THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS -- Friday, -June 12, : 1959-40 Reverse Mt. Clemens Decision Michigan Supreme Court Rules Out Mixed Seating; Ends 4-Year Suit By FRANK SIMONS The Michigan .Supreme Court ended a four-year dispute in- volving Cong. Beth Tefilas Moses in Mt. Clemens when it voted unanimously last Friday to forbid mixed seating during religious services at the syna- gogue. The move, whieh caught members of the congregation by surprise, reversed a decision rendered last year by Circuit Judge Edward T. Kane, who re- fused to hear the case on the grounds that the court lacked jurisdiction in a religious dis: pute. • The Supreme Court opin- ion, written by Justice Thom- as M. Kavanagh, hinged on a definition of the congrega- tion as Orthodox, at the same time establishing that one of the tenets of Orthodox Ju- daism. is separate seating for nd women. a nd Also involved in the case, which was appealed at its con- clusion by only one man — Baruch Litvin — was the issue of the property rights of an in- dividual. Litvin, who claims to have spent $12,000 in battling the suit for four years, stated that the court's decision was not a personal triumph, but a vic- tory for OrthodoX Judaism. "No synagogue in Michigan, which is constitutionally desig- nated as Orthodox," he claimed, "can now attempt to seat men and women together. Other Or- . thodox synagogues can now . fight against mixed seating." While Litvin won his case, however, the cost appeared to have come high. One member of the board of trustees said that,-his triumph signalled "a one-man victory and the breaking up of a con- gregation." The board spokesman said, "We will never let the syna- gogue go; we owe that much both to ourselves and our child- ren." But he wasn't referring to Cong. Beth Tefilas Moses — the synagogue on South Ave. •and Maple. He meant that in the future, nearly every one of the '75 member-families would join in forming a new congre- gation. "Mr. Litvin's victory has won him a congregation but lost him the congregants; has won him a decision that ha cost him the friendship of the rabbi of the synagogue and nearly every family in the Mt. Clemens community; has won him a court case that gives him use of a building that prohibits mixed seating but lost him a minyan to conduct services," the board member concluded. The mixed seating contro- versy has raged at the Mt. Clemens synagogue since 1954, when the original vote for seat- ing men and women .together was rejected. In 1955, however, a commit- tee reporting to the congrega- tion in favor of mixed seating, found that its resolution was adopted by the majority. An injunction, issued prior to the High Holy Days of that year, restrained the congrega- tion from effecting the change until Judge Kane's ruling, when mixed seating was put into practice. Listed as appellants in the Supreme Court suit with Lit- vin were Meyer Davis, now de- ceased, and Sam Schwartz, who had, since the suit began, joined the majority in favor of • mixed seating and even accept- ed membership on the board of trustees. In carrying out the battle alone, Litvin and his counsel called for testimony on Rabbi David B. Hollander, honorary president of the Rabbinical Council of America, and Dr. Samson R. Weiss, former dean of the . Yeshivath Beth Yehudah in Detroit and a leader in the Union of Orthodox Jewish Con- gregations of America. Rabbi Hollander was asked by the court if any difference between Orthodox or Reform and Conservative worship could be noticed. He answered that "the most observable thing is seating," since Reform • and Conservative do not require separate seating while Ortho- dox does. In his own testimony, Litvin claimed that the congregation was _never anything but Ortho- dox and that only Orthodox rabbis had been called to the pulpit. He showed - a plan adopted when the synagogue was, built, indicating that the balcony was erected as .a mechitzah,- to sep- arate the men from the women. In further testimony, Lit- vin said that : after mixed seating was introduced he and others left the synagogue because they could - not wor- ship contrary to. Orthodox law, where men and women prayed together. The major issue, as intro- duced by the appellant, thus became the approach that the Michigan Supreme Court, on other cc-asions,- has estab- lished: that "a change in relig- ious practice, not conformable with the origin and historic character of the faith of the church of which the local con- gregation is one member, as against those who faithfully ad- here to the characteristic doc- trine of the church, thereby deprive the minority of the use of the church property." T h e defendants, 'mean- •while, at a meeting prior to the hearing, determined by a vote -of 40-0, with three ab- stentations (Litvin's • three sons who are still members of the synagogue), that they would rely on -the court to dismiss the case as not with- in its jurisdiction — as they had done in the previous hearing before Judge Kane. (According to one of the de fendants, who is a . 30-year Mem- ber of the synagogue, a past president and currently a mem- ber of its board of trustees, it was felt that airing religious problems in court • is like wash- ing dirty linen in public. (By taking any other tack, it was feared the trial would de velop into a notorious feud that would bring injury to the en- tire Jewish people and also en- ter into a battle of personalities which could be avoided). The Supreme Court, charging that the defendant board mem- bers had the opportunity to re- fute- the testimony of Litvin and other witnesses for the plain- tiffs, ruled: L That Cong. Beth Tefilas Moses - was an Orthodox Jew- ish congregation; 2. That under Orthodox JeWish law, Jews cannot par- ticipate in services where there is mixed seating; 3. That if mixed seating was enjoyed in this congre-. .gation, Orthodox Jews would be prohibited from partici- pating in the services there. "Clearly," the opinion read, "the plaintiffs would be de- prived of their right to the use of their synagogue — in other words, deprived of their prop- erty and the use of their prop- erty by the majority group contrary to law." The court cited many refer- ences for previous precedent, in Michigan and other law. In the case of Borgman vs. Bulte- ma, the State Supreme Court had decided. "No one disputes, where property is dedicated to the use of -a religious denomination, it cannot thereafter be diverted to the use of those who depart from that faith, but must re- main for the use and benefit of