Windsor Jewish Community `Small But Sophisticated' By CHARLOTTE HYAMS Windsor, Ontario, just a short swim away from Detroit, is often called our Canadian su- burb. But the Windsor Jewish com- munity has a mind of its own. For while its number is small (822 families) it is a "close- knit and independent Jewish community that is beginning to resemble Detroit in its sophisti- cation. This is the opinion of the Windsor Jewish Community Council through its spokesman Joseph Eisenberg, executive di- rector. Independence wasn't always characteristic of the Windsor Jewish Community. • Detroit was looked upon for guidance up until 1959 when the Philip Bernstein Jewish Community Center was erected at 1641 Oullette. With the cent e r came "more of an indigenous Jewish life in Windsor." The $450,000 Bernstein build- ing is indeed the "Jewish center" in Windsor, for not only are recreation, cultural and so- cial programs arranged here, but all functions of the Jewish Community Council are directed from this building. These in- clude fund-raising (the c o m - munity raised $100,000 last year for the United Jewish Appeal), family service and central plan- ning. Monty Pomm, assistant execu- tive director in charge of pro- gramming at the Center, is proud of the uphill line -on the , graph near his desk: 50,000 visits were paid last year to Center programs. Half the com- munity belongs to the center, participating in teen programs, including four B n a i Br i t h Youth chapters, a Brownie_ troop, cub pack and Girl Guides group under _Center auspices; a Golden Age Club with some "35 devoted and happy" older adult members; such adult clubs as a drama group and H e b r e w classes, and the physical educa- tion and health club. facilities. Available also is a children's day camp, Yo-Mee, attended by some 200 youngsters. There is no young adult pro- gram at the Center. In fact, that is • where the Windsor Jewish Community is feeling the pinch. There are virtually no young adults, period. Few college-age young people stay in Windsor to at- tend the 1 o cal university, Assumption. Instead most prefer to commute daily to Wayne State and the Uni- versity of Detroit. The result: "Intermarriage" with Detroit Jews and more attractive edu- cational opportunities h a v.e drained Windsor of its 18-24- year olds. Eisenberg hastened to add that most of these people even- - tually return to their home town "as professionals. We have a yearly two percent increase in population and the 'emigres' are largely professionals." Still, there is a dearth in young adult leadership at the Center, and Pomm is hard put to find counselors for the youth groups. Where young leadership does exist is in the 30-40 age range. The latter has provided great impetus to Zionism in Windsor. Eisenberg estimated that 10 per cent of the com- munity has already visited _Israel, and Bonds have sold well ($75,000 last year). He also attributed the close feel- ing of kinship to Israel to the Eastern European origin of the community. Eisenberg explained that al- though the first Jews arrived in 1893, the growth of Windsor came largely after World War I when immigration quotas were set up in the U. S. Many Russian and Polish Jews emigrated to Windsor with the -motive to eventually arrive in Detroit. Although many left, many remained, settling in areas around the old business district and then branching out to Sandwich and Ford City, which are now incorporated into Windsor, and the newer areas. There are some 20 Jews living in the small towns outside Wind- sor, like Kingsville, Amherstburg and Essex. They commute for important functions, such as Windsor's recent celebrations of Israel's 13th anniversary. Although the community has no "suburb problem", it is trun- cated into four parts and poses somewhat of • a transportation dilemma for the youngsters who attend Hebrew school. The Hebrew schools are the sole responsibility of the syna- gogues, as are all _ youth educa- tional and religious functions of the community. About 80 per cent of the 500 children attend after- school classes, including one Yiddish-speaking school, the Peretz Shule, which is planning a new building near Memorial Park. Twelve youngsters corn- mute to Detroit's Yeshivah day school. Synagogue life in Windsor - is "on the ascendency", Eisen- berg feels. There are a Re- •form temple and three Ortho- dox synagogues with which some 65 per cent of the Jewish population is affiliated, he said. The largest is Shaar Hasho- mayim, built in 1930 and some 360 family mem- berships. (The spiritual