Anti-Semitic Revival in Britain THE JEWISH NEWS Incorporating the Detroit Jewish Chronicle commencing with issue of July 20, 1951 Member American Association of English—Jewish Newspapers, Michigan Press Associations, National Editorial Association. Published every Friday by The Jewish News Publishing Co., 17100 West Seven Mile Road, Detroit 35, Mach., VE 8-9364. Subscription $6 a year. Foreign $7. Second Class Postage Paid At Detroit, Michigan PHILIP SLOMOVITZ Editor and Publisher SIDNEY SHMARAK CARMI M. SLOMOVITZ HARVEY ZUCKERBERG Advertising Manager Business Manager City Editor Sabbath Scriptural Selections This Sabbath. the twenty-fifth day of Ab, 5722, the following scriptural selections will be , eats in our synagogues: 54:11-55:5. Pentateuchal portion. Reeh. Petit. 11:26-16:17. Prophetical portion. I.soiah Licht Isenshen, Friday, August 24. 7:82 p.m. Vol. X1.1 No. 26 Page Four August 24, 1962 Welcome, Jewish War Veterans Detroit is privileged, to have as its Congressional leaders. The organization guests the thoUsands of affiliated mem- has played a leading role in demanding bers of the Jewish War Veterans of the the rejection by American authorities of United States who, in annual convention any attempts to bar Jews from services here, are reviewing their past accomplish- in foreign lands. The veterans are in the ments and are planning new functions front ranks of those fighting to out an as a continuation of their services to our end to the boycott instituted against country and their efforts to protect the American firms by Arab countries, and rights of their fellow-Jews wherever they they are on record in opposition to all may reside. evidences of antagonism to Israel. It is to the credit of the JWV that JWV's voice not only has been heard its leaders have been vigilant in their in defense of Jewish rights: it has been tasks of assuring the protection of the and continues to be hearkened to, and rights of Americans everywhere. the must be respected as a valued element elimination of bigotry on the home front in the battle against injustice. Detroit's JWV leaders have served and prevention of discrimination agaiiist their movement valiantly. They have plan- Jews in foreign lands. JWV has fought valiantly in areas in- ned the convention opening here this solving civil rights. The veterans' organi- week-end with tact and with devotion. zation—the oldest movement of war vet- We congratulate them on their efforts erans in this country—has been on the and we join in welcoming the Jewish War alert against the emergence of racial and Veterans' convention to Detroit. May religious prejudices, and its voice has their deliberations meet with complete been heard in the White House and by success. Nazi Symptoms and Declining German Jewry Disciplinary action now being taken against former Nazi judges and Hitler officials by the West German govern- ment indicates that the Bonn regime is determined to bring to justice those who were responsible for the mass murders and for the planned extermination of the Jewish people. Nevertheless, there are frequent evi- dences of recurrence of Nazi tactics which emphasize the need for more thorough probing into the political activities of neo-Nazis who are striving to reintroduce the policies of the old regime.. Of special concern is the reconstitu- tion last week at Kassel of the German National Peoples Party, the dormant right-wing group of the Weimar Republic h ich supported the Nazi regime under Hitler in 1933. In Frankfurt a Nazi who was on trial on war crimes charges gave the "Heil Hitler" salute, and many other simi- lar demonstrations of an anti-democratic and anti-Semitic nature have taken place. Yet, many trials against former Nazis are now in progress, and it is hoped that the criminals will be brought to justice. Meanwhile. Jewish life in Germany continues to deteriorate. While 1,500 have registered for Jewish courses in Berlin, life in a community where the majority is composed of older people can not hold out much hope for a bright future. Proof of the hopelessness of the Jew- ish position is provided in a report that has been issued by ORT about the "end of an era" in its activities in Germany. The ORT report states: Seventeen years ago, on the heels of the armies of liberation, the work of re- habilitation of the survivors of the Euro- pean catastrophe was begun. The first ORT schools opened in Landsberg, Germany. They spread rapidly into a network of training centers that blanketed every DP camp and refugee center in Germany, Austria and Italy. Some 80,000 persons received instruc- tion during the next few years. 30,000 went on to Israel to ply their skills. The ORT schools were not merely work- shops for learning trades. They became centers of hope for the future, for the reconstruction of individual lives. The ORT diploma became known as a "passport to freedom,'' acceptable as a document for immigration. Late in 1961, ORT work in Germany ceased. The schools had been shut down in the early fifties, with the mass exodus of DPs. A few schools had remained for the ill and handicapped who for various reasons stayed on. Two years ago, the last school in Munich was shut and an appren- tice placement service was instituted for those needing this kind of help. But economic conditions and the drastic reduction in the Jewish population to some 25,000. most of them elderly, made even this unnecessary. The director for Germany and Austria,- A. Goldman, in announcing the discontinu- ation noted these conditions: "This meas- ure was unavoidable in the light of the present situation in Germany. The eco- nomic boom has lasted for several years and ha§ absorbed all available manpower. There is little problem in placement and almost any worker can find employment without difficulty. Because of this, the number of students in ORT courses and the apprenticeship service had become so small that we decided to close the insti- tutions." The basic fact is that there are few Jewish applicants. There are few Jews who are able to take or are in need of voca- tional training. A chapter of ORT history has closed. 