Banquet to Honor Morris Karbals for Their Devotion to Charitable Causes
Julius Rotenberg, general chair-
man of the 27th annual banquet
of the Council of Orthodox Rabbis
and Merkaz, announces that Mr.
NEW YORK (JTA)—The New and Mrs. Morris Karbal will be
York Times predicted that a sta- honored at the dinner March 7
tute of religious liberty might be at Cobo Hall.
Karbal, a communal le a der
enacted this year in Spain, giving
more religious freedom to Spanish whose association with charitable
Protestants and Jews. The predic- organizations goes back more than
tion was based on a comment by 30 years was born and educated
Generalissimo Franco, in a state in Detroit.
In 1930 he established a whole-
of the union message, in which he
said he favored "the exercise of sale drug business, which is today
freedom of conscience." The Times one of the foremost in the country.
said this could only mean that he His parents came to this country
in 1905, and, after settling in De-
now favored passage of the bill,
troit, his father established the
which has been stalled in the Span-
Synagogue. The
Benton Street
ish Courts since last September.
family was instrumental in the
Noting that the text of the meas- establishment of the first Old
ure has not been published, the Folks Home in Detroit, on Ed-
Times said that it was neverthe- mund and Brush. and the Jewish
less believed that some of the re- Hospital Association.
Karbal can recall chauffeur-
strictions of worship by Protestants
ing his father to bring food,
and Jews would be lifted. It added
coal and other Sabbath necessi-
that Spaniards do not worry about
ties to impoverished homes in
Jews because they do not prosely-
tize and are few in number. The
paper estimated that there are no
more than 5,000 practicing Jews
in Spain, most of them in Barce-
lona, some in Madrid and a few
in Valencia and Seville.
the Oakland area. Education and
Karbal has been honored by the
help to the indigent were given local Yeshivath Beth Yehudah on
in his parents' home.
numerous occasions and was the
He has established a student head of the building fund cam-
York, and Bar-Illan University in
Israel. He was a past president of
the Jewish Pharmaceutical Society,
and has contributed to Jewish
loan fund and has enabled many paign of Young Israel. Among the Home for the Aged and other Jew-
to establish their own businesses. institutions receiving major sup- ish and non-Jewish communal or-
He has supported yeshivoth in port from him, he numbers Teishe ganizations.
Congregations, -institutions and
this country and in Israel; sev- Yeshivah in Cleveland, Beth Hame-
eral congregations in Detroit bear drash Gevohah in Lakewood, Ner landsmanshaften will participate in
plaques designating the Holy Arc Israel Rabbinical Academy in Balti- the honor to be bestowed on the
more, Yeshivah University in • New Karbals March 7.
in memory of his parents.
He is former national represen-
tative to the United Jewish Appeal,
and received a citation for his
philanthropic efforts for help to
Jews overseas and in Israel.
In 1955 he married the former
Hannah Zalesin.
NOted Coinmaker
Jacob Abraham, an 18th century
Jewish coinmaker, was one of the
leading craftsmen in his field in
Europe. He was employed for more
than 50 years at the royal mints at
Stettin, Koenigsberg, Danzig, Dres-
den and Berlin,
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The Young Israel Center of Oak-
Woods will present a sefer Torah
for use in an Israeli community
at the 10th anniversary banquet
6:30 p.m. Jan. 31 at the center.
Sol Lessman, president of Young
Israel, said that "just as other con-
gregations helped our synagogue
organize, so do we at this time feel
an obligation to perform the same
mitzvah for the new communities
in Israel who find themselves with-
out a Torah."
A member of the national execu-
tive of the National Council of
Young Israel is expected to attend
the banquet to receive the Torah.
Recently, the Rabbinical Coun-
cil of America and the National
Council of Young Israel issued a
joint plea to congregations to as-
sist in the formation of synagogues
in the new Israeli communities by
donating sifre Torah.
Report Desecration
of Synagogues
in N.Y., Holland
NEW YORK (JTA) — About 15
stained glass windows were broken
in the Congregation Beth Halvey
synagogue, Rabbi Blaustein, its
spiritual leader, reported. Assert-
ing that Negro youngsters in the
area, located in the Bronx, have
been shouting anti-Semitic insults
at worshipers leaving the syna-
gogue, Rabbi Halvey said he sus-
pected that teenagers were respon-
sible for the window breaking.
• • •
AMSTERDAM (JTA)—Police be-
gan. investigating an incident in
Aalten, a Dutch village near the
German border, in which the walls
of a synagogue in the town were
found smeared with swastikas and
slogans calling for a "Holland
Without Jews." The town's entire
population today voiced indigna-
tion over the incident. There are
only 10 Jewish families in Aalten.
Albert Vorspan to Talk
on 'Jews, Social Action'
Albert Vorspan, director of the
Commission on Social Action of
the Union of American Hebrew
Congregations, will discuss "Jews
and Social Action" 9:30 p.m. Tues-
day at Cong. Shaarey Zedek.
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Vorspan is author of "Giants of
Justice" and co - author of "Justice
and Judaism" and "A Tale of Ten
Cities."
THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
Friday, January 22, 1965-13
e
MSS R. J. RIEYNOLDS TOBACCO COMPANY. WINSTON-SALEM. N. C.
• U.S. PATS. PENDING