Purely Commentary Wallace's Evaluation of Jewry's 'Extraordinary Record' Henry A. Wallace, Vice President of the United States under Franklin D. Roosevelt, was a noted Bible scholar. He had interesting views on Jews, Zionism, the role played by our people in world affairs. One of his most interesting comments was part of a speech he delivered when he was Secretary of Agriculture, on May 20, 1940. before the Women's Division of the Jewish Education Association of New York. In that speech, he said he had asked an outstanding Jewish university professor, "Do you think the Jews by heredity are any smarter than other Americans?" Receiving a negative reply, Wallace asked the profes- sor: "How does it happen that the Jews, forming less than 4 per cent of the popula- tion, make such an extraordinary record of the learned professions, especially in the law?" The professor replied: "Family tradi- tion." Thereupon, Wallace, in his address to the women, made his own observation on the subject, stating: "Both the Jewish father and mother, but especially the mother, live with their children day by day and urge them on in the competitive game of life. The mo- Henry A. Wallace thers of Israel several thousands of years ago learned the arts of family training in a way which has produced results throughout the ages. Love and discipline have been shrewdly mixed and untiringly exerted. The book of Proverbs has in it the distilled essence of this ancient family wisdom. Thrift, discretion, temperance, hard work, canniness, and respect for the Torah. It is no accident that both the Jews and the Scotch have gone so largely to the books of David and Solomon for inspiration in the conduct of their personal lives. Both have gone forth from their native land to be formidable competitors over the entire world. Both have their Schle- mihls, their failures, but both by virtue of their family traditions have achieved successes greater than would have been expected from the standpoint of heredity alone." In our day — a quarter century after these sentiments were uttered — many among us will undoubtedly say: would that what the late Vice President said really were totally true today. Indeed, family influences, loyalty to Torah, the inspiration of the Bible, have influenced Jewish living, Jewish thinking. These influences have been weakened in the course of human events, in the process of vital changes that have taken place in the world. Now we can learn anew from the eminent Vice President who was such an able scholar and student of human events. The late Mr. Wallace was a Zionist adherent. He admired the learned among our people. He was associated with Dr. Walter C. Lowdermilk in the proposal for the Jordan River Valley Authority plan. He delivered numerous addresses before Jewish audiences. In one of his famed speeches, delivered in September 1946 at the golden jubilee banquet of the National Farm School, in Doylestown, Pa., Mr. Wallace urged American Jews to turn to farming — emulating the Palestinian Jews. In that address, he stated: "Thirty years ago I met a graduate from the National Farm School who was managing a dairy out in Iowa. Finding a Jewish farm boy in Iowa thirty years ago, was a phenomenon that made a deep impression on me. He had been well-trained. He was an excellent dairy manager. But more that, he was a symbol — a symbol of Jewish boys from the cities eager to earn a living on the land. "For a number of years, I have been fascinated by the exploits of Jewish farmers in the Near East — just as I have been convinced of the wisdom of a Jordan River Valley Authority, with the irrigated land of southern Palestine and Transjordania available to Jews and Arabs on an equal basis. And I am happy, that, when I was Secretary of Agriculture. I had something to do with the mission of Dr. Walter Low- dermilk, of the Soil Conservation Service, which did such excellent work in showing the development possibilities in Palestine and Transjordan. "But I have never been able to see any reason why outstanding Jewish agricultural exploits should be confined to the Near East. To me there is something peculiarly appropriate about the Jews making an equal success on the land here in the United States. "Twenty per cent of the people of the United States make their liv- ing by working on the land. This 20 per cent is the seedbed for nearly half the next generation. Why shouldn't 20 per cent of the Jewish people also live on the land? The Jewish people have always been welcome and safe here in the United States. They have a common share in our proud heritage as a free people. They don't have to keep their belong- ings in liquid form — just in the event that they may have to flee over- night to a place of safety. We have no laws against the Jewish people owning land. And when a higher percentage of the Jewish people are on the land, our national life will be all the healthier. "Of course, it usually is easier to make money in other ways than by farming. But money is not all there is to life. Surely, the unsur- passed contribution of Jews to all of the arts and sciences is sufficient evidence of this fact. And, because I have worked so closely with so many fine colleagues who were of Jewish faith in Washington these past thirteen years, I want particularly to testify to their unsurpassed and unselfish service to their government — to the government of all Americans. "From my own knowledge and experience, I disagree utterly with those who say — for either curious or questionable reasons — that the Jews, inherently, are not adaptable to agriculture. "In the first instance, the sons of Jacob were people of the land. And when Moses led the children of Israel into Palestine, they were shocked by what they felt to be the shameful commercial practices of those city slickers, the Canaanites. Many of the most vigorous prophets were farm people — speaking out against the evils of cities "In this day of technological development, from a scientific and an economic point of view, we are now coming to the time when there must be decentralization in our highly-industrialized life. More and more of our workers in the cities are going to be part-time farmers with five, ten, or fifteen acres of land on the outskirts. More and more of our industrial areas are going to be decentralized. Modern trans- portation, electricity, and atomic energy will see to that. So also will