Asks Conservative Rabbis to Form Assembly to Replace Zionist Body (Continued froth Page 1) "We are deeply disturbed that in certain Jewish circles there has developed an almost complete ob- session with the discussion at the Vatican to the virtual exclusion of all other Jewish concerns," he said. "It would appear from their state- ments that the future of Judaism depended largely on what was be- ing said and done in Rome. As Jews, we ought to remember that for us, the word of the Lord eman- ates from Jerusalem, not Rome, and we have lived by that word and survived to this day because of it." At the same time, he stressed, 'we view with dismay the response ,-%.n other Jewish groups which calls "for retreat and withdrawal from ---------any dialogue with the Christians. The attitude as expressed by a leading Orthodox layman that the 1 beliefs and teachings of our neigh- bars are their concern, not ours, is not true. As neighbors, we are deeply affected by each other's be- liefs," he said. It is "critically im- portant," he went on, "that we en- gage in a dialogue better to under- stand each other and, where pos- sible, to modify or alter each other's views." But there is "one unqualified reservation that all Jews share," he warned. This is that "nothing good will come of any Jewish- Christian dialogue which has as one of its motivations the desire to Convert Jews to Christianity. Any suspicion that this still remains the avowed purpose of the Church will nullify and vitiate all attempts at a constructive dialogue. Unfor- tunately, the Church has not yet been sufficiently explicit to dispel this suspicion." Rabbi Wolfe Kelman, executive vice president of the Rabbinical Assembly, addressing the 500 dele- gates, disputed the theory of "the vanishing American Jew" and said that, instead, a "new breed" has appeared on the scene. He warned, however, that the failure of the American Jewish communal > leadership to provide a "crash- program" of support for the train- ing of rabbis and teachers may make the dire prediction of dis- appearance come true. He advised the rabbis to plunge into the leadership of all phases of Ameri- can Jewish life "in the battle for Jewish authenticity and Jewish survival." The Rabbinical Assembly an- nounced a "liturgical renewal" program designed to "reflect the crucial events of our time and relate them to the eternal Jew- ish tradition." -- In a session devoted to liturgy, the convention heard Rabbi Jules Harlow, associate director of the Rabbinical Assembly, discuss the compilation of a new Mahzor (holiday prayerbook) now under- way, which, while retaining tra- dition, will "respond in some way to life today, if life is to respond to liturgy." The program is well underway with the publication of a new weekday prayerbook and a Selichot service as well as a new rabbis manual. One of the "harshest facts of life" is the "destruction of 6,000,- 000 Jews in Europe in our time," said Rabbi Harlow, who is director of the Assembly's publication de- partment. "It is impossible to re- spond to it adequately. But, it is sinful to continue ignoring it in our formalized liturgical settings in the prayerbook. We must do more than mention it in quoting a poem or an essay or two. We must envision it in our now Mahzor as an integral part of the fabric of the Yom Kippur martyrology." He also revealed that part of the Mahzor will be in Yiddish, the language of the modern martyrs in the ghettos and death camps of Eastern Europe. He pointed out that tradition will be preserved. Catholic College Shows Work of Jewish Museum NEW YORK—Seven items pro- exhibition are the work of Israeli duced in the Tobe Pascher Work- workshop director Ludwig Wol- shop of the Jewish Museum were pert,: a brass Hanukah menorah, Dr. Louis Finkelstein, chancel- selected for the current exhibition silver havdalah set, and two sil- lor of the Jewish Theological of religious art at Sexton Hall ver kiddush cups. Seminary of America called on University (Catholic), Newark, the Conservative movement N.J. - Wednesday to establish a re- ........ ... ..... e..• • • , ,1 The exhibition was arranged by ligious institution of learning the university to complement its ........... in Israel about which would annual symposium on religion and "cluster hundreds of modern the arts, in which representatives We now add rabbis" independent of the gov- of the major religions participated. Photography ernment and tolerant of other The symposium is an effort ad- to our many religious movements within dressed to strengthening the link Judaism. between the spiritual and the aes- services; Dr. Finkelstein, who was honored theic in the contemporary world. Murry Koblin at the convention on his 70th birth- Four of the seven ceremonial day, said he recognized that his objects selected for the Seton Hall Advertising II suggestion for the establishment SUN, 1-5600 of a religious school "may be dis- THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS missed as unnecessary by some in- Friday, May 28, 1965-5 stitutions which wish at once to be secular and at the same time the center of spiritual life the world over," an obvious reference to the Hebrew University in Jeru- salem, which he praised. He gave the assurance that "we do not threaten anyone" any more No one undersells than the seminary which he heads threatens Columbia University or any other college. He suggested that the Israeli Chief Rabbinate appoint an ad- A Phone Call Will SAVE You Money! visory counsel "composed of rabbis of all Jewish groups" and said that SHORE CHEVROLET CO. the Conservative movement "would 1W 1-0600 12240 Jos. Campau Res. LI 8-4119 not hesitate to join it." 1 1 . 8 ...... . . HARRY ABRAM , NOW AVAILABLE AT THE NEW AND MOST MODERN SPITZER'S HEBREW BOOK & GIFT CENTER IN TIME FOR CONFIRMATION and CONSECRATION GIFT GIVING PuBeLiTsiiir JEWISH PUBLICATION S CIETY PRICED FROM $3.00 to $10.00 Eisendrath Hits U.S. Action in Dominican Nation NEW YORK, N.Y.—Rabbi Mau- rice N. Eisendrath, president of the Union of American Hebrew Congregations, charged that Unit- ed States' unilateral action in the Dominican Republic, based on ------" - ',.'dubious" CIA reports, seems to /be establishing a reputation for OUT country as a "self-appointed police force and a god of inter- national affairs." Rabbi Eisendrath told members attending Sabbath services at the Stephen Wise Free Synagogue, that our nation practices "strange Inconsistencies of power politics" with the result that we are "losing friends in South America, creat- ing a wariness among neutral na- tions and weakening the United Nations as a peace-keeping force." He spoke at the 25th anniver- sary service honoring Rabbi Ed- ward E. Klein, who was also pre- sented with the congregation's fourth annual George Brussel Me- tmorial Award for "outstanding contributions" in the field of re- ligious social action. The presen- tation of a statue of the prophet Isaiah was made to Rabbi Klein by Rabbi Eisendrath. 1 k S5Aiwx0e,m' .• . •....••••‘ • r •Ve The Jewish Publication Society Extends Warmest Greetings and Best Wishes to Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Spitzer in Their New and Enlarged Quarters. 24900 COOLIDGE A _ T 10 MILE 542-7520-1 IN THE DEXTER-DAVISON SHOPPING PLAZA Open Saturday Nights and Sundays WATCH FOR GRAND OPENING SPECIALS