L. Elk, vice-presidents; Jacob Pines. treasurer; and Mrs. Morton Leitson, secretary. Dr. Golden had been Council vice-president since 1952 and was general chairman of the Flint UJA for 1956. He is active in the Michigan Heart Associa- tion and is a past-president of the Flint Academy of Medicine. Dr. Golden succeeds Louis E. Rudner as Council president. Rudner was chosen honorary president. VE. 8-9364 is your Jewish News Classified Number Smart brides select the Sheraton•Cadillac for their weddings and receptions. And _for good reason! First, the staff of this famous hotel spe- cializes in catering to wed- dings — lifts so many nagging details from the shoulders of the bride and her family. And whether you select the magnificent Grand Ballroom for a party of 750, or one of our exquisite Parlors for an intimate family group of as mall as twenty, you may rest assured that the accommoda- tions and service will be the finest in Detroit. Our prices are reasonable, and you'll always be proud to remember that your wedding was at the Sheraton-Cadillac. For information and reservations, call Norman Schwartz at Woodward 1-8000 SHERATON-CADILLAC 9 HOTEL Washington Blvd at Michigan Ave. at Manager Marl Sdwahit, to their existence as Jews that emerges in this scholarly work. A typical instance is Dr. Brod's description of the conversions of prominent Jewesses of the time: "Henriette Herz's was the typical career of a Jewess of outstanding talent, seriousness and beauty. In the Berlin environ- ment in xhich she grew up it was inevitable from the start . . . that Jewesses should become completely assimilated to their German environment and divorced from Judaism. Henriette Herz was no more to blame for her apostasy than was Dorothea Schlegel, Mendelssohn's daughter, whose best friend she was, or Rahel Levin, Varnhagen von Ense's wife, who was her junior by a few years, or. the Meyer sisters . . . All these Berlin Jewesses had arrived- socially. At the turn of the (19th) century and for the next three decades their 'salons' were the focal point of German cultural life. Their lives had assumed the form they did in spite of the opposition . . . of their tradition-minded parents, who 'considered a German education inseparable from a Christian basis' .. . The parental opposition failed. We cannot regret it. What Judaism had these parents to offer their chil- dren? It was a crumbling Judaism, no longer aspiring as a matter of course to permeate the whole life of every individual Jew and of the entire Jewish community . . ." Such were the conditions that also influenced the life of Heine. The reader of Dr. Brod's analysis of the situation that existed in Germany a century and a half ago will inevitably come to the conclusion that marked strides forward had been made by Jewry towards a more wholesome Jewish existence. Dr. Brod's study is not only of the conditions of that time but also of the various other trends in Jewish life and the entire struggle between Judaism and apostasy that so seriously affected the life of Heinrich Heine. Heine's wit, his biographer points out. was not uniform, corresponded to periods in his life and became finer with increas- ing age. Dr. Brod states that "Heine used his wit as a defense mechanism of the most primitive kind. He was poor, was a Jew, was unhappy in love, was mistrustful, was proud, ambitious and sensitive, and he saw nothing wrong in attempting to gratify the pleasures he so keenly enjoyed; hence he was marked out for suffering on all counts." Of particular interest is this observation by Dr. Brod: "For Heine the Jewish question was very often, practically always, the impossible situation that lurked ahead. In the last years of his German period the situation became one of despair of ever being able to find a place in German society, of ever being able to exercise a profession. To this extent he had no choice between being ironical or unironical; he had to have recourse to irony or else suffocate . "So the view taken of Heine's irony will always be linked with the view taken of the Jewish situation of his day. Was this situation a genuinely impossible one? To me it seems that it would be an impossible situation even in our own day, did not Zionism point a way to a solution. But for Heine's generation and the succeeding ones even this narrow way was not available." Describing Heine's life "between Germany and Paris," Dr. Brod again