THE JEWISH NEWS issue of July 20, 1951 Jewry's Open Forum Incorporating The Detroit Jewish Chronicle commencing with Member American Association of English--Jewish Newspapers, Michigan Press Association, National Editorial Published every Friday by The Jewish News Publishing Co., 17100 West Seven Mile Road, Detroit 48235 Mich., Association: VE 8-9364. Subscription $6 a year. Foreign 37. Class Postage Paid at Detroit, Michigan Second PHILIP SLOMOVITZ Editor and Publisher CARMI M. SLOMOVITZ Business Manager SIDNEY SHMARAK Advertising Manager CHARLOTTE ILYAMS City Editor Sabbath Scriptural Selections This Sabbath, the sixth day of Shevat, 5725, the following scriptural selections will be read in our synagogues: Jeremiah 46:13-28. Pentateuchal portion: Exod. 10:1-13:16; prophetical portion: Licht benshen. Friday, Jan. 8, 5 p.m. VOL. XLVI, No. 20 Page 4 January 8, 1965 The Community's Share in Paradise Another campaign is about to be launched here for the major causes to provide for our overseas needs, to care for national educa- tional movements and to support Detroit's Jewish agencies. Having dealt with the budgeting problems, having begun the 1965 Allied Jewish Cam- paign with the magnificent sum contributed at the dinner given in honor of Max M. Fisher, the new national general chairman of the United Jewish Appeal, at the specially convened Detroit function in New York, we are now confronted with the task of en- rolling the support of more than 25,000 con- tributors to the approaching Detroit drive. While we do not speak in terms of charity when we appeal for the numerous causes that are represented in our campaign, since the Jewish term is justice--zedakah—rather than philanthropy. there nevertheless is a story on charity that is applicable to all our needs. In his new, impressive work, "The Book of Jewish Knowledge," published by Crown, Nathan Ausubel relates the following: When an orphan asylum was in danger of closing down because it lacked a certain Stall of money, the rabbi of the commu- nity urgently implored the richest man in town to make up the deficit. But the nogid (wealthy man) promptly refused. "I will sell ?you my place in Paradise if only you will give me the money," pleaded the rabbi out of desperation. The rich man was delighted with the "bargain" and gave him the money. And so the orphan asylum was saved, but the collector was without his portion of bliss in the World-to-Come. The rabbi's disciples were aghast when they heard of his 'deal." They remon- strated with him: "Oh, Rabbi! how could you do a thing like that—you, a holy man who was sure to enter Paradise!" The rabbi replied: "Twice each day I repeat in my prayers: 'Love thy God with all thy heart, with all thy soul, and with all thy posses- sions.' My sons, I'm only a poor man. What are the possessions with which I can serve God? All that I possess is my share in Paradise, and to serve God's children, the orphans, I am ready to part with even that." It is the share in the greatest good that man can perform that beckons again to our community. There is so much that needs to be done—in our midst, in behalf of the unfortunates who must escape from persecu- tions, in support of Israel that stands ready to welcome these distressed! This is the time, therefore, to prepare for the great drive—by providing the manpower it needs for the tremendous job of soliciting so many thousands, and by assuring for the many causes the funds that are so vitally needed! The tens of thousands who must find refuge in Israel, the need at home and abroad, the educational institutions in our own community and those operating on a national scale, look to us for support through the local drive. Our community should be in readiness soon for the great task inherent in- the forth- coming Allied Jewish Campaign. Moral Issue in Statute of Limitations If the statute of limitations on war crimes should go into effect in West Germany on May 8 and in Austria on June 15, the year 1965 may go down on record as one of the most tragic in history because the impending limitations will make it possible for tens of thousands of Nazis responsible for mass mur- ders to go free and to be at large again as a menace to peace. Should the statute of limitations go into effect. in spite of the protests that have been made by non-Jews as well as Jews, by men of responsibility in many lands and also in Germany, it is estimated that more than 130.000 Nazi criminals will be able to get out of hiding. to claim back positions and openly to propagate again the Hitler theories. The impending danger stems from the that West Germany's Justice Minister Ewald Bucher opposes extension of prosecu- tions, in spite of the warnings by the Christian Democratic Union and the Social Democratic Party of Germany that it would be intolerable if after next May Nazi mur- derers should not only go free but should be able to boast of their deeds. Many warnings have been issued against the statute of limitations. While it is natural for Jewish groups throughout the world to protest against the planned statute, it is im- portant to note that Jews are not alone in protesting against giving free reign to hordes of Nazis. Robert Kempner, a U.S. prose- cutor at the Nuremberg trial, pointed out that the murderers of 4,000 Catholic priests in Nazi Germany have not been brought to trial. And there are many other indications of .failure to round up the Nazi criminals—a task yet to be completed if justice is to be meted out. * * * The attitude of German officials is not necessarily the verdict of all of Germany, and fact Trevor-Roper Presents Hitler's Orders in 'Blitzkrieg to Defeat' Commencing with the invasion of Poland in 1939 and continuing through his aggressions on the European