leader is Rabbi Samuel Stollman, son of Detroit's Rabbi Isaac Stoll- man of Cong. Mishkan Israel.) Oldest among the synagogues in Windsor is Shaarey Zedek, which held its first services in a rented hall on Pitt St., built its own edifice in 1904 and erected a new building in 1957. Its rabbi is Shmaryahu Karelitz. Tifereth Israel, with just enough members to form a minyan, was built in 1917. The newest house of worship is the Reform Temple Beth El, set up last year under the youthful leadership of former Detroit rabbi Sherwin T. Wine. Presently meeting in a leased building, the congregation is planning a new temple for its 90 member families in Sand- wich West, the most suburban area of the Jewish community. The liberal movement has be- gun to enter other synagogues. Shaar Hashomayim, according to Pomm, is an "Orthodox syna- gogue with a Conservative con- gregation having Reform tend- encies." Small as the Windsor Jew- ish community may be, it is proud of its favorite sons who have made good in civic life. They include David Croll, the only Jewish senator in Parlia- ment and a former Windsor mayor; and such men as Ja- cob D. Geller, immediate past president of the Jewish Com- munity Council, who hopes to run for Parliament in the next election; Eli Golden, another Council past president, Wind- sor's Man of the Year and a frequent award winner in the non - Jewish community; and Myer Dorn, who has also played a leading role in Wind- sor conununal affairs. Other leaders include the newly-elected Council president, young Melvin E. Sorifer, past chairman of the Welfare Fund; Harry R. Schwartz, chairman of the current Welfare Fund Cam- paign, who has . served as pres- ident of the Retail Businessmen's Association and with the Family Service Society; and printer Michael Sumner, a pioneer in Zionist work and an active par- ticipant in local and national affairs, including the Canadian Jewish Congress National Exec- utive. The ladies have made no mean contribution to the prominence of Windsor Jewry. Mrs. I. Ben- .Ezra, known for her work in the non-sectarian civic Council of Women, is active in Hadassah national circles, as is Frances Geller, for whom a Chatham Hadassah chapter was named. It takes no more than a brief -visit to realize that Windsor Jewry—as well as all Windsor —is Americanized. . . Its citi- zens look and act like their De- troit relatives. Only an occa- sional symbol of Canada's Do- minion status is apparent, like the portrait of Queen Elizabeth hanging 'in the Jewish Center. But the Windsor Jewish -Community is, nevertheless, very much Canadian, proud of the liberal tradition of toler- ance that is the declared pol- icy of the country, and dedi- cated to the cause of Canadian freedom. In the words of Senator Croll, who addressed the Senate on the occasion of the bicentenary of Jewish life in Canada in 1959: "We in Windsor have been blessed in having, among our citizens, members of the Jewish faith who are devoted, loyal citizens, sharing willingly . in all our undertakings for the public good . . . Congratulations on two hundred years of freedom under The Flag of the Common- wealth where each of us and all men may walk as their con- science persuades them, every one in the name of his God." Supreme Court Rules Officeholders Need Not Declare Belief in Religion (Direct JTA Teletype Wire to, The Jewish News) . NEW YORK — A unanimous decision by the U.S. Supreme Court striking down the require- ment in the constitution of the State of Maryland that office- holders declare their "belief in G o d , ' was described by the American Jewish Congress Tues- day as a major victory for "re- ligions liberty and the separation of church and state." In handing down the decision, the Supreme Court unanimously reversed a previous lower court ruling against Roy R. Torcaso, whose commission as a notary public was withheld because he refused to sign the state oath declaring his belief in God. Tor- caso's chief attorney was Leo Pfeffer, general counsel of the American Jewish Congress. Justice Hugo Black declared in a majority opinion that "we repeat and again reaffirm that neither a state nor the Federal Government can constitutionally force a person to "profess a be- lief or a disbelief in any religion." Justice Felix Frankfurter and John M. Harlan went along with the judgment but did not join the opinion. In hailing the decision, the American Jewish Congress de- clared that "we are deeply gratified' at the court's ruling that any religious test for public - of- fice violates the most funda- mental