Purely Commentary That Muddled Issue of Unity and Uniformity Bernard G. Richards is not only one of our most charming person- alities: he remains, in his late 80s, one of the ablest and wisest inter- preters of Jewish needs and aspirations. He is especially well qualified to define the needs for the centralization of Jewish communal activi- ties—because he played important roles in the formation of the Ameri- can Jewish Congress, he assisted in the setting up of the Kehillah in New York and he was active in behalf of the ill-fated American Jewish Conference. His views gain new importance as a result of the statement that was issued recently by the American Jewish Committee on "Central- ism." The latter was aimed as a rebuttal of the charge made by Dr. Nahum Goldmann that the AJCommittee is injecting itself in Latin American affairs, that it is not cooperating in unified Jewish efforts. To justify its position, the AJCommittee has made public several statements from Latin American Jewish communities to indicate that the Committee is welcomed by them and that its contributions are of value to them. Since then, there have been expressions against the intervention of overseas groups in internal Jewish affairs in Latin American coun- tries and a resolution to that effect is on the records of the World Conference of Jewish Organizations. But that is not the important factor in the new controversy involv- ing the AJCommittee. The statement it issued declared that "no single organization can presume to represent all the Jews of the U. S., let alone the Jews of the world"; that "any organization which claims such representation however composed and however democratic in expressed intent, is deluding itself and misleading those to whom such claims are addressed." This is not as logical as it sounds. It is necessary to take into account many Jewish responsibilities which arise from time to time for an understanding of the value of unified action. There have been times when different and differing Jewish delegations have gone to American and other leaders to plead for just rights for Jewry and for Israel. Often they pleaded in accord, but failure to act in unison emphasized a lack of accord among us. The AJCommittee's statement failed to clarify the issue. Unity does not imply uniformity. If we have a centralized movement it does not imply that any one group is deprived of the right to self-expression. But in time of great need it assures the existence of a movement that can speak for all of us. But when representatives of major movements shun each other and create an impression that vested interests are vital to their existence, there is created bitterness and animosity as substitutes for cooperation and unity. B. G. Richards, writing on this subject of unified Jewish action, in a recent article in the American Zionist, used as the title for his recollections regarding the New York Kehillah "The Address of the Jewish People." That's just the point: that in time of crisis there is need for an address. The AJCommittee has not prevented the acquisi- tion of such an address: in some measure the Conference of Presidents serves that purpose. But it has remained aloof from such an over-all effort. That's its failing. Dr. Goldmann's 'Single People' Credo In all fairness, the attitude of Dr. Nahum Goldmann should be known in his direct application to the AJ Committee's position. The stenographic report of Dr. Goldmann's criticism has just reached us. In his speech at the meeting of the executive committee of the World Jewish Congress in Strasbourg. France, he warned "against inclinations and tendencies within American Jewry not to participate in joint action with other Jewish communities, either through the instrument of the World Jewish Congress or the World Conference of Jewish Organizations. but to act on their own and so to speak to set themselves up as protectors of other weaker Jewish communities." He said "this tendency must be resisted," and he continued: "The American Jewish Committee which does important work and, in most essential Jewish problems, has no real differences with other Jewish organizations working in the field, and makes an im- portant contribution to Israel and other Jewish causes, nevertheless insists—for ideological reasons which are meaningless today—on acting on its own, cooperating with other Jewish organizations only in specific cases which represent an exception to their basic principle. As a matter of fact, the whole activity of the American Jewish Com- mittee is in contradiction with their theoretical basis. It denies the unity of the Jewish people in action, and acts de facto as if it were an international Jewish organization, dealing with Jewish problems in various parts of the world, and even without observing the basic principle of the World Jewish Congress, not to interfere in Jewish questions in other countries without being asked by the representative bodies of these communities—except for the cases, like in Nazi Ger- many, where no such Jewish bodies exist—and without being guided in what they do by the advice of the organized Jewish communities. "There is a similar tendency on the part of other organizations too, and, if this continues, it will increase chaos in Jewish life, bring American Jewry into conflict with other Jewish communities and create undesirable political problems in several non-American coun- tries, making effective work very difficult. The time has come for the American Jewish Committee — which has a record of important achievements and is genuinely devoted to the welfare of the Jewish people—to reconsider its ideology which has no meaning in the 20th Century, and no longer act as if it had a mandate from the Jewish people, which it does not recognize, to do as it does, but