Eastern front, in the Mediter- ranean, in the Scandinavian countries, Adolf Hitler personally issued 74 directives dictating strategy in major war activities. until hi,s collapse in 1945. Hitherto unpublished texts of these documents are included in "Blitzkrieg to Defeat: Hitler's War Directives, 1939-1945," edited by H. R. Trevor-Roper and published by Holt. Rinehart and Winston (383 Madison, NY 17). This is one of the most unique books dealing with World War II and is a most valuable addition to the works that expose the Nazi terror. The author, history professor at Oxford. is one of the best informed men on the era of Nazism. His "Last Days of Hitler" was one of the first and most important volumes dealing with the Hitler mania, and his subsequent works. his numerous articles, are part of a vast literature revealing the background and effects of the holocaust. There is no doubt about the important need filled by this work. Now, possessing the documents as they were issued by Hitler himself, it is simpler to understand the motivations that led to the war crises. The author's introduction and his commentary additionally illum- inate the conditions of that tragic period. One of the directives by Hitler, dated May 23, 1941. dealt with the it certainly is meeting with opposition and Middle East and the fuehrer gave these orders: resentment in many other quarters. is our natural ally against England "The Arab Freedom Movement Last week, seven members of the British in the Middle East. In this connection the rising in Iraq is particularly House of Commons issued an appeal to the important. It strengthens the forces hostile to England beyond the German government to extend the deadline Iraqi frontier. disturbs English communications, and ties up English for the prosecution of the Nazi war criminals. troops and shipping at the expense of other theaters of war. "I have therefore decided to hasten developments in the Middle They pointed out that if the statute of limi- tations were to be enforced there would arise East by supporting Iraq." This order continues with further instructions at much greater "a situation which must be repugnant to the seared conscience of the world that lived length. In another order, dated June 11, 1941, there is further refer- through a period of the most atrocious crimes ence to the Middle East. On the question of "exploitation of the of man against man." Arab Freedom Movement," Hitler's order stated: "The situation Even more interesting was the approval of the English in the Middle East will be rendered more precarious, by the French National Assembly, by unani- in the event of major German operations, it more British forces mous action. of a law holding that war crimes are tied down at the right moment by civil commotion or revolt" against humanity are not subject to any time Other directions for operations in the Middle East were issued limit for prosecution in France. Dec. 28, 1942. This is the step that must be taken Trevor-Roper points out that "Hitler envisaged the possibility of wherever a Nazi might raise his head. The making war on the West as early as 1938; and in his last months, look- crime must continually be exposed to light, ing back on his ultimate failure, he would regret that he had not else all the martyrdom at the hands of the launched it then." and Nazis will vanish from memory. The noted historian reviews Hitler's war plans, his methods * * strategic orders. He explains that "Hitler's directives . . . provide an There is no doubt, as a New York Times outline documentary history of Hitler's war, the war as he conceived it and as he controlled it; for even at the end, even when the initiative correspondent stated in a report to his paper had passed to the Allies, it was still Hitler who controlled the strategy on what he called "a German dilemma," that "the issue touches on the moral foundations of disaster." "Historians of the war," Trevor-Roper states, "can add a mass of the new German state founded in 1949 ofdetail to this outline. They have the captured records, the in repudiation of Hitlerian methods." reconstructed war-diary, the recollections of the survivors. But The issue that has arisen as a result of the they can never dispense with these central documents which show, new German tactics to end the prosecutions in crude but emphatic form, the war which Hitler envisaged, which he launched, and which he directed, in all its stages, past the is a real challenge to the sincerity of West intoxicating vision of universal victory to universal defeat." Germany's rulers. Either the Nazi ideal is to be totally obliterated, or guilt will be posed Trevor-Roper shows how during the last 18 months of the war with those who publicly denounce Hitlerism Hitler had become desperate, with the old assurance gone, "turning desperately from one theater to another, uncertain where his over- but whose actions may condone Nazism. Germany is, indeed, being put to the test. stretched front will break, where the Russians, whom he had so often The Bonn government is in position, how- defeated, will counter-attack, where the Western allies, whom he had triumphantly driven out of Europe, will return, where the `bandits'- ever, to exonerate itself by making it known so only i.e. the resistance-forces of occupied Europe—will strike. The that no criminal ever will be shielded so unity of these later orders is the unity imposed by general fear." that the memory of the holocaust should Trevor-Roper has added most valuable material to the history of linger in humanity's determined will that the Nazi era and his "Blitzkrieg to Defeat" must rank among the very again be Nazi crimes should never the valuable works about the holocaust and its fuehrer. . repeated.