Friday, Sept. 20, 1963 — THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS -- 20 Peace Corps Member Eeta Freeman Kops' Life Story Dr. Judah Shapiro to Be Lecturer THE WORLD IS A WEDDING, by Bernard Kops. Coward-McCann Inc., for Sholem Aleichern's 'Weekend' Tells of Pakistan Jewish Community New York. Appearing in the current issue of Beth Aaron Synagogue's "The Scribe" in an article by Eeta Freeman, a member of the con- gregation and daughter of Mr. and Mrs. B. Z. Freeman. Mrs. Freeman is president of the synagogue Sisterhood. Her daughter, now serving in the Peace Corps in Pakistan, writes of Jews and Judaism in a Mos- lem country. "Mogain Shalome Synagogue, over 100-years-old, is maintained by the 400 Jews that remain in the country. "The presidency of the Jewish community is hereditary. Simon Reuben (he and others have re- tained their European surnames through hundreds of years here) is the third generation in his family to hold this title. He is guide and counselor, arbitrator and substitute rabbi for the con- gregation. He proudly points out that his family built Mogain Shalome. "After working with the Peace Corps in the city of Lah- ore for almost a year, I vaca- tioned in Karachi. "Although they call themselves orthodox, Pakistan's Jews have had to veer slightly from the strict tradition. For instance, kosher meat is available only two days-a-week. Being a Mos- lem country, pork is not sold anywhere. MUMIFORD U S I N G S By PATTY REISTMAN "All 70 families are bilingual. They speak Urdu, the 1 o c al language, but 'prefer to speak English at home and in their businesses. Most families from India hope one day to send their children to Israel. Only a few young people migrate to Israel each year, but many more boys than girls have gone. "The main problem, recog- nized by all of the adults, is the lack of Jewish education. The present generation knows neither Hebrew nor Jewish his- tory. The Jewish Agency sent a teacher who stayed only one year. What prayer books they have, are all Hebrew - English ones from the United States or Britain. "Surprising as it is to West- erners, these Jews living in a Moslem country are truly first- class citizens. Pakistan's 400 en- counter no discrimination in employment, horsing, social or religious practices. "They try to be good Jews, good Pakistanis, and loyal sup- porters of Israel. Cut off from the bulk of Jewish learning and traditions that developed in Eur- ope after the Inquisition, they created and maintain a flourish- ing community of Bnai Israel throughout Asia. To anyone visiting or working here, they are a constant reminder that you can find good Jews in every corner of the globe." ewiy n t e ir This Week's Radio and Television Programs MESSAGE OF ISRAEL Time: 11 a.m. Sunday. Station: WXYZ. Feature: Rabbi Joseph Bueh- ler of Temple Mizpah, Chicago, Following the hustle and ex- Ill., will speak on "When Man citement of a seemingly short is Most Like God." * * * v a c a t i o n, 3,000 Mumfordites have settled down with their studies for the 1963-64 school year. While many Mumfordites stayed at home, several traveled abroad under the various aus- pices of United Synagogue Youth, Histadruth and United Council of Churches. Included was Shelley Kessler, who, as Mumford's American Field Service summer exchange student, spent the summer with the family of Alfredo Pineda in Alcalon Province, Philippines. During her 10-week stay, she toured the islands and became acquainted with Philipino culture. Marking Mumford's ninth year of participation in the AFS pro- gram, the student body wel- comes Luis Udart of Uraguay. Luis, who enrolled as a 12B, is residing at the home of Dr. and Mrs. Benjamin Juliar as guest of their son Neil. New members of the Radio Broadcasters Guild selected from auditions are Craig Car- nick, Steve Iczkovitz, Susan Leamy and Eric Pianin, 12B's; Babette Krolick, Arthur Lerner, Bob Rosenberg, Steve Selzer, Ada Snyder, and Joan Weiss, 11B's. Recently elected Guild officers include Judi Magi, president; Gary Rubin, vice- president; Suzy