Jakov Lind's 'Soul of Wood': Seven Impressive Short Stories The seven stories by Jakov Lind appearing under the title "Soul of Wood," published by Grove Press (80 University Pl., N Y3 ) , are moross. Some are filled with hor- ror, others bear the stamps of sad memories of the tragic Nazi era. The author should be known for an understanding of his narratives. He was born in Vienna in 1927. He was 11 when he escaped to Holland, his parents having been deported when the Nazis came to Austria, later losing their lives in the holo- caust. He escaped deportation by hiding, posed as a Dutch national while working on a Rhine barge, became an "assistant" to a spy, was a fisherman on the Mediter- ranean, a construction worker in Home for Jewish Aged Opened in Switzerland; Has Chinese Refugees GENEVA (JTA)—Special cere- monies were conducted Tuesday at Vevey, Switzerland, where the Berges du Leman, a home for the Jewish aged, was dedicated and where a particularly moving chap- ter in the story of Jewish rescue was highlighted. James P. Rice of New York, executive director of United Hias Service, and Otto Heim, president of the Swiss Refugee Aid Organiza- tion, who participated in the cere- moies, pointed out that some of the aged residents at the Berges du Leman are European Jewish refugees from China who would have been "lost souls" if it had not been for extraordinary efforts to care for them, made by . Jewish and international organizations, aided by the Swiss government and the Jewish community of Switzer- land. These aged men and women could not have qualified for help under normal emigration programs but were brought to Vevey through the efforts of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees and other intergovernmental agencies. Aiding the program, also, were the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee and the Conference of Jewish Material Claims Against Germany. Israel Opens Consulate in Boston; Eighth in U.S. BOSTON (JTA)—Israel opened its first full-time consulate in Boston. The Consul for Boston and area, who arrived here this weekend and took up his duties immediately, is Yohanan Cohen, previously director of personnel for the municipality of Ramat Gan. Born in Poland, Cohen came to Palestine in 1937, at age 20, and studied at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem. He was elected to Israel's Knesset (Parliament) in 1958, and served in the informa- tion department of the foreign ministry between 1960 and 1962. With the opening of the Boston Consulate, Israel now has consu- lar offices in eight major cities in the United States. Revival of Rightist Party Watched by Canada Jews MONTREAL (JTA) — An effort to revive a rightist party active in Canada during the 1930s and early 1940s, known as L'Unite Nationale, is being made in rural areas by the former leader of that group, Adrien Arcand, according to re- ports received here by the Joint Community Relations Committee of the Canadian Jewish Congress and Bnai Brith. The reports indicate that Arcand has been propagandizing in favor of establishing a party with a plat- form he calls "Federalist, Chris- tian, Corporatist, Monarchist and Pro-Western." In his talks, accord- ing to the reports, he stated he is "not anti-Semitic, but pro- Gentile," and asserted he is "not opposed to Jews but to inter- national Jewry." Jerusalem, a Tel Aviv beach pho- tographer, a Nathanya orange picker, an Israel air force aircraft inspector, a private detective, a newspaper publisher in Vienna, a London film agent, traveled in many lands and is now residing in London. The effects of Nazism on some of his characters are traceable to his experiences as a youth, as a witness of what had hap- pened during the Hitler era. In the title story — it appeared in German as "Eine Seele Aus Holz" — the book originally ap- peared in Germany and was trans- lated by Ralph Manheim — we already have the Nazi theme. There are two aspects there that are deeply moving. One depicts the offer of one's apartment to a non- Jew: "take care of our child and the _ apartment is yours." And there is the desire to have the name of a Jew one of the char- acters supposedly had protected: by claiming to have shown kind- ness to a Jew one could escape when . the reckoning came: "to have saved even one individual would be proof positive that we were not guided by feelings of hatred in the performance of our work." This is preceded by the comment "one Jew more or less can't do nobody any good," yet, "one Jew can help a great