Friday, March 27, 1 969 -- THE DETRO IT JEWISH N EWS --26 3 Jewish Vignettes at Passover in Korea BY ISRAEL B. KOLLER (Copyright, 1964, Jewish Telegraphic Agency, Inc.) Passover. especially this one, brings back some memories. My Passover in 1962 was not like any other one before. Two hun- dred Jewish servicemen were assembled in the Retreat Cen- ter, Seoul, Korea, to participate in a seder thousands of miles from home. The snow was deep and the air was frosty. Kosher meat had been shipped in from the States by the Army. Matzo and wine, as well as canned chicken soup, were sent by the National Jew- ish Welfare Board. The then JWB representative in Tokyo, Miss Dorothy Brickman, braved hard winter weather to be with the boys in Korea. She came loaded with camera, f ilm and tape recording equipment. Pictures and messages were prepared for families back in the States. Dorothy was as wel- come that Passover as if she were Elijah himself. All names except those of Chaplain Dicker and Miss Brickman are fictional. The situations discussed are real. T h e Jewish chaplain i n Seoul. Col. Harman Dicker, made all the necessary arrange- ments. He arranged for a ko- sher kitchen: saw to it that qualified chefs prepared the seder. He even induced the U .S . Ambassador, Samuel Ber- ger, to recite the Haggadah, in Hebrew and English.. Many of the men came from camps where I did not serve. Those from the north were my parishioners, in a military way I knew some slightly; sonic well. They were, in many ways, a typical cross-section of Amer- ican Jews. I will cite three examples of young men whose presence with me in Korea affected my think- ing about Judaism and its cur- rent needs. Sergeant Myron Greenbaum was a New Yorker. His father, a tailor, came from Russia and settled in Brooklyn in 1920. Myron attended a yeshiva and was educated in the Jewish tradition. He was, to hear him say it. less pious than his fath- er. But what could he do? Even in Korea Myron ab- stained from non-kosher food. He ate vegetables and cheese when others feasted on steak. Near his bunk, in a barracks with no other Jews, he con- structed a wooded ark in which he placed a prayer book, a yar- mulka and an old JWB minia- ture Torah Schol. The ark was opened each morning and each evening for the respective serv- ice. When the Jewish Chaplain was unable to be present for Friday night, Myron served as lay leader, using his ingenuity and his position to obtain passes for other Jewish servicemen in the area. He conducted the serv- ices and, when necessary, pro- vided refreshments out of his own savings. The other soldiers respected Myron. They considered him a bit unique and not a little ec- centric. Most of them had never seen a Jew before. But his ways made them more conscious of their own religious background. If they had to meet a Jew, Myron was their best bet. * * Pfc. Lennie Halber showed me a photograph of his family. His wife and two children re- mained in Sunset Park while he served in an isolated mountain position somewhere in Korea. At home, his father belonged, to use his word, to the local Conservative synagogue. Lennie seldom attended services. His Jewish education was minimal. Back in Sunset Park he never gave his Judaism much thought. Lennie walked into my office one afternoon with a picture of a group of Jerusalem orphans, ihe found in an Ohio English- !' Jewish newspaper. I looked at the picture as Lennie explained his trip to my office. The Unit- led States, he told me, is blessed with so much. We hardly under- stand poverty anymore. Even Jews have been partialy im- munized against compassionate feelings. But if we, the Ameri- can Jewish community, do not come to the aid of our orphans throughout the world, who will? Are we not the last to be helped by others? Jewish servicemen donate large sums for Korean relief and Army relief, why can't we give some to our own needy? I was struck by his apparent chauvinism, but it all made sense. I had to agree. So Lennie took up a collection. He worked in the best tradition of any fund-raiser. He p le a de d. He threatened affliction of the con- science. He used his charm and his anger. And when it was all over, the Jerusalem orphans had $543.87. * * * Captain Elmer Short was a good friend. We spent many an evening at the Officers' Club killing time and discussing any- thing and everything. His fath- er, a prosperous pharmacist, was president of a Reform tem- ple in a New England city. Elmer had a fuzzy knowledge of ewry On the Air This Week's Radio and Television Programs SPECIAL Time: 12:35 p.m. Sunday. Station: WJR. Feature: "A Holocaust Sur- vivor Speaks"—a special inter- view by Frank Tomlinson with Dr. Leon Weliczker Wells, au- thor of "The Janowska Road." who served as witness at the Nuremberg trials, the Eichmann trial and the trials of the Nazis in West Germany. Presented by