those who still adhere to the faith." • • Because- the Supreme Court decision was unanimous, it is doubtful whether any appeal will be made. • Either . of the two options— appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court or request for a re-hear- ing •13y the Michigan Supreme Court—would be too costly and, because of the unanimous vote, it is doubtful whether either court would hear the case. Rome Mayor Refuses to Celebrate Fall of Nazism; Evokes Protest ROME (JTA)—Members of statement earlier, declaring four opposition parties in the that the city will not partici- Rome City Council will request pate in the celebration of the the resignation of Mayor Urbano Cioccetti for his refusal to per- mit the city's official participa- tion in the celebration of the liberation of Rome from Nazi- fascist rule. Announcement that the May- or's resignation will be sought was made here at a protest meeting by Councilmen repre- senting the Socialist, Commu- nist, Republican and Radical parties. One of the speakers at the meeting urged the govern- ment to remove Mayor Cioccetti under a law permitting such re- moval for "acts contrary to the Constitution." Another of the speakers at the protest meeting recalled the suffering of Rome's Jews during the Nazi-fascist regime, and accused the Mayor of "betraying the spirit- of the solidarity shown the Jewish fellow-citizens" by Christians in Rome. The group conducting the protest meeting invited to the stage a representative of Rome's Jewish Youth Center. A number of anti-fascist organ- izations participated in the rally. Mayor - Cioccetti had issued a Jerusalem Calling • Shavuot Festival Translation of Hebrew Column Published by Brit Ivrit Olamit A short time ago, my nephew in- vited me to come to his kibbutz for the festival of Shavuot. I ac- cepted the invitation gladly (will- ingly). The Festival of Shavuot is also know as Festival of the First-fruits, since in ancient days the Children of Israel used to bring on this day to the Temple in Jerusalem from the first-fruits of their land. In our day Jews once again dwell on their own land and again they rejoice with the first-fruits of the field. Members of the kibbuti decorate the tractors and the wagons with greenery and flowers, and seat the children upon them. The chil- dren are dressed in white clothes, with wreaths of flowers: on . their heads. Within the wagons the mem- bers of the kibbutz place the first- fruits: from the fields, from the wineyard- and from the citrus grove; even little chickens and a calf born a few days before the festival. The entire procession -makes its way with song from the field to the dining-hall. After - a nice • cere- mony the children go forth in dance, which after a short time draws in the adults, too. In the city, -too, of course, the residents of Israel celebrate the Shavuot festival. In the schools there are special celebrations on the eve of the festival,- the syna- gogues are full of worshippers, and thousands of pilgrims come to and go up to Mount Zion to pray at the Tomb of King David. WRY Chief Advances Six-Point Solution to Arab Refugee Issue NEW YORK (JTA) — Con- crete recommendations for the settlement of the Arab refugee problem were advanced in:con- nection with the World Refugee Year, which goes into effect on July 1, under a mandate from the United Nations General Assembly. The recommendations were outlined in a report presented at a press conference by Elfan Rees, chairman of the executive committee of the International Committee for the World Refugee Year (WRY). They suggested: 1. To accept as "practical" and "hopeful" the offer which Israel made in the UN last year to compensate the Arab refu- gees under certain' conditions; 2. As part of the over-all settlement of the refugee prob- lems in the Middle East, ac- count must be taken of property abandoned in Arab lands by 400,000 Jews who "have been forced to leave their homes in Iraq, Yemen and North Africa" for settlement in Israel; .3. To consider the repatria- tion of the Arab refugees to Israel as "physically and politic- ally impossible, and culturally undesirable;" 4. Israel should admit some Arab refugees, "under inter- national .control, on a quota basis, over a period of years;" 5. The world "should be ready -to support Israel finan- cially in its compensation plan;" and 6. The United Nations Relief and Works Agency for -Arab Refugees from Palestine change its title to "Works and Relief Agency," so as to emphasize the need of rehabilitation of the refugees through work, rather than through relief activities. UNRWA's mandate expires June 30, 1960, and the UN must decide at the next General Assembly whether to continue aiding the Arab refugees and how to perform that task beyond 1960. Among the participants in the press conference at which Dr. Rees' report was issued was James P. Rice, executive direc- tor of United Hias Service, who lauded America's contribution to World. Refugee Year. He cited plans for fresh congres- sional action in regard to immi- gration, and pointed to - the recent White House conference on the refugee problem, where proposals were voiced for active American participation in WRY. - * * * Ask UNRWA to Ready for Liquidation in 1960 JERUSALEM (JTA) — In- structions to prepare for liquidation of its activities were received from United Nations headquarters by the main office of the UN Relief and Works Agency for Arab Refugees, at Beirut. The Agency's mandate expires officially, on June 30, 1960. The liquidation orders are believed to be merely a formal step, since there is virtually no doubt that either UNRWA, or an agency similar to it, will continue to aid the Arab refugees beyond the summer of 1960. 15th anniversary of Rome's lib- eration because "no demonstra- tion should- be held which might rekindle hatreds, or re- open new wounds now healing." The Mayor also refused to accept the honorary chairman- ship of an exhibition now being prepared here, commemorating the Italians who were deported to Nazi concentration camps. After making the announce- ment, the Mayor left for Paris. A manifesto issued • by the National Association of Italian Partisans condemned the May- or's attitude. The organization pointed out that. 3,850 persons were deported by the Nazis from Rome, including 2,091 Jews. Only 32 -of the deported Jews returned from the camps, stated the manifesto. "Cioccetti is not entitled to be the Mayor of these people, nor does he repre- sent Rome," the manifesto said. 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