Weiss, secre- tary; John Bookston, treasurer; Karen Newman and Barbara Miller, board members. Senior activities got under- way with the distribution of class pins and organization of the steering committee. Candi- dates for office are currently circulating petitions and plan- ning skits for elections to be held Sept. 30. The Mustangs are preparing for their football game against Northeastern Sept. 26 at North- eastern. Under the coaching of Stan Mullin, this year's squad will be led by co-captains Norm Lavin and Greg Palmer. ETERNAL LIGHT Time: 10:30 p.m. Sunday, Station: WWJ. Feature: Maurice Samuel will discuss great Hassidic tales adapted from his book, "Prince of the Ghetto," a study of the life and work of the great Yid- dish writer I. L. Peretz. * * * THE JEWISH HERITAGE Time: 11:30 p.m. Sunday. Station: WCAR. Feature: "The Fast I Have Chosen," a special broadcast marking Yom Kippur, will fea- ture Rabbi Benjamin H. Gor- relick of Beth Aaron Synagogue, the choir of Temple Beth El, directed by Jason Tickton, and narrators Bob Leslie and Bea Koenigsberg. * * * TO DWELL TOGETHER A Review by Mitzi Rachleff Dr. Judah J. Shapiro, secre- tion only. For information and When Bernard Kops was a tary of the National Foundation reservations, call VE 8-7440. child, sharing two beds with six for Jewish - The author of many papers in siblings in an East End ghetto Culture, w i 11 English, Hebrew and Yiddish, during pre-war London, the world, as the Talmud teaches, was a wedding. Living in Step- ney Green with his Dutch im- migrant parents, getting food parcels from the Jewish Board of Guardians, queuing up for bags of sweets and fruits out- side the synagogues during Suc- coth or Simchat Torah, com- posed the childhood world that Kops loved. Later, during the War, the world became a funeral for Kops and he began clutch- ing desperately for vestiges of life. He developed a passion for books and writing, for the neur- otic bohemian atmosphere of Soho, for paths leading to self- destruction and self-discovery. Kops was the avatar of the lost generation which emerged from World War II, a searcher, a longer, an unfulfilled Jewish boy whose beloved mother had taught him that although, "blood was thicker than water," Chris- tions "were human, too." In his richly colored auto- biography, poet-playwright Kops tells of his discoveries in his quest for identity and security in a chaotic existence: "There I realized how much Jews needed the family. It was our security. We were obsessed with it, we indulged in it and we enjoyed our indulgence and obsession. For here was our strength, our only safety, our place of worship . . . The family was the essence of our faith .. . and possibly our religion springs from this." Possessed with a curiosity and humor which all but saves him from despair, Kops becomes in- volved in a society of prosti- tutes, criminals, dope addicts and other kindred soul seekers. As he struggles to alienate him- self from his family his mother's death brings a further fortifica- tion of his Jewish conscious- ness. Kops writes, "It's hard to assess the meaning and power of a Jewish mother. She is prac- tically always a matriarch, hold- ing the family together, bending it to her will, making a living bit of sense out of the sense- lessness of the universe. When she dies the family is splintered, destroyed. The children become separate planets shooting their own directions into space." All ends well, however. Kops meets beautiful Jewish Erica, who represents the sanity for which he had been searching throughout his life. "I, who had spent all my life looking for something, had found what I was looking for. I, who broke away from the family, had merely wanted a place in the sun for my own family." With the birth of his son, Adam, the meaning of existence is reaf- firmed for Kops. "The World is a Wedding" is a skillfully written work en- dowed with the brilliance and wit of one of England's most sensitive and talented Angry Young Men. Time: 9:15 a.m. Sunday. Station: WJBK (radio and