the Culture Commission of the Jewish Community Council of Detroit. * * * THE JEWISH HERITAGE Time: 11:30 p.m. Sunday. Station: WCAR. Feature: Dr. Trude Weiss- Rosmarin will discuss "Jewish Education and Other American- Jewish Concerns," with Joseph Edelman, director of the Cul- ture Commission. * TO DWELL TOGETHER Time: 9:15 a.m. Sunday. Station: WJBK (radio and television simultaneously). Feature: Dr. Clarence Hil- berry, president of Wayne State University, and Rabbi Leon Fram, both recipients of the 1964 annual American Jewish Congress Amity Award, will discuss "Community Leadership and Responsibility," with Mrs. Samuel Linden, chairman of the Amity Award committee. Pre- sented by the Culture Commis- sion. * * * MESSAGE OF ISRAEL Time: 8:30 a.m. Sunday. Station: WXYZ. Feature: "Archaeology and the Bible." OSS Judaism. His education in things Jewish was, to put it generously, highly inadequate. At home he would, now and then, attend the Temple Friday evening services. Not much more. At the University of Cali- fornia, Elmer received the M.D. degree and, upon graduation, entered the Medical Corps. It was a cold night. The snow was deep. The road was w frozen over and we were listening to a Jack Benny program on short wave radio. Then it happened. A Korean passenger train, on its way from the border to Seoul, was derailed near our camp. The village nearest to the accident had no hospital and no physician. It had no telephone. The message reached us at mid- night. The accident occurred at 11:30. For 22 hours, without sleep and without food, Dr. Short per- formed his duties in sub-zero weather. His operating room was a peasant hut, without run- ning water, without lights, with- out heat. The mess sergeant, a Catholic from Minnesota, kept the coffee hot in an Army field pot. The medics, two Spanish- speaking boys from Nogales, were on the scene at all times assisting the doctor. Water was delivered from the camp by the only ambulance avilable. And when that ambulance broke down, the water came by Army helicopter. Seven Koreans died. Five were evacuated to Seoul. Six- teen were saved by quick and modern surgery. The town coun- cil had Dr. Short over for a fish and rice dinner, the high- est honor it could pay him. The President of Korea came up from Seoul to personally bestow the Medal of Merit. Dr. Short sent a donation to his Reform temple, a symbol of his gratitude for the quiet faith and the deep courage his Juda- ism implanted within him. He was a man who loved the justice and dealt in mercy and walked humbly before all men. * * * Why do I, a Reform rabbi, re- cal these vignettes? Because they impressed me by their sim- plicity. Because they taught me some lessons. First, American Jews are too obsessed by "den- ominational" Judaism. We put more emphasis on Orthodox, Conservative and Reform than we do on the all-important Judaism. We should rather re- member that Judaism is the impetus, not a particular inter- pretation of it. Perhaps more significant to me personally, these servicemen fortified my own convictions. Judaism to me was always more than a set of laws or a corn- b i n a t i on of commandments; ore than a casual visit to a tem- ple or a glib pronouncement about social justice and the prophetic mission. It was, and is, a way of life; a complex of ideas and philosophies, ex- pressed in diverse deeds of rit- ual and compassion. These sol- diers, and many others, exoner- ated my personal philosophy. When the Commission on Jewish Chaplaincy of the Na- tional Jewish Welfare Board asked me to serve as a chaplain I had doubts about it. When I arrived in Korea I still had some. When I left Korea I real- ized that the boys in uniform taught me as much as I taught them. Korea was a lonely place to be. But the Jewish men never failed to amaze me with their dedication to our people and our heritage. Maccabiah Games Soccer Tryouts Start May 10 Lesnick-Margolis Engagement Told Eastern regional soccer try- outs for the 1965 U.S. Macca- biah Games Team will begin at Randall's Island, New York, on May 10, according to Jack Flam- haft, soccer committee chairman of the sponsoring U.S. Commit- tee—Sports for Israel, Candidates for the U.S. Mac- cabiah soccer squad are re- quested to contact Flamhaft, in care of the U.S. Committee— Sports for Israel, 147 W. 42nd St.. New York 36. The VII Maccabiah Games will b19e 6h5.eld in Tel Aviv Aug. 22-31, In 1961, the United States was represented in 13 sports and captured the Jay Myers Memorial Trophy for winning MISS MURIEL LESNICK the greatest number of gold medals. Dr. and Mrs. Sol W. Lesnick of Greenlawn Ave. announced FOR THE BEST IN the engagement of their daugh- MUSIC & ENTERTAINMENT ter Muriel Rochel to Harold Margolis, son of Mr. and Mrs. Hyman Margolis of Santa Rosa Ave. at a recent cocktail party. 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