A List from Higher-Ups THE JEWISH NEWS 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. 1942 at Post Offic.... Detroit, Mich under act of Congress of March u. 187t PHILIP SLOMOVITZ Editor and Publisher SIDNEY SHMARAK Advertising Manager CARMI M. SLOMOVITZ Circulation Manager FRANK SIMONS City Editor Sabbath Scriptural Selections This Sabbath, the twenty-ninth day of lyar, 5719, the following Scriptural selections will be read in our synagogues: Pentateuchal portion, Banzidbar, Num. 1:1-4:20. Prophetical portion. I Sam. 20:18-42. Rosh Hodesh Sivan will be observed on Sunday. Licht Benshen, Friday, June 5, 7:46 p.m. VOL. XXXV. No. 14 Page Four June 5. 1959 The Giving of the Law' - - and Its Recipients Shavuot, the Festival of the Giving of the Law, to be observed next Friday and Saturday, must primarily be viewed as the festival of the receiving of the Law. This is the time of the year when many of our boys and girls are graduated from our communal schools. when many of them are confirmed and consecrated in our congregations. Educators and dedicated community leaders consistently call attention to the need for considering our graduations the commencements of new educational re- sponsibilities, the rededication of students to higher learning, to continuation of their studies, to uninterrupted enroll- ment in higher classes for the study of our history, our traditions, our inherited Jewish values. In this era in which there is so much discussion about Jewry's status, when there is so much concern over the future status of our people, as well as about the ability of our people to survive the challenges that are hurled at us by the temptations of assimilation, it is especially urgent that the young people should be presented with. this message of the need for their continuation of Jewish studies. Shavuot is the year's turning point. It marks the end of a long year's activi- ties. the beginning of a summer's period of slowing down in Jewish programming, an interlude between graduations and eventual planning for either renewed or new activities—by our youth as well as by the adult community. The summer should not be idled away. It should be devoted to proper planning of future efforts—and the major emphasis must be in the field of Jewish education. This is the time to bring our youth closer to us, to induce them to continue learning facts about their people, never to cease acquiring knowledge about their kinsmen and about Israel's history and traditions. The receiving and the acceptance of the Torah is the most important factor about Shavuot. By fulfilling it. we perpet- uate the values of the giving of the Torah to Israel. The Commission on Jewish Education of the United Syna- gogue of America has made a remarkable contribution to class- room and home literature for children with two prayer books. The two volumes are related. One is for the Sabbath and weekdays, the other for holidays and holy days. Each is beautifully illustrated. and the impressive texts and pictures are certain to fascinate the young readers and to inspire them to recite the prayers. The prayers are included in the original Hebrew, with their English translations. The illustrations are multicolored and are traditional throughout. Hyman Chanover and Evelyn Zusman are the authors of the two compilations of prayers. The! . full color illustrations are ing Towers of Babel instead of emphasiz- by Leonard Weisgard. To assist parents and teachers. in using these two prayer ing the spiritual values of our faith and books, the authors also have prepared a pamphlet. "Adult Guide our cultural legacies? Dr. Kaplan's observation that half of to 'My Book of Prayer'." It serves an excellent purpose in assur- our identity is the product of Jewish asso- ing proper application of the prayers and in providing an of the basic values of instilling religious feelings ciation calls for re-evaluation of our com- understanding in the child. munal structure. We seem to be retaining The authors state in their guide that they were motivated in great strength when we are collecting preparing the prayer books by the following: funds for worthy causes. Many of our "Experience has shown that at an early age the child can young people are in the thick of cam- learn to reach out to God and find in Him an unfailing source paigns to secure the means needed for of personal power and strength. Children need this spiritual the construction of immense buildings as anchor, the feeling that God has a plan for His creatures, well as for charitable purposes—including that it is a dependable and good plan, and that they, too, are the support we give to new settlers in included in that plan and in their small way can share in its Israel. Can we count on these people when unfolding. "To help children achieve this feeling of at•homeness in the cultural values are involved, when it is necessary to strengthen Jewry spirit- God's world, a satisfying program of worship is highly import- ant. For best results, prayer experiences are required which uallly? children can both understand and feel and whia will It is indisputable that a portion of our young grow in personal meaning as they practice them." identity is "the product of gentile ex- "My Book of Prayer," as each of the two volumes is entitled, clusiveness." This always has been a neg- has