discussed the problem of conversions and states that "Heine believed firmly that a formal change of faith could be justified only as a concession to the Jew's environment and on grounds of occupational necessity . . . There .could be no question whatever of any inner conversion, of any spiritual change towards Christianity." He then declares that "baptism aroused Heine's fury" and that the conversions of the great Jewish women of that time—Rahel Levin, Henriette Herz, the Mendelssohns and the Veits----and their "intransigent attitude towards real Christianity . • . enabled him to don the cloak of pseudo-Christianity so easily, and led him to quite an unpardon- able over-simplification of the situation." Dr. Brod's informant, Mme. Caroline Jaubert, revealed to him that Heine particularly enjoyed listening to his old friend Princess Belgiojoso, "who had just returned from a voyage to the East. when she spoke of Palestine. a country 'across which he had often travelled in his mind since the Bible had become his favorite reading'." There are evaluations of Heine's "Hebrew Melodies" in Dr. Brod's book. We learn that in his imagination Heine "had destined to preserve the poems of Judah Ha-Levi." "Heine: The Artist in Revolt" is a good book. We treasure it as perhaps the best work we have read and possess on Heinrich Heine. Israel Ratifies Pact on Abolition of Slave Labor UNITED NATIONS, (JTA)— Israel ratified the convention on the abolition of forced labor which was adopted by the inter- national labor conference last June. The convention provides that each member state will not make use of any form of forced or compulsory labor as a means of political coercion or as a means of racial, social, national or religious discrimination. Is- rael has now ratified 21 of the International Labor Organiza- tion's conventions which togeth- er form the so balled World Labor Code. Rio de Janeiro Names I Public School for Israel RIO DE JANEIRO, (JTA)— A municipal school named for the State of Israel was opened here at a ceremony attended by Mayor Negrao de Lima and Israel Minister Ariah Aroch. The school is located in a work- ers' suburb in which no Jews reside. The naming of the school for the State of Israel was decided upon by the Rio de Janeiro municipality in honor of Is- rael's tenth anniversary. In his speech, Mayor de Lima empha- sized the contribution of the Jews of Brazil to the develop- ment of the Brazilian capital. For the Perfect Affair .. . Mickey Woolf and His Orchestra UN 3-3737 JACK GORBACK MISS NORMA SILVER The engagement of Norma Ellen Silver to Phillip Charles York was announced at a re- cent family dinner in the home of the bride's parents. Mr. and Mrs. Hyman Silver, of 11644 N. Martindale. Mr. York is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Hy- man York, of 18968 Burt. A Sept. 7 wedding is planned. PHOTOGRAPHY Weddings - Bor Mitzvahs Our Specialty I Quality Work - Moderate Prices U N 3-8532 Personalized SAM ROSENBLAT ✓loster of Ceremonies and his Orchestra Detroit's Leading Entertainer TO 8-2067 TO 6-5016 on Trip to Israel ;.",•;::>Z41Dr: Morris and Emma Schaver COVERS and their son, Isaac, will leave MADE TO ORDER OR shortly for Israel where they READY MADE will participate in the dedica- CALL ANNA KARBAL;i tion of the Nathan and David TO. 7-0874 Shever Community Center at 14 9911 ■ X:416, Beersheba. They will travel together with Dance with Delight Mr. Schaver's sister and brother- to in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Morris 1 I Peck, and will be joined by LARRY FREEDMAN other members of the family. i ! and his Orchestra including the Nathan Shevers N 1-4687 l - and David Shevers, of St. Louis. r and whom the Beersheba Cen- ter is named. Other members of the family making the trip are Mrs. Her- bert Girrard, of Gastonia. N.C.. Nathan's daughter, and Mr. and Mrs. A. Schneider, of Harris- burg, Pa. Israeli members of the family will join in the dedi- cation. The center, considered one of the most modern in Israel. has complete recreational and cultural facilities, an outdoor swimming pool, tennis courts and other play areas. It will serve the needs of the entire city. While in Israel, Emma Scha- ver, in addition to singing at the dedication event, will give a series of concerts in Haifa, Tel Aviv and Jerusalem. OMMIN••■■•■■■ 4.1•01.6 -"- PHOTOGRAPHS by BERNARD H. 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