THE JEWISH NEWS Han,ukah, 1959 Incorporating the Detroit Jewish Chronicle commencing with issue of July 20, 1951 Member American Association of English-Jewish Newspapers. Michigan Press Association, Nationa, Editorial Association Published every Friday by The Jewish News Publishing Co.. 17100 West Seven Mile Road. Detroit 35 Mich.. WE 8-9364 Subscription $5 a year Foreign S6 Entered as second class matter Aug 6. 1942 at Post Ottic, Detroit. Mich under act of Congress of March b. 187: PHILIP SLOMOVITZ • Editor and Publisher SIDNEY SHMARAK Advertising Manager CARMI M. SLOMOVITZ Circulation Manager FRANK SIMONS City Editor Sabbath Scriptural Selections This Sabbath—first day of Hanukah—the twenty-fifth day of Kislev, 5720, the following Scriptural selections will be read in our .synagogues: Pentateuchal portions, Vayeshev, Gen. 37:1-40:23. Num.. 7:1-17. Prophetical portion, Zechariah 2:14-4:7. First Hanukah light to be lit tonight. Licht Benshen, Friday, Dec. 25, 4:48 p.m. VOL. XXXVI, No. 17 December 25, 1959 Page Four Hanukah--Feast of Religious Liberty Hanukah means dedication. It spells light and this Feast of Lights, which we inaugurate tonight with the lighting of the first candle—to continue for eight nights — also is properly called Feast of Dedication and Feast of Religious Liberty. It is one of the great festivals on our calendar that delight grownups as well as children. Its lesson remains among the major ones in the battle for human liberty and justice. * * * Hanukah's background goes back to the days of the cruel Hellenic ruler Antiochus Epiphanes who had set out to conquer the Judaeans by imposing upon them pagan regulations and ruthlessly to destroy their culture. It was in the year 165 BCE that he found himself opposed by a determined people that would not give up its religious independence. A small group of ill-fed men, led by the courageous .Maccabaeans, challenged An- tiochus by their insistence upon retaining their religious and national liberties and by rejecting the tryanny with which they were threatened. The story is told in the First and Sec- - and Books of the Maccabees, in the Apo- crypha. The Maccabaean story quotes the speeches of Mattathias and his son Judas to their brave followers. Mattathias at first lamented because "the Temple is become as a man without glory," that "the sanctuary is laid waste and the Gentiles have profaned it." Then, when the Greek officers demanded offers of sacrifices to their gods, he proclaimed: . "God forbid that we should forsake the law and the ordinances. We will not hearken to the king's words, to go from our religion . . ." Before he died, Mattathias admonished his sons: "Be valiant, show yourselves men in behalf of the law . . . * * * The Apocryphal Book of the Macca- bees contains the text of Judas Macca- baeus' speech to his followers. It relates that "the brave soldiers under Judah's command would often lose courage when they saw the mighty army of Antiochus which was so much larger and stronger than their own. Judas would speak to his followers and put fearlessness and cour- - age into their hearts." And Judas Macca- baeus spoke to them: "It is no hard. matter for many to be shut up in the hands of a few; and with the God of Heaven it is all ane, to deliver with a great multitude, or a small company: "For the victory of battle standeth not in the multitude of an host; but strength cometh from heaven. "They come against us in much 'pride and iniquity to destroy us, and our wives and children, and to spoil us. "But we fight far our lives and our laws. "Wherefore the Lord himself will over- throw . them before our face; and as for you, be ye not afraid of them. "Arm yourselves, and be valiant men, and see that ye be in readiness against - the morning, that ye may fight with these nations that are assembled together against us to destroy us and aztr sanctuary: "For it is better for us to die in battle than to behold the calamities of our people and our sanctuary. "Fear ye not their multitude, neither be ye afraid of their assault. "Remember how our fathers were de- livered in the Red Sea, when Pharaoh gu.rsited them with an army. "Now therefore let us cry unto heaven, if peradventure the Lord will have mercy upon us, amd remember the covenant of our fathers, and destroy this host before our face this day: "That so all the heathen may know that there is one who delivereth and saveth Israel." * * * In the speeches of Mattathias and his son Judas are incorporated the scores upon scores of inspirations to courage that needed to be uttered throughout the history of the descendants of the Macca- bees. Their struggle for religious freedom has been valiant and it emerged in the triumphs of survival because the Jewries who were attacked had learned the lessons of courage that were taught them by the Maccabees. Now we face a new era—an era of freedom and liberalism in which the im- positions of idolatrous practices are non- existent, in which the Jewries of the world no longer need fear the ruthless enforcement upon them of strange reli- gious codes. Perhaps the new freedoms make the struggle for religious and cul- tural loyalties more difficult. Yet, the lessons of the Maccabees of old persist