THE DETROIT JEWIS H NEWS — Friday, May 19, 196 1 , Purely Commentary t A Report on a Tour of a Country That Once Sparkled with Jewish Genius and is Now a Desert for Jewry By Philip SiOMOVitZ The Government Attitude and the jetvish . Position—The German Past, Present and Future Reporting objectively about the situation in Germany, it is memories, and suspicions still lurk in the hearts of German necessary to indicate that there are two specific factors in the post-war bitter Jews—the era. In the land where a single individual was able to negate the Republic. handful of _them who remain in the Federal German Decalogue and to proclaim to the world a new faith of "thou shalt kill, There is a double tragedy here—the virtual disappearance of thou shalt pillage, thou shalt hate thy neighbor," where the most German Jewry and the community's demoralization. satanic spirit of all time was able to fulfill the program of "the final Just as there is a sense of guilt in the hearts of Germans over solution of the Jewish problem" in terms of the devastation of German what had under Hitler—the fairest-minded of Jewish leaders and East European Jewries, there is no longer anti-Semitism. A truly vouch for happened it—so is there also a sense of guilt among Jews: for having liberal government, now in power in Germany, would not permit it remained in Germany. And just as much as there is a challenge to even if there was a sizable Jewish community upon whom bigotry their parents among Christian youth for their having either partici- could be vented. pated in or condoned the Nazi crimes, so is there the challenge of In this same land, where great Jewish geniuses created scien- the youth to their Jewish parents to explain why they remained in tific wonders, where Judische wissenshaft enriched Jewish knowl- Germany. edge, where industrial and commercial giants established vast indus- This is how the tragedy is multiplying in Germany. There tries, there is now an impoverished Jewish community. are many devoted leaders of German Jewry who maintain that there Hitler had lost the war to the democracies, but he won the war will always remain a Jewish community among them, that Jews are against the Jewish people. needed in Germany, that the genuine official German friendship for Out of the Hitler-made holocaust_ has emerged a government Jewry must be welcomed and encouraged and appreciated because that is above reproach. There can be no doubt about either Adenauer it is needed for historical' reasons and as a mark of German-Israel or Luebke or Heuss, just as, there can be no doubt about the determina- amity. tion of the entire present German regime to guarantee just rights Yet, one must leave Germany with a feeling that there is an for Jews, to bend backwards in, their desire to prevent the recurrence uncertain for Jewry in that land, that the youth, who are of Nazism, to ban all pro-Nazi elements. From the men above all the so small in future numbers, may already be planning to emigrate either way down the line, this program is being put into effect. Even if to Israel or to some other country. The future is bleak, those in the government who are former Nazis—and there must be in spite of the genuineness democratic of the democratic spirit of the new Ger- some, Hans . G7obke being an example — strain themselves to enforce many, regardless of the optimism of the Jewish leaders. the ultra-democratic principles, yet, there is a feeling of insecurity, A contributing factor to this situation is the spiritual impover- of a void, of a strained relationship that perpetuates suspicions. of German Jewry. It is no longer the creative force it was. A high government official expressed the wish that there could ishment It is limited scholarship, like the Germans themselves the Jews again be Jews in Germany, that there might even be three million of are primarily in interested in material gains, the synagogues are empty, them in Germany, so that Germans should know Jews and build except on the Holy Days, Jewish teachers must be imported from together with them a new society ; But he knows, as I have told him, Israel, there isn't enough confidence in the ,German Jewish leader- that Jews would not return. ship to inspire unified communal action. It is a community split and The anomaly of the situation is that, unlike the situations in other democratic countries, Germany virtually bans anti-Semitism, lacking in creativeness. It is no wonder that the frequent comment is that Hitler and Eichmann achieved their goal of "the final whereas in the United States and Great Britain and Canada Jew- here solution to the Jewish problem." baiting could flourish. Hitler's "Mein Kampf" can be purchased in It is wrong to generalize. It is unfair and unhealthy; since all countries, but not in Germany where it is banned. A German there has been so much generalizing also about the Jewish people. girl could "Heil Hitler" in Detroit or in Milwaukee or New. York, Therefore this Commentator brings the views of responsible leaders and could not be arrested for it—although she would be viewed as among Germans and Jews to his readers, so that they may know the irrational—but in Germany she would be given a jail sentence. A facts and judge the situation, as it exists and as it faces the future. German boy could not shout "death to the Jews" within hearing of The German government is genuinely sincere. The Jewish community the police without being arrested, but a Rockwell has freedom of is impoverished. There are differences of opinion regarding Jewry speech in the United States. as it exists and as it may develop. To this Commentator, it is a bleak That's how far Germany has gone to eradicate anti-Semitism, future: But the facts should be known and understood, so that the to make swastika-painting -a crime, to encourage Jewish cultural relationships among future generations may be in the spirit of the activities, to finance synagogues and Jewish seminars. human decency that met destruction under Nazism and struggles for But the German government's efforts have not wiped out reconstruction within the orbit of democratic idealism. Van Dam Believes There Will criticize the present German government and that He admitted that this is a speculative augury, Always be a German Jewish , Community DUSSELDORF, West Germany — From his of- fice at Fischerstrasse 49, in this reconstructed com- munity, where there isn't a sign of any of the remains of the bombing that razed most of the town towards the end of World War II, Dr. Hendrik George van Dam, the general secretary of the Zen- tralrat der -Juden in Deutschland, the Central Committe of German Jewry, directs the activities of the Jewish communities in the Federal German Republic. In the 10 years of the Zentralrat's activities, many things have happened, but the real challenge probably is yet to come. Dr. van Dam reports that there are 22,000 Jews affiliated with Jewish communities in Germany. He believes