THE JEWISH NEWS Incorporating the Detroit Jewish Chronicle commencing with issue of July 20, 1951 Member American Association of English—Jewish Newspapers, Michigan Press Association, National Editorial Association. Published every Friday by The Jewish News Publishing Co., 17100 West Seven Mile Road, Detroit 35, Mich., VE 8-9364. Subscription $6 a year. Foreign $7. Second Class Postage Paid At Detroit, Michigan PHILIP SLOMOVITZ CARMI M. SLOMOVITZ Editor and Publisher Business Manager SIDNEY SHMARAK Advertising Manager Russian Sabre Dance CHARLOTTE HYAMS City Editor Sabbath Scriptural Selections This Sabbath, the twenty-sixth day of Tevet, 5724, the following Scriptural selections will be read in our synagogues: Pentateuchal portion: Exod. 6:2-9:35. Prophetical portion: Ezekiel 28:25-29:21. Licht l3enshen, Friday. Jan. 10, 5:02 p.m. January 10, 1964 Page Four VOL. XLIV. No. 20 Campaign Chairmen and Community Duties Detroit's Allied Jewish Campaign soon will be under way and the time is at hand for the mobilization of all available forces to assure success for the task of providing the major funds for the most pressing overseas needs, as well as for the upkeep of all of the local and national cultural, recreational and social services agencies. With the selection of the year's cam- paign chairmen, the initial organizational efforts in enrolling leadership have been put into motion. Now it becomes neces- sary, in addition to assuring the enroll- ment of the ablest men and women for the major tasks in guiding the campaign, to obtain the cooperation of several thou- sand workers who must secure contribu- tions from close to 30,000 people who are potential givers to the great cause that calls for a generous response. With Charles Gershenson and Al Bor- man, last year's co-chairmen, again at the helm, and Mrs. Jerome Hauser as head of the Women's Division, it is a foregone conclusion that the community's ablest men and women will lend their names to leadership and to positions as volun- teers in the ranks. As in past years, a thorough educa- tional campaign again will be in progress to enlighten our people on the needs that call for help. There is a continuing vast. migration movement out of lands of op- pression into Israel. These tens of thou- sands must be aided to find their roots in the Land of Israel. The crises in many lands have not yet been hurdled. There are so many to be helped in Moslem countries, in Eastern Europe, in the lands wherein the wholesome Jewish communi- ties that existed before the Hitler era either have vanished or still call for the surviving residents' rehabilitation, that their cry for help must not be ignored. There are tens of thousands of refugees in France and in other countries who are awaiting either rehabilitation or urgent help to assist them in becoming firmly established in new homes. Let it be understood that Israel more than shares in this great effort, that the Jewish State provides the major means for the settlement of large numbers of people. But the Jewish State, handicapped by threats from her hostile neighbors, constantly in danger of the war threats that come from Cairo and other Arab cap- itals, must think first in terms of self- defense. The philanthropic responsibili- ties are, therefore, mainly ours, and the campaign about to be launched aims to provide the help necessary for those in dire need to escape the indignities that are being hurled at them in so many backward areas. Our Allied Jewish Campaign is a vital instrument for the continuation of the major Jewish educational efforts, mostly in our community schools and also na- tionally. The funds we raise provide the means wherewith to train our youth for good citizenship, for an understanding and appreciation of their Jewish heri- tage. Without these media our community will be impoverished. Let us mobilize, therefore, to make the forthcoming campaign one of the most successful in our community's history. It is a duty that involves security for our kinsmen and self-respect for all of us who share responsibility for a dignified Jewish survival. Dr. Sidney Steiman, who now holds a pulpit in Indianapolis, who is director of the school of religion at the University of Indiana, has produced a most valuable book on the Maharil. It has just been issued by Bloch Publishing Co. under the title "Custom and Survival." So comprehensive is this study that the eminent scholar, Dr. Nahum N. Glatzer, of the Brandeis.University department of Near Eastern and Judaic studies, pays the author a compliment for his work in the following foreword: "Rabbi Jacob ben Moses ha Levi Moelin of Mainz, known as the Maharil, was one of the most influential personalities in the West-European Jewish community in the second half of the 14th and the beginning of the 15th centuries. Affectionately referred to as the 'master of ceremonies of Ashkenazic Jewry,' he set out to rebuild the ancient communities which had been so sadly affected by the ravishes of the Black Death (1348- 1349), the ensuing persecution from without and the disorgani- zation and discouragement within. In attempting this labor of reconstruction he directed his effort toward the cultivation of the Minhag, time-honored religious usage. By restoring the dignity of the ancient customs, by lending them added author- ity, within the total framework of religious life, Maharil wished to imbue the spiritually impoverished communities with stronger piety, deeper sense of order, continuity and tradition. "Dr. Sidney Steiman has made an important contribution to Jewish historical scholarship by reconstruction of the life Work of Maharil; by presenting a coherent picture of the Ash- kenazic Minhag as it took shape in the school of Maharil and his disciples, Zahnan of St. Goar and. Jacob Well, rabbi in Nuremberg, Augsburg, and Erfurt; and, finally, by viewing this work against its historical background. Besides a thorOugh acquaintance with the