Purely Comment By PHILIP SLOMOVITZ Birth Control: Procreation in Jewish Law A decision reached a few days ago by the New York Board of Hospitals to provide information on birth control and on birth control therapy temporarily has brought to an end a controversy that has raged for several months in New York City. The vote to abolish an unwritten ban on birth control was 8 to 2, and the issue therefore may be revived again, especially in view of the differences of opinion on the subject among the religious groups. Catholics, as is well known, are strongly opposed to birth control. Most Protestants. support it, but there is a handful among them that adheres to the conservative interpretations of the issue. Jews are divided—the Orthodox being as adamant against birth control as are the–Catholics, with Conservative and Reform favoring control of births. The traditional Jewish position was explained back in 1930 by the well known editor of the Yiddish daily Day-Morning Journal, B. Z. Goldberg, son-in-law of the late Sholem Aleichem. Goldberg wrote his interpretation in a book, "The Sacred Fire: The Story of Sex in Religion," that was published by Horace Liveright. "The man who destroyed his powers of procreation was twice a murderer." Goldberg explained the Jewish traditional viewpoint nearly 30 years ago. "Even he who was born sterile had no place in the religious communal life. A Jew is forbidden to castrate even an animal; he may not so much as request a Gentile to perform the operation upon his beast. . . . The command to live and populate the world goes beyond race and faith. It rests upon all dwellers of the earth, whether or not their forefathers stood at Sinai and accepted the Law." In a direct analysis of the birth control idea, as it is faced by Jewish law. Goldberg wrote: "Just as it is sinful to abstain from marriage, so is it unlawful to live childless • in the marital state. One should not marry a woman that is too old or too young to bear children. If a man has lived with his wife for ten years and has had no children with her, he is obligated to divorce her and to marry another who will bring him offspring. Masturbation is the great horror of the pious, and the inten- tional loss of semen is an unpardonable sin. He who wastes his semen is a murderer. Onan, son of Judah, was slain by the Lord for 'spilling his seed on the grotind,' in an attempt to prevent childbirth. He gave his name to masturbation- onanism." Man's sexual life. Goldberg pointed out, was accorded the high purpose in Jewish law for "the continuance of life upon earth. It was not designed for the carnal pleasures it offers." But there were restrictions upon such rigid interpretations of the law and God's will also was interpreted as permitting the joys that must accompany marital life. because "it was to do well by His creatures that God willed the earth to be populated . . ." The extreme views. therefore, will not stand thorough examination in accordance with the strictest interpretations of the law. The ultra-orthodox represent the minority in the birth control idea, and its opponents are a dwindling element. * * * The Episcopal-Anglican Attitude The attitude on birth control, as expressed recently at the Lambeth Conference in London by 310 Episcopal and Anglican archbishops and bishops, including 89 from the United States, is of particular interest. The encyclical letter issued by that conference stated: ". . . There are many lands today where population is increas- ing so fast that the survival of young and old is threatened. . . . In such countries population control has become a necessity. Abortion and infanticide are to be condemned, but methods of control, medically endorsed and morally acceptable, may help the people of these lands so to plan family life that .shildren may be born without a likelihood of starvation. . . ." Bishop Stephen F. Bayne, Jr., of Olympia, Wash., headed a Lambeth_ Conference committee to study family questions. His committee said they reached the above conclusion "that some form of family planning, particularly in areas of rapidly growing population, is an urgent necessity." Hugh Moore, of New York, president of a fund bearing his name, formed as "a non-profit educational foundation devoted to international affairs," followed up the decisions of the Lambeth Conference with .a statement in which he declared: This positive religious sanction of conception control as an effective means of solving one of the most critical problems of our time—overpopulation—is remarkable because not long ago the Anglican Church opposed so-called artificial birth control as vig- orously as the Roman Catholic Church. The Lambeth Conference of 1920 voiced "an emphatic warning against the use of unnatural means for the avoidance N' conception . . ." This revolutionary change of attitude is proof of the gravity of the world population situation. World population is now growing by 5.400 every hour or 47,000,000 a year. A r.