there are 8,000 more who are unaffiliated, and he does not count at all any of the additional thousands who have intermarried and left the fold. But Jewish leaders do not agree on the exact numbers. Some claim there are many more. Similarly, there is a variety of figures on the percentage of the aged. But on this score there is a measure of agreement. It has been established that while the average age of Jews in Germany was 57 a. few years ago, it is now 48. Thus, it is agreed that there are few young people here—and that is con- sidered German Jewry's problem. Some contend that many of the youth will emigrate, that most of them plan to leave for studies abroad or for settlement in Israel. Some give the figure for youth as 3,000, while Dr. van Dam claims its is 4,000. But there is near total agreement on the lack of interest in Jewish religious life among the youth. There is total agreement that religious activities generally are at a very low ebb. Dr. van Dam is challenging on this point. "I have attended international gatherings and have heard many reports which prove to me that the situation is like that in the United States, Great Britain and other countries," he said. Thus, a declining spiritual status is in evidence, and the Jewish leaders here consider it their major problem. Dr. van Dam, like many of his associates, holds to the view that "it is important historically that there should be a Jewish community here." He con- ceded that there are no Jews in the Bundeswehr and he ascribes it primarily to the consequence of the composition of the Jewish , community, which has few youths, and to the reaction against participation in a military force. The . secretary general of the Zentralrat was especially anxious to emphasize that his committee is an independent body, that it has the right to it utilizes that right. Germany's Spiritual impoverishment BADEN BADEN, West Germany — From the mountain heights of this world famous resort city, where he has recently built his home at Herrenecker- strasse 24, Karl Marx supervises the activities of the leading Jewish newspaper published in Germany- the Allgemeine Wochen ze itu ng der Juden en in ll the Agem eine Wochen bl a tt der d Deutschen Juden (A smaller publication appears in Munich). As editor and publisher of the paper, Karl Marx, who may have been the first German Jew to return to his native land with the American occupation forces, holds' a position of great status in Germany. He is constantly consulted by German officials, he ' has access to Chancellor Adenauer, to President Luebke and former President Heuss, all of whom he has befriended, and to the various ministries in the Federal R Republic ra l epuc o Germany, of G No relation to the founder of the Socialist movement and the author of "Das Kapital", the name Karl Marx has occasioned unusual experi- ences and reactions, all of which he has handled with a sense of good humor. He seems to like the idea of having to counteract the Karl Marxism in his name. Karl Marx's paper has a circulation of 48,000. He claims that 60 per cent of his readers are non- Jews, and he ascribes it to the interest that exists in many ranks in the position of German Jewry. But the fact that German officialdom is so deeply concerned in whit is being published in his paper, the German government's desire to befriend the Jews and to grant them - all sorts of privileges, may more than anything else, be responsible for a large readership of the Allgemeine Wochenblatt in of- ficial quarters. - Marx also claims wide readership of his paper by former German Jews in Israel, the 'United States and other countries. . Karl Marx believes that the existence of a strong Jewish community in Germany is a necessity for Germany and that it also is vital for Israel. "West Germany is and will remain Israel's strongest defender and supporter in Europe," Marx said. Is there much of a future for German Jewry? Karl Marx is the most optimistic German leader I have met. Unlike most of the others, who foresee only bleakness in the years to come, he believes that in another generation there may be 100,000 Jews in Germany. "When° there were only 12,000 Jews left in Germany," he stated, "about 10 years ago, I pre- dicted a Jewish population of 30,000 in 1960. My prophecy came true, and I believe that more and more Jews will come here in the years ahead." but he insists that relations between Jews and Germans will be good, that such good relations are needed and he expressed the view that many Jews may, in the future, come to Germany from behind the Iron Curtain. Karl Marx is a conservative in his editorial t"!a- pacity. He does not stir up controversial issues. When a conflict arose among Jewish leaders regard- ing the film "Die Schwartze Kies"—"The Black Gravel"—which has been condemned as anti-Semitic, Marx hushed the matter up. The general secretary of the Zentralrat der Deutschen Juden, Dr. Hendrik van Dam, had registered a protest against the film and preferred charges against Producer Kaeutner and later withdrew them. Marx rejected the charges of anti-Semitism both against the film and the pro- ducer, and said nothing about the controversy in his paper. Thus there is an evident difference of opinion between Marx and van Dam, just as there is a definite division of views on many subjects among most of the Jewish spokesmen here. Marx is especially concerned about the "spirit- ual status" of German Jewry. "We are spiritually impoverished," he said. "German Jewry has no leaders. That is why the 30 to 40 prominent Jewish professors who are now teaching in German universities refuse to be active in the Jewish communities in Germany, although most of them are affiliated with the communities." - Marx has another criticism. He states that Ger- man Jewish leaders now have control of approxi- mately 140,000,000 Deutsche Mark, which have been provided la the reparations by the Federal Republic for the destruction of Jewish communal property. That, Mark contends, has given the Jewish leaders power that makes them a bit arrogant. Many of the objective Jewish personalities have made tin point that too many synagogues are being built for communities that do not use them, that it is difficult to gather minyanim for services, and that the funds could be used for better purposes, in addition to aiding Israel. That's one of the views held by Marx, who was anAnti-Zionist in pre-Hitler days but who now is tl. % head of the West German Zionist movement. Apparently van Dam's anti-Zionist views irk him. Marx, who has traveled many times to Israel, who has been to many European countries and to Latin America, says he will continue to refuse to go to the United States because he will not visit a country that condones racial discrimination. It was a viewpoint that sounded rather inconsistent for a man who lives in a land that still has many—very many Nazis, and which has to express pride in having outlawed Nazism. (Continued on Page 40) •