source material, Rabbi Steiman's research which is currently observing an important required much circumspection, discernment, and last but not anniversary, has rendered and continues least, a profound love for the subject matter. "The author. has indeed succeeded in introducing both the to give so many valuable services to student of Jewish life and thought and the intelligent layman America and to Jewry that its status has to one of the seldom treated, and often misunderstood, chap- grown with the years. The Seminary has had the support of ters in religious history. Dr. Steiman's work helps to . clarify one of the main factors in the spirit of intense, fervent, warm such distinguished leaders as the late piety characterized Ashkenazic communities in the cen- Louis Marshall and the late Senator turies that following the activity of Maharil." Herbert H. Lehman. Those now assisting Dr. Steiman's contribution towards an understanding of the in the Seminary's functions contain the Maharil's role in Jewish history assumes a two-fold significance. names of many of American Jewry's most His book offers biographical data on the great rabbinic scholar prominent leaders. and reviews thoroughly the teachings of the Maharil. By honoring the four rabbis for their As the author indicates, "The teachings of the Maharil have century of service, Detroit Jewry also re- been presented and evaluated so as to give the reader an insight affirms its interest in one of the great into the function of custom (Minhag) in the life of .medieval institutions of learning, and the Con- Jewry, as well as to determine the Maharil's influence on and usage.of Ashkena- servative affiliates thereby also reassure Contribution to the .Minhag Ashkenazi Religious great authority of the zic Jews to our own day still reflects_ the support for the Seminary. Maharil." . Of special interest is the author's reference to the Maliaril's resort to the sermon. We learn that the Maharil did preach, that his sermonic material "deals with clarifying Minhagim," that: "The Maharil took advantage of the sermon to teach.the raising of the vast sums that are neces- people moderation and temperance. Ina sermon before Pass- sary to assure the fulfillment of the themselves from Over- philanthropic obligations to the many new over, he exhorted the people to restrain tWO . Sederini. Iii another and excessive drinking at the eating immigrants who are flocking to Israel, sermon, he recognized the importance of the women of his day away from persecution. and even permitted them to -recline at the Seder along with The lodal Israel Bond leaders have an the men." ambitious program for the current year. In another sermon the Maharil emphasized that "repentance They have set a goal of $2 million for does not mean simple confession but restitution as well. It is not 1964. Judging by the experiences of the enough 'to say 'I have sinned; I . will not do this anymore.' frue past two years, there is ample reason to repentance means to return what has been improperly taken and believe that their aspirations will be ful- to rectify the wrong that has been done." The Maharil's views on the festivals and celebrations, on filled. The responsiveness of our com- study and learning and on community relations are evaluated munity has been at so high a level, that Steiman, who asserts: Israel is certain to gain from the philan- by Rabbi "The survival of Ashkenazic Judaism was achieved _through thropic spirit of Detroit Jewry as well as the efforts of the Maharil and his successors to define and estab- the readiness to participate in the sound lish the Ashkenazic Minhag. Custom is the poetic translation of Israeli investments. Detroit Jews have religious values in daily living. The establishment of a Minhag played important roles in the establish- (time-honored religious usage) in medieval Germany proved to ment of industries in Israel, and they be a determining factor in the survival of Ashkenazic Judaism. have, at the same time, participated in Unquestionably, this was survival through custom." Dr. Steiman has rendered a most valuable service with his the community-wide Bond sales. The rec- evaluation of the Maharil's role in such survival. ord is a. most creditable one. Tribute to 4 Rabbis... Honors for the Seminary Honors to be accorded here, on Jan. 20, at a dinner sponsored by the Detroit Friends of the Jewish Theological Semi- nary, to four of its distinguished graduates —Rabbis Morris Adler, Benjamin Gorre- lick, Moses Lehrman and Jacob Segal— are in themselves sufficiently significant to merit the entire community's attention. Together, the four rabbis have rendered more than 100 years of service as spiritual leaders, in Detroit and, prior to their corn- ing here, to several other communities. Of added significance is the fact that these men represent a great movement in Jewry—Conservative Judaism—and have been ordained in one of the world's most important Jewish theological seminaries. The Jewish Theological Seminary, Detroit's Impressive '63 Israel Bond Success Detroit's very noteworthy Israel Bond sales record for 1963 attests to efficiency and devotion which assisted the local organization in advancing the needs for investments in Israel. The sale of more than $1,700,000 in Israel Bonds during the past year is a tribute to the leadership and management of the Israel Bond Organization. It also is an indication of the community's realization that investments in Israel are vital in the effort to assure industrial ex- pansion that will enable many of the new- comers to find employment and will create opportunities for new industries to find root in Israel. Israel Bond purchases are among the most important supplementary tasks in our aid to Israel. Now, having completed such a good year for Bonds, our com- munity must turn its attention to the Allied Jewish Campaign, to assure the Maharil's Role in Ashkenzic Survival Told in Steiman Book -