principle of American democracy—that a man's• religi- ous beliefs or disbeliefs are in no way subject to government control." Other states requiring a belief in the existence of a supreme being as a qualification for pub- lic office are Arkansas, Missis- sippi, North Carolina, Pennsyl- vania, South Carolina, Tennessee and Texas. Jews in South Africa Clarify Stand , Toward New Status of the Republic JOHANNESBURG, (JTA) — The official position of South African Jewry toward the South African Republic established here was made clear at a meeting of the South African Jewish Board of Deputies in a declaration made at the meeting of the chairman, Dr. Teddy Schneider, which was endorsed warmly by the entire Board. Schneider said: "Looking back over 51 years of the Union of South Africa, we see that the Jews here have serv- ed the country in all fields. The religious services which were held in our synagogues and tem- ples during the last weekend, with special prayers for the wel- fare of the Republic are- a mea- sure of the Jew's faith in South Africa, his identification with the best interests of the land, and the rededication of the entire Jewish community to help South Africa in every way possible in the future. "We take off our hats to the past, and we take off our coats to the future. Difficult times may lie ahead. But we, as a commu- nity, will play our part in facing the coming tasks as we played our part in all past national tasks." The South African Jewish com- munity was represented at the official investiture of the Repub- lic's first president, Charles R. Swart, - and at a state banquet where authorities will provide special kosher food for the Chief Rabbi and other Jewish guests. During the weekend, sermons in various synagogues stressed the theme of citizens' loyalties and government's responsibilities to ensure the well-being of all sec- tions of the country's inhabitants. Editorials in the Jewish press greeted the advent of the Repub- lic, affirming the loyalty of the country's Jewish citizens. Jewish Affairs, the organ of the Jewish Board of Deputies, declared: "South Africa's 100,000 Jews are a settled, permanent part of the European population, enjoying the same rights and subject to the same duties as other citizens, and will accord the Republic the same loyalty they always accorded the Union. Loyalty to the State is a precept enjoined upon Jews by Judaism." The editorial referred to the many fields — the professions, arts, commerce, industry, educa- tion, science and social services —in which Jews made a "truly formidable contribution to the welfare and progress of South Africa." The publication express- ed the confidence they will make no less a contribution to the progress of the Republic. Hebrew Corner Sick Fund of Kupat Holim The members of the 2nd Aliya (i.e. wave of immigration to Israel) laid the foundations for the Jew- ish labor - and labor settlements —their road was not an easy one. They arrived in Eretz Israel when the country was under Turkish rule and neglected and desolate. The pioneers of this wave of immigration were forced to adjust themselves to a hot climate and an unaccustomed way of life. The many swamps in the various parts of the country spread mosquitoes and spawned disease. The workers who lived in stables or miserable Arab hovels fell ill with malaria, typhoid, dysentery and skin diseases and there was no one to care for the sick. The dangerously ill were transported by wagon to the hospital, a two-day journey through difficult and ruinous roads. No won- der that many of the sick died and the workers suffered disillusionment and despair. One day the. workers convened and decided to found a sick fund which would afford patients assis- tance in time of need. And so in 1911 the first sick fund was estab- lished which rendered medical as- sistance to every member who paid a fixed fee. When the First World War and its troubles were over and the General Federation of Labor was founded (in 1920)- the sick fund expanded. It established its own clinics, phar- macies and hospitals. Today the num- ber of persons who benefit from its assistance totals over a million and at its disposal are nearly a thousand clinics and two thousand doctors. Since the emergence of the State and the beginning of mass immigra- tion, the sick fund was charged with absorbing the masses of immigrants, most of whom medically speaking hailed from backward countries, and render them medical assistance and guidance in matters of hygiene. 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