THE JEWISH NEWS The Bridge 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 36, Mich., VE 8-9364. Subscription $5 a year. Foreign $6. Entered as second class matter Aug. 6, 1942 at Post Office, Detroit, Mich.. under act of Congress of March 3, 187:, PHILIP SLOMOVITZ Editor and Publisher SIDNEY SHMARAK Advertising Manager CARMI M. SLOMOVITZ Circulation Manager FRANK SIMONS City Editor Sabbath Scriptural Selections This Sabbath, the ninth clay of Tebet, 5719, the following Scriptural selections will be read in our synagogues: Pentateuchal portion, Vayigash, Gen. 44:18-47:27. Prophetical portion, Ezekiel 37:15-28. Licht Benshen, Friday, Dec. 19, 4:45 p.m. VOL. XXXIV. No. 16 Page Four December 19, 1958 Russia's Hostility Towards Israel Multiplication of tensions between East and West continues to throw addi- tional light on the sad status of Russian Jewry and on the increasing unfriend- liness on the part of the Communist rulers towards Israel and the Jewish State's supporters. One of the latest manifestations of hostility on the part of Russia is con- tained in a new Soviet-published book, by two authors, one of them Jewish, under the title "The State of Israel, Its Position and Its Policy." It is revealed by Kol Israel, the Israeli radio, that this book completely disregards the fact that Russia was among the countries at the UN which supported the 1947 resolution calling for the creation of the State of Israel. Similarly, all mention is omitted of the Russian declarations during 1947 and 1948 about the moral duty of the world to provide the remnants of Euro- pean Jewry with a national home in Palestine." * * * This revelation is minor compared with other reports, from United Nations and other sources, which indicate that the anti-Jewish campaign has been inten- sified in Russia. Marop Rossi, the UN correspondent of the Christian Science Monitor, states that "news that Jews in the USSR were being persecuted could not be hidden from the outside world"; that the Kremlin has set up a special propaganda office to deal with the "Jew- ish question"; that through this new office the Communist rulers have under- taken "a vast- campaign at home in order to destroy Jewish nationalism" and that this campaign at the moment is aimed at defaming Israel and disrupting Soviet Jewry as a people. Soviet Jewish tourists to Israel were enlisted, upon their return to Russia, to address "compulsory mass meetings" at which they spoke with antagonism of Israel. According to Rossi, "members of the Moscow Synagogue were made to sign spontaneous letters to the Chief Rab- binate in Jerusalem requesting that Israeli representatives should not appear in the synagogue since their behavior is `unbecoming' and they 'violate the Sab- bath.' " While this reveals a grave situation, some reports state that the new actions of USSR leaders serve to inspire new interest in Israel among Russians. But that's small consolation in view of the dangers that are being imposed upon Russian Jews by their masters. * * * In a signed article in the New York Times, Harrison E. Salisbury, who, by virtue of his experiences in Russia as a correspondent for his n e w s p a p e r, is looked upon as a well informed person on occurrences behind the Iron Curtain, stated that "the Jews are 21 times worse off in regard to facilities for worship than the Baptists and 13 times more poorly provided for than Russian Orthodox believers. He pointed out that "no He- brew Bible has been permitted in Russia since 1917," that "the Jews have been permitted only to issue a photocopy edition of a handwritten calendar," that while Orthodox, Baptists and Moslems are permitted to have nationwide organ- izations to represent their religious and lay communities "similar organization for the Jews is forbidden." Such is the status of Jews in Russia about whom Milt Freudenheim wrote to the Chicago Daily News from the United Nations that "a new crisis for the esti- mated 3,000.000 Jews living in the Soviet Union is expected in a few weeks when the first Soviet census since 1939 is slated," and he adds: "Soviet Jews have been required to state their nationality as Jewish on identity cards which (since 1948) have singled them out for dis- crimination in jobs, schools and the Corn- munist party." Communist tactics on the world scene are disturbing enough to make the demo- cratic world suspicious of everything that emanates from the Kremlin. But the Rus- sian anti-Semitic tactics are much more shocking. They represent a reversion to Does U.S. Jewry Feel Insecure? medievalism and are indications of an inheritance from Czarism that even many extreme leftists have been unable to shake off. What the Russian Communists are doing today is merely a re-enactment of Nazi tactics. Russian identity cards carried "Minorities in the New World," by Charles Wagley and by Jews must carry the designation Marvin Harris, published by Columbia University Press (2960 "Yevrei" — "Jew." That is how the clock B'way, N.Y. 27), makes the striking assertion that— is being turned back and the yellow badge "It should not be taken for granted that the present is being reinstituted in another form. position of the Jews in the United States represents a secure a study made by Moshe Decter for or stable adjustment. During a period of economic expan- the ADL of the position of Soviet Jews sion, the middle-class position of a minority can be of con- under Khrushchev, we learned that ac- siderable use in controlling and deflecting the hostility complishments by Jews were kept from the directed against its members. During a political or eco- record of the Soviet regime's achieve- nomic crisis, however, such a position in the social hierarchy ments in the past 40 years, and that there may actually increase the danger to the