in our own time. They remain the guiding lights that inspire us to an uncompromising adherence to the prin- ciples which dominate our faith and which deny tyranny and oppression when- ever they raise their ugly heads. a * * The triumph of the Maccabees not only protected Judaism but made it possi- ble for other faiths to retain the freedoms that were gained for Israel by the Macca- bees. It has therefore been indicated, with great truth, that the Maccabaean triumph was a triumph for religious liberties for all mankind. Now we again celebrate the great Festival of Lights as an occasion on which to proclaim to ourselves and to our neigh- bors that we glory in the heritage of undistinguished lights for the liberty- loving of all ages and all peoples. May this light never be extinguished and may the Hanukah lesson continue to inspire mankind along the road of libertarian idealism. This is the spirit in which we greet our people with hearty wishes for a Happy Hanukah. far-Ilan University's Detroit Supporters One of the phenomenal triumphs for them was a group of Detroit Jews who Israel's educational system is in evidence dedicated their efforts in the univer- - behalf. in Ramat Gan, the suburb . of Tel AViv, sity's For several years, the Detroit Corn- where the Mizrachi-sponsored Bar-Ilan mittee for Bar-Ilan University has: con- University is making rapid progress., tinued to remind our community of the This new school already has graduated attainments of this school, and has a number of students and it is now in- progressively enrolled new sponsors. The troducing a number of new departments annual dinner of the local committee, Which. will make it a university with a scheduled for Jan. 1.2, will undoubtedly high 'rating. again attract additional DetrOit support- Bar Ilan University owed its • start ers for this project, which has emerged tn a rilirnhpr a A mpricaris nrid nrnang as a most worthy. Israeli cause. - Timely for the Feast of Lights ' Complete Book of Hanukah' Replete with Holiday Facts Friendly House Publishers (65 Sufford, N.Y. 2) has just issued a valuable source book for Hanukah. Parents as well as their children will benefit greatly from "The Complete Book of Hanukah," by Kinneret Chiel. Ably and interestingly illustrated by Arnold Lobel, this volume is replete with facts about Hanukah and contains a great deal of program material. In addition to the story of Hanukah, the author, who resides in Tuckahoe, N.Y., has compiled facts about the observance of the festival today in various lands. The noteworthy volume contains the First Book of the Maccabees and numerous Hanukah legends—about Hannah and her seven sons; Judith; why Jews spill the dreidel, miracle of the jug of oil, and others. * * * Then there follow a number of the important poems about Hanukah, from the First Book of Maccabees and the works of Elma Ehrlich Levinger, J. Fichman, Jessie Sampter, Henry W. Longfellow, Philip Raskin and Rufus Learsi. There are songs and prayers for Hanukah, stories about the Festival by I. L. Peretz, Leon Spitz, Sholom Aleichem and David Einhorn. To make the book complete—in its value for the housewife as well as the rest of the family—there is a section of Foods on Hanukah. Adding to the merits of this interesting book is an in- troductory essay by Budd Schulberg under the title "Reflec- tions on Hanukah and the American Struggle for Indepen- deuce." The essayist speaks of the Jews as having come to the United States "as 'ready-made citizens,' in the sense that our history was preparing us for the free atmosphere of American life for thousands of years ... When I think of the Maccabaean revolution, Mattathias was Torn Paine, Ben Franklin and Sam Adams gathered into one towering figure . . When we celebrate Hanukah, we honor both the traditions of Juda- ism and reinvigorate the principles of Americanism." Chiel, in his preface quotes Mr. Justice Louis D. Brandeis' statement that "courage, hope, enthusiasm, devotion and self- sacrifice of the plain people" as explaining the "qualities of the Jews who resisted the Syrian tyranny and made possible the Maccabaean victory, and these were the secret of their eternal youth." Historic Hanukah photographs, a glossary and a bibliography complete the book. Its entire contents, wisely gathered, provide us with a most valuable book on and about Hanukah. Works by Noted Writers Israeli War and Peace Poetry Published by Herzl Institute Indicating that "the bridge between war and peace in Israel is indeed tenuous," Gabriel Preil states in his author's note to the new Herzl Institute pamphlet, "Israeli Poetry in Peace and War," that his notes "attempt to present and interpret some of the moving forces in the works of Israeli poets." _ The poems in the brochure were translated by Preil, Hilda Auerbach, Charles A. Cowen, Simon Halkin, Sholom J. Kahn, Jacob Sloan and Dov Vardi. Poets represented in the peace period are Uri Zvi Green- berg, Leah Goldberg, S. Shalom; and there is a complete chapter on "war poetry." Americans who contributed to this poetry, whose "symbolic tie binds them to Israel," are Israel Efros, Reuven Avinoam and T. Carmi. Poems by Hayim Guri and Amir Gilboa complete the interesting brochure.