deal." In "Resurrection" there is a soul-searching, the sense of guilt by a convert who sought escape through Christianity: "A Jew who takes up Christianity has lost noth- ing and gained a Jew. For good Christians such a Jew is a Christ- tian, but for anti-Semites he's still a Jew. So I turn anti-Semite; that way I can go on seeing myself as a Jew () twen you and me, I was an anti-Semite before and as a Jewish anti-Semite I couldn't stand myself). So now I know why I turned Christian. It makes every- thing so simple. With one excep- tion; the regulation about the childless baptized. No one rotten condition they let me live — as a Jew, no conditions, they just kell me . . . " "The Pious Brother" is another revealing tale — about a priest who served Hitler and the SS, who ravished women, who ended his life as a suicide: "Alive or dead, Franz thought, God didn't provide us Christians with a soul. All we know is how to kill, not how to suffer. We haven't the soul for suffering, even our Savior had to be taken from the Jews .. " "The Judgment" is a horror tale — about a chap who killed 12 women, who was to be executed, who asked to see his father, plan- ning to strangle him, too, but his father takes the matter into his own hands, strangles the son, saves the state the expense of the execu- tion. The father goes to the lunatic asylum. First he is c alled an anarchist. He is released. The judges all had sons — and they let the man go. It is a moving tale, in all its brutality. "Journey Through the Night," "The Window" and "Hurrah for Freedom" similarly are impres- sive tales. In its totality, Lind's "Soul of Wood" is an excellent collection of well-written stories by a man who knew Nazism and knows how to expose it. David Hermelin Elected to Region Insurance Post David B. Hermelin of the Her- melin Agency, 13625 W. 8 Mile, has been elected regional vice president for the United States of the Crown Leaders Club of the International Crown Life Insur- ance Co., by the officers, directors and agency force of the company. A graduate of the University of Michigan in 1958, Hermelin, 28, now attends the Detroit College of Law. He produced over $2,000,000 in insurance last year. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, August 13, 1965-29 Plans to Be Made Labor Zionists' 60th Anniversary for Israel Bonds to Be Marked at Oct. 9 NI'Lave Malke Lieberman, chairman of Marie Syrkin, noted Labor Zion- Holy Day Appeals the Morris Labor Zionist Council of De- ist thinker, editor, teacher and The annual pre-High Holy Day dinner meeting sponsored by the Israel Bond Congregational and High Holy Day Council will -be held Aug. 26, 6:30 p.m., at Holiday Manor, Oak Park. Guest speaker will be Robert Lurie, national Israel Bond spec- ial events chairman. Rabbis, lay leaders, cantors and executive directors of 26 Detroit area congregations have been in- vited to the affair, which will plan for the annual High Holy Day ap- peal, the mainstay of the Israel Bond campaign in Detroit. Phillip Stollman is chairman of the Congregational and High Holy Day Council. Co-chairmen are Norman Allan, Judge Nathan J. Kaufman, Morris J. Brandwine and Max Sosin. troit, annonces that on Saturday night, Oct. 9, the Council will cele- brate the 60th jubilee of Poale Zion, at the Labor Zionist Institute. The entire Labor Zionist Move- ment—Poale Zion, Farband Labor Zionist Order, Pioneer Women Or- ganization and Habonim—invites the community to share this Simcha, to be in the form of a M'Lava Malke. Eleven Skilled Americans Recruited 'to Work in Israel Eleven highly skilled American professionals — five engineers, two psychologists, an architect, a physician, a teacher and an editor —left for Israel on a three year contractural basis after being re- cruited for important work assign- ments by the Committee on Man- power Opportunities in Israel of "I see one-third of a nation• ill- the Jewish Agency (COMOI). The housed, ill-clad, and ill-nourish- group includes eight men and three ed."—Franklin D. Roosevelt. (1967) women. member of the World Jewish Agen- cy Executive, will deliver a major address. Pinchas Cruso, honorary national chairman of the LZOA, will re- minisce about 60 years of Labor Zionism. For information, call DI 1-0131 or DI 1-0669. 0••••••••••••••••••••••0 WATCH FOR • THE OPENING - • •• • MORREY WATNICK here comes one of those thick, delicious BIFFS ground beef patties! NOW IN THE FROZEN FOOD CABINET AT YOUR MARKET • Fine Jewelry & Gifts • Birmingham, Mich. s•••••••eesseo••• PI