lives and welfare was "deliberate concealment" of facts of the entire minority group. Despite (or even because of) middle-class affiliation in Germany, the Nazis found about Jewish attainments. One of the re- their Jews to be convenient scapegoats for the seething dis- vealing facts is that in listing the publi- the content of the German masses. With the democratic basis of cations "in 124 languages of the peoples German society destroyed, and with all power concentrated of the Soviet Union as well as of foreign in the hands of a rabid anti-Semite, the Jews derived no countries," Yiddish was omitted and "was advantages from their relatively high position within the old not considered even as deserving as 'Tat,' socio-economic hierarchy. Perhaps it is for this reason that the language of a small Daghestan tribe, the Jews in the United States, despite their current relative which boasted the publication of a single material prosperity and their civil and political freedoms, item in 1956 with a circulation of 1,000 tend to feel insecure and to be extremely sensitive to even copies. Of course, no Yiddish work has purely verbal expressions of hostility." been published in the USSR since 1948. This undoubtedly will prove a shocking revelation to many But in 1913, literally hundreds of Jewish Jews in this country. Is it true that Jews feel insecure? We publications appeared in Yiddish (and are sensitive to hostility, but it is doubtful whether a very Hebrew), for it was the springtide of the large segment of American Jews feels endangered by a G. L. K. Smith or by the distribution of anti-Semitic litera- Jewish cultural renascence in Russia." It is a matter of record that in the ture during a political campaign. The authors, in this interesting book, indicate that this early days of Bolshevism, and even now, country stands out as having rejected anti-Semitism officially. some Jewish writers, especially Sholem This holds to a view he has expressed time and time Aleichem and J. L. Peretz, were among again reviewer that official anti-Semitism will be frowned upon and the heroes in the Russian literary spheres, shunned in this country. As long as that persists, as we be- and Yiddish was encouraged. But Yiddish lieve it will, there is no cause for insecurity. And as long as newspapers now are banned, anything there is no reason for insecurity, there will be only sensi- related to Jews and to Jewry is taboo, tivity—and sensitivity leads libertarians to eternal vigilance. and the only explanation for the newest "Minorities in the New World" deals with six case studies action is: anti-Semitism. and reviews the positions of the American Indian (in Brazil * * * and in Mexico), the Negro in the Americas • (in the Mar- Evidence of Soviet anti-Semitism is tinique and in the United States), and the European immi- mounting. Decter reveals the existence of grants (French Canadians and Jews in the U.S.). An illuminating chapter on "The Jews in the United "a tacit quota system for Jewish students in Soviet universities and advanced tech- States" reviews the Jewish position, deals with the problem nical and academic institutes." Also, "for of intermarriage and describes the fight against anti-Semitisin. more than a year now, official Soviet news- On this score, too, while asserting that "whatever may be the extent of anti-Semitism in the United States today, papers and periodicals have been regularly actual there has never been a time or place where the Jews were in a publishing fictionalized articles of an better position to defend themselves," the authors contend: unmistakable anti-Semitic nature." "Yet anti-Semitism has only been suppressed rather than elimi- What better proof of the latter point nated. Its roots still lie firmly embedded in the hostile stereo- than the missionary and self-hating ex- types harbored by millions of Americans." pressions in the Nobel Prize winning Zionism is viewed by the authors as secessionist and the novel "Doctor Zhivago," by its author, Jews in this country are described as being of various factions Boris Pasternak, a Jew who was converted as to their ultimate objectives: "some are pluralistic, some are to the Greek Orthodox faith — Boris assimilationist, and even a few might be said to be • secession- Pasternak, who now is himself the victim ist . . . It might be argued that the traditional stated goal of the Jews in the United States has been pluralism, yet there of Soviet persecution? This is an almost insoluble problem is a marked trend toward assimilation in their actions." In the general statement of their anthropological views, —for the present, at least—in the midst of a world crisis which has not yet the authors state that "pluralistic minority groups engender and conflict, yet assimilation may sometimes run reached its peak. As long as the world hostility counter to the vested interest of the dominant group, which East-West tensions continue — and the often has something to gain by maintaining a minority as a West Berlin situation points to a pro- discrete and subordinate group. Conflict must be recognized longation rather than a speedy solution as an inevitable and often necessary aspect of our social life. of the problem — the position of Russian Only through some measure of conflict will the disabilities of Jewry, and the issues emanating from minority groups be removed." Soviet hostility towards Israel, will re- There is much in this volume to incite interest in the main very grave. All of it is part of the subject and to create discussion on the authors' conclusions. threat to the peace of the world, for On the Jewish issue, there is much with which we can differ which the USSR must be held responsible. with them. —P. S. Reviewer Differs With Authors of 'Minorities in New World