-umber larger than the total population of France was added to the people living on this earth in 1957—and the rate is accelerating. The Population Division of the United Nations esti- mates that the present world population will more than double— and reach six or seven billion people—in the next 40 years. The principal reason for this unprecedented growth is that medical discoveries and recent wide-spread advances in sanitation have improved health and prolonged life spans in Asia, Africa and Latin America. This has lowered death rates—without changing high birth rates. As a result hundreds of millions of people in the world are hungry. A report by the U.S. Department of Agriculture finds that population growth in the Far East is outstripping the rise in food production. Food PER CAPITA is less than pre-war. These millions are ill clothed and housed and generally dissatis- fied with their lot. In their desperation they are susceptible to Com- munist propaganda and Infiltration—and may be enticed to violent actions by 1-..mbitious demagogues. But improvement of living standards in underdeveloped areas is impossible without a slow-down in population growth. Birth rates must somehow be brought into balance with death rates. Today the "poplili,tion bomb" threatens to create an explosion as dangerous as the explosion of the H bomb, and with as much influence on prospects for progress or disaster, war or peace. But while the H bomb is only being stockpiled, the fuse of the population bomb is already lighted and burning. The facts enumerated by Moore are most interesting, and the arguments in support of family planning are valid and relevant. But the attitude on "overpopulation" is subject to scrutiny. We doubt whether the Jewish viewpoint, even among those who support the humane idea of birth control, can go along on the supposition that "overpopulation" is a "burning bomb." There are vast areas in this world that need to be developed. There are many lands—noteworthy among them those in the Middle East where so much hatred is being generated Jewish Community in liedatuled China • Reduced by 25 Percent in a Single Year Within one year the Jewish community in Communist China has decreased by about 25 per cent, according to information received by the World Jewish Congress in New York. One community organization, in Tientsin, has ceased to func- tion, although a small number of Jews still remain in that city. A report from the Council of the Jewish Community in Shanghai puts the total number of Jews in China registered with the Council at 294 as of June 30. Exactly one year ago the total was 397. The new report states that there are 84 Jews in Shanghai, 32 in Tientsin and 178 in Harbin. Comparative 1957 figures for these three centers were: 109, 55 and 229. Last year four Jews were listed as living in Dalny and Mukden. There is no ref- erence to these towns in the 1958 survey. In Tientsin, which once had a Jewish population of 2,000, the local Hebrew Association has ceased to function after more than 50 years of activity. The gradual diminution of the corn- munity made the liquidation of the Association necessary and steps in this direction were initiated late in 1957. The furniture, fixtures and other items belonging to the Association were sold at public auction, and civil authorities were notified of the Associa- tion's intention to close. The one remaining Sefer. Torah was transferred to Israel, the ar- chives placed in the offices of the Shanghai Council for safe keeping, and in January of this year, the Tientsin community's central body was totally liqui- dated. The welfare of Jews remain- ing in Tientsin is now the re- sponsibility of the Shanghai Jewish Council. This body finds itself increasingly concerned with the plight of its own dwin- dling community, almost 25 per cent of whom have to be sup- plied with free meals. A shelter house and a camp provide accommodation for about 20 needy members of the community. More than 50 per cent of the Jews of Shanghai receive medical care at the ex- pense of the Council. In addi- tion, the Council ensures He- brew education for the eight or nine children of school age. Despite their depleted num- bers, the Shanghai Community notes "encouraging" attend- ances at its sabbath and holiday services. As in preceding years, the report received by the WJC notes, matzos were baked locally and- distributed free of charge to all needy Jews in the city on Passover. Chinese authorities recently informed the Jewish- Council in Shanghai that no further burials should be made in any of the four existing Jewish cemeteries. This was followed by allocation to the Council of a separate plot in the public cemetery and by a request that the Wei Ming Lu Cemetery, established in 1917, and the Hwang pe Lu Cemetery, established in 1862, be removed to new sites outside the city. Between them the two cemeteries house 2,000 graves. A similar request was made of the Tientsin community in 1956 and, by November 1957, 559 graves had been removed to a new site. USSR. Believed to Be Sensitive to Criticism of Its Anti-Jewish Policies by World Jewry NEW YORK, (JTA)—Ameri- can Jewish organizations who keep watch on developments in the Soviet Union with regard to Jews asserted Tuesday that there are indications that the Moscow government is sensitive to exposures abroad of Soviet anti-Semitism. In an analysis issued here, they expressed the hope that "continued exposure may yet bring amelioration" in Mos- cow's policy of suppressing Jew- ish culture and communial life. The analysis claims that there