to recognize de facto and not only de jure the existence of a single Jewish people, and cooperate with other Jewish organizations, both within the U. S. and in the international field with regard to common Jewish questions. "The World Conference of Jewish Organizations, which repre- sents an addition to the World Jewish Congress and comprises a number of Jewish organizations unfortunately not yet represented within the World Jewish Congress. has, after a period of purely consultative procedures, abolished the role of unanimity, which may open the way for joint activities." Non-Jews often looked upon us with suspicion and spoke of an alleged "Jewish unity" as something to guard against. Actually, we are as little united as any other peop12., but we need more coopera- tion among ourselves because of many crises that arise. More often than not, we all agree on the basic matters that affect us, but some seek their own platforms. A centralized force could avert many em- barrassments. This is the issue at hand in dealing with the AJ Corn- Yom Kippur an Influencing Force in Jewry . .. Muddled Issue of Unity, Uniformity By Philip Slomovitz mittee which, as Dr. Goldmann said, "does important work." In unity, such important work becomes even more significant. * A Deserved Honor for BGR Bernard G. Richards—affectionately referred to in Jewish leader- ship ranks as BGR—is due for a deserved honor. His rich collection of historic letters with American Jewish nota- bles will soon form an archive, in his name, in one of the great Ameri- can academic institutions. This is good news, BGR deserves every honor that will be accorded him, and the creation of such planned archives is an especially fitting way of paying him the honors he deserves. * * The Yom Kippur Fast and Jewish Nostalgia Last week, 'Edmond Fleg's satire on Yom Kippur fasting by a Jew who otherwise had rejected everything Jewish, was part of our Com- mentary. Coincidentally, the current issue of Ramparts, the leading Catholic liberal laymen's publication, presents a similar theme. One of its contributing editors, the specialist on travel, Gerald M. Feigen, describes a trip on "The Road to Jerusalem" on the eve of Yom Kippur. Driving from Caesaria, he became "worried about the tabu" of the approach of Yom Kippur, but his passenger, a Jerusalemite, assured him they would arrive on time before the fast day would set in. "An American tourist who had not observed Yom Kippur for 40 years," he began to wonder why the approach of the atonement day bothered him. He continued to call it a "tabu," but he picked up two hitch-hiking soldiers—"who wouldn't stop for a Jew on Yom Kippur Eve?"—and he explains their attitude: "Neither of them were going to the syna- gogue, but they were going to fast. They were against the orthodoxy; most of their friends were not religious, but they still respected Yom Kippur. It didn't imply that you were a true believer—merely that you were a Jew in Israel." But it isn't in Israel alone that there are such Jews: as in the Edmond Fleg story, the Jew fasts out of respect for his father but abandons all else in Judaism. Yet, there is much more to the Feigen story. He reached Jerusa- lem a bit late, there were no other cars in sight, the traffic light did not work, he was surrounded by Jews on their way to the synagogue, muttering imprecations, and one spat at him. He reached the home of his host ‘v h o assured him that it was a genuine, national involvement, this Yom Kippur. Even the unbelievers observed it, one way or anoth- er, and often found reasons to fast. But even those who did not fast, remained at home quietly involved. There was a soul-searching, and Feigen's confessional proceeds to express his sentiments as follows: "Collecting my thoughts, I decided that my severe symptoms were reactive to my childhood memories of Yom Kippur, the reputation of the Mea Shearim, and the statements of so many Israelsi of the im- portance of the tabu. But that wasn't all of it. My feelings were intensi- fied. by some special quality generated by this land, its history and people, and the history of the Jews everywhere. During the past few days I had visited the ancient fortress at Acre, and saw the execution chamber, where a number of Jewish fighters were hanged; I saw the death cells, and the red suits worn by the condemned, lying freshly laundered on the bare cots; I learned of the fantastic escape of a large number of Irgun prisoners which came just too late to save the con- demned. This was the beginning of the modern State of Israel. "I also saw the Yad Vashem, the Memorial to the Jews who were destroyed by the Nazis. It was an enormous square building, its walls made of giant boulders selected from the Galilee. The roof was ?made of thick, heavy concrete, sloping down to within a foot of the walls, leaving a small space through which light filtered softly. Once past the massive sculptured doors, I saw a vast, dark hall; a corridor ran around a floor of blue and white tile, recessed about three feet. An eternal flame burned in one corner, but what made the eyes mist over were the names of the concentration camps spelled out in the tile—Dachau, Maldenek, Auschwitz — a silent roll call that filled me with des-pair and hope. "And so sitting exhausted on my rocking chair, I realized that the Israelis have cherished Yom Kippur as a total tradition — a day not so much of atonement, as a tribute to the many times when civilization perished, the Jews survived. It had become a day of silent thought, a national intensity, polished into a gem-like tradition by universal acceptance. The unbelievers seemed to acknowledge with a kind of reverence that it was the believers, who in many lands over the cen- turies, kept the Jewish race and ideal alive by continuing, year