'Understanding Israel' Judith Laikin One of Three Valuable Book Participants As part of its "Understanding Your World" series. Laidlaw Brothers, educational publishers, of River Forest, 111., have just issued the very informative "Understanding Israel." Judith Laikin (Mrs. Sol Elkin). daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Laikin, whose literary contributions to numerous maga- zines already have distinguished her as an able observer and student of world affairs, is co-author of this book with Marion. Gartler and George Hall. "Understanding Israel" is. indeed. a valuable work. In spite of its brevity—or perhaps because of its mere 64 pages into which are packed all the relevant material about the young country—the readers of this book will be greatly enlightened by its contents. Commencing with the historical background, a review of the ancient history of Israel. leading up to the War of Independence, the authors proceed to provide information about the Israel a today—its agriculture. industry, educational programs, recreation and other aspects of the newly developed modern community. The authors describe the two major cities in Israel—Tel Aviv and Jerusalem—the art and entertainment in the former, the problems faced by the division of the latter. They describe the functions of the Israel government and point to the problems of the future—Israel's relations with the Arabs and the need to create a friendship with its neighbors. They point to the menacing threats to Israel by the Arab boycott and declare that "The situation is a source of concern not only to Israel. but to the rest of the world as well." In the course of their interpretations of Israeli affairs, the three authors point to the Jewish state's numerous interests. includ- ing literature. music and art. A glossary of important terms is appended to explain a number of references in the book. "Understanding Israel" will serve a valuable purpose in pro- viding much needed information about Israel. Welcome Addition to Paperbacks ' Dr. Spiegel s ' The ORT experience is only one ex- ample of a decline in the positive ap- Hebrew proaches towards a revival of Jewish life One of the great classics published in the early 1930s is in the land where the worst holocaust in now available in a paperback. history materialized under Hitler and "Hebrew Reborn" by Prof. Shalom Spiegel has just been with the approval of the German people. reissued jointly by the Jewish Publication Society and Meridian Books of the World Publishing Co. Non-Jewish Germans like President Luebke and Chancellor Adenauer and their associates would have liked to see an increase in Germany's population, a return of some of the refugees, a revival of the friendliest relations between Chris- tians and Jews in present-day Germany. It is doubtful whether this could materi- alize, and anything approaching a whole- some resurgence of Jewish cultural ac- tivities will certainly be deterred as long as there are evidences of neo-Nazism. In fairness to the Federal German Republic, it should be noted that Wil- liam Henry Chamberlin, in an article in the Wall Street Journal, vehemently de- nied that ex-Nazis are influencing the German authorities. "On the contrary," he declared. "it would be impossible to imagine a system more different from Hitler's than the one which has developed under the leadership of Adenauer." While this is generally acknowledged, German Jewry continues to decline in numbers and is a ponentity culturally- wise, unlike the community that func- tioned before Hitler. This is a sad indica- tion of a collapse that may prove to be without cure. Reborn' While the book deals with the rebirth of Hebrew and the miracle accompanying it, Dr. Spiegel asks, at the very outset: "Hebrew reborn — but was it ever dead? Or, if it was, how can a dead language be born again?" Thereupon he shows that the revival of He- brew and its transformation into a colloquial tongue, the revival of the literature in that language, "have proven beyond a doubt the physiological genuineness of our rejuvenation as a people." Dr. Spiegel's book deals with the epoch Dr. Spiegel of the Haskalah. Dealing with the era of enlightenment, it re- views the activities of distinguished personalities that contributed towards Hebrew's revival. The second portion of the book is devoted to a review of events and leaders "Under the Spell of the National Renaissance — David Frichman, Ahad Ha'Am, J. L. Gordon, Tchernochivski, Eliezer Ben Yehudah and others. He shows how Palestine, in pre-Israel days, already had begun to become "a center of pro- ductive life." The concluding portion of the book paid tribute to "the magic of an, ancient language and says in reference to "the whole of modern Hebrew literature": "Though it may seek distant, foreign seas far from its fatherland and its spiritual inheritance, though it may desire to break the old tablets and to herald undiscovered coasts, it finds itself after encircling the whole earth—back in its own harbor." Dr. Spiegel's "Hebrew Reborn" is one of the most wel- — come additions to the paperbacks. It enriches popularly-priced literature.