• Stamford Mayor Backs JWV Leader Heroism of Jews' Warsaw Ghetto Resistance in Dispute With Rightist Organization Recorded in Tuslmet's‘ To Die With Honor' STAMFORD, Conn. (JTA) — Charges and counter charges be- tween the Jewish War Veterans here and the Young Americans for Freedom, a group labeled by a leader of the Jewish veterans as "associated with the John Birch Society," have sparked a bitter fight in this community. Thomas Flaherty, chairman of the Stamford and Northeastern University chapters of the YAF, has requested Mayor Thomas C. Mayers to remove Leslie Meyers, state commander of the JWV, from membership on this city's patriotic and special events com- mission. The mayor turned down the re- quest, and Flaherty has threatened to take the issue to the board of representatives. He said he would also ask his national organization to start a law suit on the grounds that the YAF has been "slander- ed" by accusations that it is tied with the John Birch Society. The entire issue started last Memorial Day, when the Pa- triotic and special events com- mission voted to bar from the holiday parade a float entered by the YAF. Although four of the five members of the commission voted for the ban—with the fifth member absent—the YAF has centered its fire on Meyers. At that time, while a member of the Commission, he was also state commander-elect of the Connecticut Jewish War Vet- erans. Meyers' stand for the ban of the Liebman's View Invoked in 'Positive Thinkers' "Sick people call on doctors— but not always. Sometimes they call on priests. One hazard of twentieth-century sphistication is the difficulty of knowing when to call on which," writes Dr. Donald Meyer in a provocative book called "The Positive Thinkers," to be published by Doubleday June 4. Dr. Meyer subtitles his book: "A Study of the American Quest for Health, Wealth and Personal Pow- er from Mary Baker Eddy to Nor- man Vincent Peale." This is Amer- ican history with a twist. Dr. Meyer analyses the strange phenomenon that for over a hundred years America has been the breeding ground for all sorts of mind-cure movements running all the way from Christian Science to Positive Thinking. He breaks his narrative into three main divisions: the ap- peal of mind-cure for the middle- class and often idle female; the fascination of mind-cure for the anxious male, i.e. business tycoon; the answers offered up by spokes- men like Dale Carnegie, Rabbi Joshua Loth Liebman, Bishop Ful- ton J. Sheen, and Dr. Norman Vin- cent Peale. YAF float has been backed by the JWV's outgoing commander, and by Harry Rosenbaum, vice presi- dent of the advisory board of the Bnai Brith Anti - Defamation League in Connecticut. Noting that Meyers voted for the ban of the YAF float as a mem- ber of the commission, and not as a representative of the Jewish War Veterans, and that, unlike "the super-patriots," Meyers "lost an arm in the war," Rosenbaum said the action was justified be- cause the YAF is a political body. Many Stamford citizens are sup- porting the mayor in his refusal to remove Meyers from the pa- triotic and special events com- mission. Some, however, have written the mayor, attacking the ban and leveling their principal charges of "discrimination" against the Jewish veterans' lead- er. The mayor insists that the YAF float "was not in keeping" with the objectives of the Memorial Day Parade. Why a 'Party' for Mourners? BY NATHAN ZIPRIN Editor, Seven Arts Feature Syndicate The Synagogue Council of America, representing our three r i g i o u s denominations, has adopted a statement on funeral and mourning practices which it hopes will serve as a guide to the entire Jewish community. Empha- sizing that a funeral is a- solemn religious service, the Council urges that it be completely under the guidance and regulation of the spiritual leader. It calls for a sim- ple service, for unostentatious caskets and opposes public view- ing of the deceased. As to the period of mourning following the funeral, the statement says: "SHIVA is a period of mourn- ing for the bereaved family. In keeping with the solemnity of the occasion, visitors should not ex- pect nor contribute to the crea- tion of festive hospitality. Chari- table contributions are a more ap- propriate. testimonial to the mem- ory of the deceased than are gifts." Lavish display, vulgar ostenta- tion, complete lack of good taste is an illness from which a large sector of our affluent American Jewry is suffering today. We in- dulge in five-thousand-dollar Bar- and-Bat Mitzvas. For Rosh Ha- shanah many of us are making it a habit to go away to an expensive hotel instead of staying home and attending the services in the syna- gogue of which we ourselves are dues-paying members. The ob- servance of the Passover Seder at home is now by many regarded as old-fashioned. And now we're getting real Sandy Koufax is not only the leading pitcher in the major parties during the SHIVA period. leagues: he also has become a It's becoming real fun nowadays to visit a house of mourning— good hitter. His cluch hitting won for him you're offered all sorts of fruits, the 17th game, on Tuesday, when cakes, candies, hot and cold drinks, his single in the ninth inning ac- in return for which you bring a counted for the Los Angeles gift. What is needed badly is a Dodgers' 3-2 victory over Hous- course in good taste, a course ton. which our synagogue centers might offer to their membership. Such a course would emphasize FIVE YEAR that while we need not cry and SAVINGS wail constantly, as some of our CERTIFICATES Koufax—Clutch Hitter - NOW EARN e7 ANNUAL RETURN, MN VELD TO MATURITY 525 10111 , 'RONAL MK Of souninite INSURED BY FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORP. • • • • • • • • INQUIRE FOR DETAILED INFORMATIQH1 NATIONAL BANK OF SOUTHFIELD 17000 W. 8 MILE ROAD SOUTHFIELD, MICHIGAN 48076 Dept. JN HARE ADDRESS CITY STATE • ••••••seetes•etssesatt••• ancestors were wont to do as a mark of sorrow over their dear, departed dead, it is the height of vulgarity to turn the period of mourning into a season of gladness particularly if the hosts are real- ly heart-broken over the passing of a close relative. Must the hosts stage a party for their guests only because everybody else does it and it's expected of them too? Then let's teach everybody else the meaning of civilized good taste that should be grounded in honest feeling. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 16—Friday, July 23, 1965 Much has been written about the Warsaw Ghetto uprising. Few of the available volumes are as soul- stirring and as moving as "To Die With Honor—The Uprising of the Jews in the Warsaw Ghetto," by Leonard Tushnet, published by Citadel Press (222 Park S., NY 3). Dr. Tushnet, a practicing physi- cian in Irvington, N.J., conducted research in the Warsaw Ghetto where he gathered the material for his challenging book. The author has compiled data to show the factions that had par- ticipated in the revolt, the news- papers they published, the differ- ences among them and the de- veloping unity. He points out that "there was a nonpolitical mass, a religious group and three well-organized political factions" in the ghetto. "Of the last," he writes, "the Bund was the largest and most influential, closely followed by the Zionist parties, themselves divided, and farther behind, by the Communists. Each organiza- tion had its own publications and its own band of devoted follow- ers . . ." The beginnings of action are traced to the arrival in the ghetto of a Soviet representative of the Polska Partja Rabotnicza, a para- chutist, Pinya Kartin, better known as Andrzej Schmidt. Aid was to be offered to the Jews who Were isolated in the ghetto. Conversa- tions regarding joint action began. An effort was begun for united ac- tion. But the leftists formed their own committee for defense and resis- tance. A general staff of the Jewish Fighting Organization—Zhydowska Organizacja Bojowa — Zhob — was formed. It was composed of Tsivia Lubetkin, Mordecai Tenenbaum, Samuel Breslau and Isaac Zucker- man. "The total arsenal consisted of—one revolver." A call for arms went out to the "Aryan side." All sorts of plans were made. There were complications. "Sen- tences of death were formally pass- ed on Joseph Szerynski, the Jewish chief of police, and on other col- laborators with the Germans; the actual execution had to wait until guns were available." The Jews were warned not to be misled by German plans for trans- fers from the ghetto since it was established that they meant trans- portation to the Treblinka gas chambers. On Aug. 20, 1942, an attempt on the life of Szerynski was made by Israel Kanal who was disguised as a policeman. He succeeded only in wounding him. Fires were set in factories, but propaganda proved fruitless and a small Jewish ar- senal was taken by the Germans. The Nazis continued with their "resettlement" plans: "Out of 350- 000 Jews at the beginning of July, between 50,000 and 70,000 remain- ed (the figures vary). The sur- viving Jews were herded in four areas of the former ghetto." Efforts began for an active cam- paign of resistance. The names of many who - have written them- selves indelibly in the history of the ghetto uprising appear in the crucial months of 1943—those of Mordecai Alieliewicz, the 23-year- old Zhob commander-in-chief; Isaac Zuckerman, Tsivia Lubetkin, Michael Rosenfeld a n d many others. Zhob did not know that Himm- ler had issued an order on Jan. 11, 1943 that the uprising should be suppressed, and it selected Jan. 22 as the time for an armed attack on the Nazis..There was a heavy Jewish loss when the ac- tual fighting began on Jan. 18. In a diary which was hidden in a bunker, Samuel Winter wrote that while many Jews were taken "the Germans are afraid to enter the cellars and bun- kers," that for a time the Ger- mans withdrew, Zhob then for a time became a power and Dr. Tushnet states in his historical record: "That Jews fought and that their resistance, feeble as it was, was enough to make the Germans interrupted the deport- ations buoyed up the spirits of the Jews, now more than ever aware of their desperate situa- tion. The detailed account presented by Dr. Tushnet describes how Jews sought weapons, how they acquired means with which to carry on the struggle. There is a full account of the uprising, April 19 through May 16, 1943, Nazi Governor-General Frank having sent an urgent appeal to Berlin for help. He said in his message to Reichsminister Lammers: "Yes- terday we encountered a well or- ganized armed resistence in the Warsaw Ghetto; to combat it we needed to use artillery." Descriptions of the battle are of- fered in the form of diaries kept by ghetto fighters. Referring to the report of Nazi General Stroop that up to April 25, 27,464 Jews were captured and there were only five German dead and 50 wound- ed, Dr. Tushmet states: "The last figures are incredi- ble, especially since on April 18 he had already reported 12 dead. He was evidently anxious to minimize his losses. An under- ground Polish agent reported, from a reliable source, that up to this day the Germans had lost a total of 700 dead and wounded, 150 having been killed in the first two days of fighting. An unfriendly (to the Jews) re- port said this figure was exag- gerated, the total being only 400." Stroop is reported even of hav- ing spoken of "Jewish hutzpah." The entire story is one of Jewish heroism. There were sacrifices, Anieliewicz was among those who succumbed, some committed sui- cide rather than yield to the Nazis. There were many acts of courage. There is a chapter, "The Rub- ble Fighters: May 16, to Septem- ber, 1943." In other words, the Jewish heroes did not give up the struggle even after the great battle, against vast odds, was lost—to the disgrace of the Nazis —to the ghetto warriors. Dr. Tushnet concludes his story with this postscript as a tribute to the warsaw ghetto resistance: "So ends the tale of the Jew- ish Resistance in Warsaw. It must be remembered that the final uprising in the ghetto was the long- est single sustained conflict in the history of all the resistance move- ments in occupied Europe. To ac- complish that, under such unpre- cedented circumstances, is an achi- evement of which the Jews can be proud." Gershwin Songs in Movie George Gershwin's unpublished songs and new lyrics by his brother Ira are being used by Gene Kelly for a new motion pic- ture telling the romantic advent- ures of an American World War I pilot and a French girl from the music halls. 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