are indications that the Soviet Foreign Office has established a special "counter propaganda" bureau on the Jewish question. The functions of the bureau are: 1. To persuade public opinion abroad that there exist Jewish communal and cultural activities in the USSR and 2. To persuade Soviet Jews that their "true motherland" is the USSR, and that life in Israel is "a hell on earth," the analysis says. The bureau is believed to be feeding overseas Communist publications dispatches from Moscow reporting in detail Yid- dish concerts. It also dissemin- ates articles and broadcasts on Birobidjan. Parallel propaganda within the USSR — especially in the provincial press and in the mass circulation evening papers in the central cities—seeks to dis- courage pro-Israel sympathy against Israel, especially against the latter's principle of unlim- ited welcome to immigrants from countries of oppression— that need to be irrigated and made productive. It has been the Jewish argu- ment for many years that vast areas in many portions of the globe — including the United States and Canada—can be made habitable for many millions of additional settlers. The oppor- tunities now offered by Alaska offer proof for such an argu- ment. And so, while birth control is a valid cause and should be encouraged where problems of health and economics enter in, we find it difficult to accept the argument of "overpopula- tion." In any event, the subject of birth control should be dis- cussed on a very high level. The Episcopal - Anglican viewpoint assists in such a realistic and normal discussion. among Soviet Jews by impugn- ing conditions of life in Israel, the analysis establishes. This propaganda apparently has fail- ed, and the Soviet government decided to adopt a new method: it sent 12 Jewish "tourists" to Israel, chosen from among resi- dents of large Jewish popula- I 1 tion centers (Moscow, Lenin- grad, Kiev, Odessa, Minsk) whose evident assignment was to bear "eye witness" testti- mony on the bad climate and "repressive" government in Israel. Articles by some of these "tourists" have already appeared in the Soviet press. , Boris Smolar's 'Between You ... and Me' (Copyright, 1958, Personality Profile Jewish Telegraphic Agency, Inc.) Meet Samuel Rubin—American Jewish leader about whom you will be hearing quite a lot in the coming season of Jewish activities . . . Rubin is one of the major contributors to the United Jewish Appeal—he gave the largest contribution of $250,000, to the UJA Emergency Drive—and is generously con- tributing to various causes in Israel and to Jewish and non-Jewish causes in this country . . . But his great love is culture . • . He thinks that Israel has great chances to sell itself to the world by achievement in culture and science . . . Not only the Arab countries but also countries lying farther afield than the Middle East will benefit from these developments in Israel, he believes. . . . That is why he became president of the American-Israel Cultural Foundation . . . That is also why he contributed $300,000 to Israel's first Academy Award of Music . . . That is why he established a Middle East Scholarship Fund to enable talented Arab students to study in Israel . . . That is why he financed the creation of cultural centers in outlying border settlements in Israel and instituted a cultural exchange program to bring to the United States Israeli artists . . . He has seen to it that the American-Israel Cultural Foundation makes available 100 scholar- ships worth $2,000 each to Arab, Israel, Greek, Indian and Bur- mese students to pursue their studies in art . . . Rubin believes that the peoples of the world have only one common language— the language of arts and sciences . . . Through inter-cultural relations he sees the brotherhood of man beoming a reality . Also the brotherhood between Arab and Israeli. Rubin, who is president of one of the leading perfume manu- facturing firms, sees no imminent danger of war . . . He belongs to the camp of the optimists who cancel out the possibility of a new war, because of the catastrophe it would bring to the world. . .. He thinks that intercultural relations help pave the way to peace and understanding among peoples separated by national borders and linguistic, cultural and economic barriers . . . An example is the performance of Inbal, the Yemenite troupe which captured American audiences and the appearances of the Israeli Philharmonic Orchestra in a number of American cities . . . And the concerts given in the U.S. by 15-year-old Israeli prodigy pianist Daniel Barenboim . .. Each of them created more good- will for Israel. Inbal has just been invited by the Japanese government to come to Tokyo—at the government's expense—and perform before Japanese audiences. As president of American-Israel Cultural Foundation, for- merly the American Fund for Israel Institutions, Rubin is making it his ambition to pursue cultural exchanges between Israel and other nations . . He points out that his organization started the cultural exchange idea long before the United Sates scored such a success in Moscow with Van Cliburn, the pianist . .. He believes the success enjoyed in this country by Israeli artists has reflected not only upon Israel, but also upon the Jews in the TTnitod Ctatpc