provisions for brief introductory statements by adults before ative aspect of our existence. But mere the children recite the prayers. The book for daily and Sabbath fund-raising, while it does introduce the use begins with the prayers on rising. Then come the traditional campaigners to the causes they support, is expressions of thanks for bread. fruit, vegetables, cookies. They not in itself a positive aspect of Jewish are followed by the grace -- the benshen. Then come the bed- time prayers. life. Then there is the section for the Sabbath — the regular The reacquisition of the positive ele- prayers, the grace, the prayers for wine and food. the kiddush. The havdalah and post-Sabbath services follow. All are in ments represents the major challenge to with their English translations, and the concluding our people. Presently, we face grave diffi- Hebrew prayers, in English, are additionally inspiring. They include such culties. Perhaps we are too close to the expressions as: picture to appreciate many of the gains Dear God, that have been made in the moderniza- Help me to learn tion of Jewish educational efforts, in What to do, drawing many of our young people to us, To be a good in instilling in the youth a new loyalty to American Jew. The concluding prayers include appeals for good health. Jewish values. But the attainment of the goal is difficult. It needs constant em- to overcome fears and to create friendships. "My Book of Prayer" for Holidays and Holy Days similarly phasis on Jewish creativeness. It calls for devotion to ideals and unsparing labor covers a wide range. It begins with the Holy Days, continues appropriate prayers for Sukkot, Simhat Torah, Hanukah, Tu to raise the standards of our cultural in- with Bishvat, Purim. Pesah, Shavuot and Tisha b'Ab. stitutions. In every instance, the major traditional prayers are in- We know the problem, but we are cluded. For Passover, the authors have included the Mah often helpless in finding a solution to it. Nishtanah, Dayenu, excerpts from Psalms, the Had Gadya. As long, however, as the Kaplans and the The able authors have undertaken to introduce the young Heschels keep reminding us of our short- child to basic traditional prayers, to catch the prayers' spirit comings, we are a bit more secure. As and to interpret them on the child's level of understanding. With long as we know the issues, the chances their blend of the Hebrew and English translation, they are able are good that they will be resolved. We to arouse in the child a sense of love for God and a feeling of retain faith in the eventual emergence of belonging to His group. The excellence of their work, the a spiritually strong people that will be attractive illustrations, the simplicity of the approach, combine able in our day, as in ages past, to defy to assure success for their efforts. "My Book of Prayer", for Sabbath, Weekdays, Holidays and and to overcome the obstacles of nega- Days. form a splendid two-volume work that will be found tivism, defeatism, despair -and assimila- Holy indispensable for use in classrooms and in homes, in providing tion. the proper Jewish training for youngsters. Faith in Eventual Spiritual Conquest If, as Dr. Mordecai M. Kaplan, the dis- tinguished leader of the Jewish Recon- structionist movement, has declared, Jew- ish life is "social rather than spiritual," and if Jewish life in America is only "skin deep," what hope is there for Jew- ish survival? - A "social" life can go a long way in stemming assimilation and in preventing a certain amount of intermarriage, the extent of which already is turning into a decimating force in Jewish life. But if Dr. Kaplan was right in his assertions at the convention of the Rabbinical Assembly of America that, in the United States, "one half of Jewish identity is the product of gentile exclusiveness and the other half is the product of Jewish association," then, at best, American Jewry has only one-half a chance to retain its spiritual Jewish identity. * A certain amount of pessimism seems to have seeped into our ranks in the con- sideration of Jewry's position in the world today. In another address heard at the Rabbinical Assembly convention, the delegates were admonished to take into account the indifference that exists today. Dr. Abraham J. Heschel warned against seeking to regain faith through "quiet in- sight" and advised instead its reacquisi- tion "through embarrassment, shock and dismay at our immense callousness." Dr. Heschel deplored religion's having become "institution, dogma, security," and its having turned into idolatry, into "a distortion of the word God." There was a sound of despair in his declaration: "This is a time to cry out. One is ashamed to be human. One is embarrassed to be called religious in the face of our failure to keep alive the image of God in man. We see the writing on the wall, but are too illiterate to understand what it says." While this rebuke is intended for all mankind, for people of all faiths, the con- cern over Jewry's institutionalization makes us chief targets. in his warnings. * Are we failing in the sacred responsi- bilities of imbuing our people with the principles inherent in Jewish traditions and in our heritage? Are we too dogmatic and too institutionalized? Are we build- 'My Book of Prayer': Notable Two-Volume Set for Children