by year, the orthodox services on Yom Kippur in the synagogues, undaunted by persecution, segregation, and scorn. It was a day of the dead and the living; and although the majority of the Children of Israel do not follow any defined, theologic construct, they venerate this day holding fast to its traditional lever, and adding a special quality of their own— a memorial, observed with some kind of personal sacrifice. It was a salute to the patriarchs, a gesture of feeling altogether non-intellectual, which enabled them to accept the "tabu." "It was an enriching, if frightening, experience for me; in some way the dialogue I had with myself, validated its character. It helped me delineate my knowledge of Jewish history, and my sense of loss at being a noncontributor, except of my own personal integrity. The day was still ominous to me, but now in a more understandable way. The psychologic pain left, and I was able to meditate peacefully." Kiev Will Honor Memory of Jewish Babi Yar Victims WASHINGTON (JTA)—The So- viet Embassy made known receipt of official information that the City Soviet of Kiev has decided to erect a monument to Jews and other victims of Nazi mass murders at Babi Yar, on the outskirts of the Ukrainian capital. Information sent by the official Novosti Press Agency said that Mikhail Burka, chairman of the Kiev City Soviet, made the an- nouncement to a Novosti corres- pondent. He was quoted as stating: "It is known that, at the time of World War II, the German Fascist invaders shot in Babi Yar tens of thousands of Soviet citizens, Jews, Ukrainians, Russians, men, women, old folks, and children. The monu- ment to the victims of Fascism will be erected on the spot of the mass slaughter. It will remind fu- ture generations not only of the horrors of war but of the savage ferocity and bestial deeds of Ger- man Fascists." The monument will be erected next year. A competition has been authorized for the the most suitable and graceful design. The memorial will stand at the entrance to the park which is being laid out in the elevated section of Babi Yar, on the spot of the mass shooting. For a number of years, heavy criticism has been voiced through- out the Western world against the unwillingness of Soviet authorities to mark the Babi Yar site suitably. In most instances, Soviet denuncia- tions of German atrocities during World War II have avoided men- tioning that Jews were among Hit- ler's principal civilian victims. Novosti is a feature service under government control in Moscow, catering only to the foreign press. Its dispatches are not published in the Soviet Union. * * * Letter Upbraiding Nikita Reaches British Press LONDON (JTA)—A sardonic and impassioned analysis of the re- emergence of anti-Semitism in the Soviet Union during the Khrush- chev regime, believed to have been written by a Jewish Communist Party member who was a victim of Stalin's persecution of Jews, has reached the West after being cir- culated among Soviet Jews clan- destinely for about two years. A report on the document by Emanuel Litvinoff, the British Jew- ish writer, appeared in the Guar- dian. It is an anonymous letter to former Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev after his denunciation of the Soviet poet Yevgeni Yevtu- shenko for the latter's famous poem on Babi Yar, the ravine where, in 1941, the Nazis slaugh- tered hundreds of thousands Jewish men, women and childre,,,__,/ The poem denounced anti-Semitism in the Soviet Union and described the martyrdom of the Jews under the Nazis. The letter to Khrush- chev denounced Soviet anti-Semi- tism outright. * * * Costa Rican Intellectuals Appeal to USSR for Jews SAN JOSE, Costa Rica (JTA)— An appeal signed by 51 of the lead- ing intellectuals in this country was sent to the authorities of the Soviet Union, urging sharply that the USSR stop its discrimi- nation against Russian Jewry who are denied full rights in the educa- tional, cultural and reliigous fields. The appeal was adopted at a meeting here at which data a b u o t anti-Jewish persecutions were documented by Costa Rican writers and educators. The meet- ing took note of the fact that the recent Latin American congress of members of Parliament had adopt- ed a similar resolution, calling for an end to anti-Jewish discrimina- tion in the USSR. It is not because we are soon to approach Yom Kippur that we offer this soul-searching declaration as a basis for self-analysis by others who may have drifted from Jewish loyalties but who still adhere to a heritage they are unaware of, a legacy they cherish sub- consciously. What we have inherited is spiritual. It is historic. But for those who think in terms of "tabus" it often emerges as much more than that. It is something we do not escape. It is part of a continuing tradition which provides us with the pride of belonging, with a sense of the historic that is inerasable from our inner selves. Yet, to so many it has become a "tabu," when, in reality, it is a legacy that constantly reminds us of the Jew's adherence to the highest principles of social justice, to his realization that he continues to play a vital role as the teacher who carries with him, wherever he may, the Decalogue and also the sense of duty to transmit to a cruel world the credo of the Jew: a credo of justice and humanitarism. Somehow, one feels upon reading Feigen's account of his Yom Kippur in Israel, as it was published in Ramparts, that he was re- lieved: he rediscovered himself. The Jew who has not broken with his faith and with his traditions always has the advantage of being better prepared to meet all eventualities and to defy dangers. The spiritually THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 2—Friday, September 3, 1965 faithful Jew is always the happier and more secure. -