television simultaneously), Feature: The Book of Jonah will be discussed by Rabbi Is- rael Halpern of Beth Abraham Synagogue and Joseph Edel- man, director of the Jewish Community Council Culture Canada's Diefenbaker Commission. The program is Is Guest of Israel TEL AVIV, (JTA) —John G. entitled "Go to Nineveh." Diefenbaker, former Prime Min- * * * SPECIAL Time: 9:30 p.m. Sunday. Station: WJR. Feature: "From All Your Sins . . ." will feature Rabbi James T. Gordon, newly-elected spiritual leader of Young Israel Center of Oak Woods, in a spe- cial sermonette and liturgical selections by prominent cantors. * * * COUNCIL-ALTMAN HOUR Time: 10 p.m. Saturday. Station: WJLB, Feature: Movsas Goldoftas, secretary of the Farband City Committee, will discuss the forthcoming conference to be held Oct. 5. ister of Canada, arrived here for a visit as a guest of the govern- ment, after visiting Egypt. Diefenbaker t o 1 d newsmen that, while in Cairo, he had a talk with Egypt's President Nas- ser, but, he declared, the con- ference did not touch either on Egyptian relations with Israel or on other Middle East prob- lems. High Israeli officials of the Foreign Ministry, as well as ranking military officers, met Diefenbaker upon his arrival. He left immediately for Jerusa- lem where he met with Prime Minister Levi Eshkol and For- eign Minister Golda Meir. be the honor- ed guest speak- er at the Sho- lem Aleichem Institute's an- nu a 1 banquet and lecture weekend Oct. 12-13. Shapiro will speak 8:45 p.m. Oct. 12 on "Idle Wor- ship —Religion Without Secu- larism." T h e Shapiro lecture is open to the public. Shapiro will speak 6:30 p.m. Oct. 13 on "Warsaw—Jerusalem and Detroit—Patterns of Jewish Education." This second evening is the Institute's annual banquet and may be attended by reserva- Technion Society Honors Prexy Gruzen WEST ORANGE, N.J., (JTA) —Declaring that to ignore "Egypt's military build-up, plus Nasser's insatiable ambition to rule over all Arab governments is to turn our backs upon real- ity," Congressman Emanuel Celler, Democrat of New York, chairman of the House Judi- ciary Committee, warned here that tension in the Middle East brooks ill for the western world." Celler was principal speaker at a testimonial dinner ten- dered in honor of B. Sumner Gruzen, president of American Technion Society, a nationwide group that provides financial and technical assistance to the Technion-Israel Institute of Technology, the oldest institu- tion of higher learning in Is- rael. Shapiro is the former national director of the Bnai Brith Hillel Foundation. He has also held executive posts with the Joint Distribution Committee and the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany. He is a past president of the National Conference of Jewish Com- munal organizations. PM/ Activities DETROIT LADIES AUXIL- IARY will meet 8 p.m. Monday at the Memorial Home. Refresh- rremts will be served. * * * OAK PARK LADIES AUXIL- IARY will hold a membership party 8:30 p.m. Tuesday at the home of Mrs. Maurice Nobel, 24144 Westhampton. A "To- night" program will highlight the evening. Special guests will include Mesdames Sam Skupsky, Dept. of Mich. president; John Nemon, national junior vice- president; Philip Bernstein, past department president; and Sidney Cohen, past department president. Mrs. Max Strumeyer, auxiliary president, invites pro- spective members to attend. Israel's Shipping Israeli shipping cargo traffic totaled 1,497,000,000 tons in 1962, an increase of 40 per cent over the figures for the pre- vious year. ! I WHY WORRY I I Leave Everything to Us PANCHITO AND ORCHESTRA • BAR MITZVAHS • WEDDINGS YeS • OUR SPECIALTY LATIN SHOWS & MUSIC UN 1-5435 go undations hy WYN and HAROLD LANDIS HOME CATERING Phone Corsets-Brassieres Expertly Fitted EL 6-8411 • STYLE • ELEGANCE • BEAUTY WYN-HAROLD CATERING 20127 W. 7 MILE RD. 538-5575 Parking in Rear objets d'art • UPHOLSTERING • DRAPERIES INTERIORS by Phil Morganroth Residential and Commercial Professional Member N.S.I.D. 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