the very nature and desire of man himself. "Agriculture is the place where science and the art of living are most fruitfully joined together. Hopefully, I look forward to the day when there will be as many Jewish scientists in agriculture as there have been in the development of atomic energy. The National Farm Henry Wallace's Legacy: His Farming Advocacy for Jews ... Pluralistic U.S.A. By Philip SIOMOVitZ School I know is concerned with training Jewish boys to do a practical job on the land. Nevertheless, if the National Farm School is as great a success in the future as it has been in the past — and I am confident that it will know even greater days — the result inevitably will be the development of a great Jewish agricultural university. Then the Jew- ish spirit will flow back again to the land — the land from which it derived its greatest strength when the Jewish race was born — the land which produced Amos, who of all the prophets was the most pas- sionate exponent of social justice. "Prophetic genius will never be derived from machines or science. It comes directly from life. By heredity and tradition the Jewish race is rich with prophetic fire. That is why I covet for the Jews the ad- ditional impetus which will come from a renewed and richer contact with the soil." There was much wisdom in Wallace's numerous declarations. He was one of the most colorful Americans of this century. His memory will be recalled with reverence by all who knew him — and history will certainly treat his record most kindly. The Genius of 'Pluralistic U.S.A.' An editorial note in the current American Bar Association Journal merits special attention. Under the heading "Zionist Israel and Pluralistic U. S. A.," the editor had this to say: My good friend, Al Arent of Cornell and the District of Columbia Bar, and adjunct professor at the Georgetown Uni versity Law Center, has sent me some thoughtful observations on my recent report (May Journal, page 502) on Professor Mallison's article in The George Washington Law Review: The vast majority of Jews, whether or not they are Zionists, believe that the Jews are a "people" bound by historical, cultural and ethnic ties, as well as by religion. Professor Mallison, to whose views you devoted consider- able space in the May issue, and the American Council on Judaism, which he serves as a consultant, do the American Jewish community a disservice when they equate the non- political concept of peoplehood with the legal and political status of nationality. In our culturally pluralistic society, Americans of Scottish, Irish or Italian ancestry do not be- come dual nationals or lesser Americans because they cher- ish their ties with, and on occasion make common cause with, persons of the same background and extraction. Recognizing that from time to time an Israeli or Zionist leader may make chauvinistic statements that play into the hands of Arab propagandists and the American Council on Judaism, we must not be misled into believing that there is anything unfittiing in the affection and aid which so many American Jews shower upon the little State of Israel- a bastion of democracy in the troublesome Middle East and the haven of millions who have fled from oppression. This sentiment echoes the glories of our democracy and is a tribute to those who help retain the "pluralistic" qualities of the United States. There are many who have been misled by the venom of the Council for Judaism. But the American Bar Association Journal's editor and the scholarly writer he quoted had the vision to recognize that the greatness of this land lies in a democratic idealism that does not deny the right to life and freedom to others. This is what is implied by Zionism and this is the aim of the movement's supporters who are to be found among all faiths. The genius of the U. S. A. is inherent in "pluralistic" contributions: Zionist idealism is one of them. Madison Club's Bias Reversed 2 ,-11ADISON, Wis. (JTA) — The Madison Club board of directors has reversed an earlier decision and voted to invite a Jewish State Supreme Court Justice and a Jew- ish attorney to join after a storn--- of protest over the original decisio. rejecting the applications. The board acted after more than----5' 200 of the club's 600 members signed a protest petition and Fred H. Harrington, president of the University of Wisconsin, resigned from the club. The board held a special meeting at which it liberal- ized club by-laws on admission procedures. It then invited Justice Myron Gordon and Attorney Gordon Sinykin to join. The board said, in a statement, that it had acted to amend "the by-laws so as to provide that any candidate may be admitted by five affirmative votes of the nine di- rectors. In addition, the club, by appropriate action, moved that ( Justice Myron Gordon and Gordon Sinykin are welcome to join the club if they care to." Two of the board members initially voted against admission for the two men, leading to charges of bias in the club and to the resignation of Harrington. The rejection was widely believed to have been on the basis of the fact that they were Jews. Their ap- plications originally had been sub. mitted at the urging of Collins Ferris, president of the Madison Bank and Trust Company, who, along with other Madison Club members, wanted to dispel long- standing reports that the club barred Jews. • A number of groups in Madison responded to the original rejection by canceling meetings at the Madison Club. The Madison City Council passed a resolution declar- ing its intent to deny city license including liquor li- censes, to organizations guilty of discriminating on the basis of race, creed, color, national origin or privileges, ancestry. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 2—Friday, December 3, 1965 Johnson OKs Resumption of Food Shipments to Egypt; Plan Provides 555,000,000 in Aid WASHINGTON (JTA) — A State Department spokesman announced Tuesday that President Johnson has authorized resumption of food shipments to Egypt, and United States officials revealed that the agreement now being negotiated with Cairo will provide about $55,- 000,000 in aid over a six-month period and would be partly pay- able in dollars. American officials said the de- cision was taken because of a trend of improvement in American- Egyptian relations marked by Egyptian concentration on internal development rather than foreign affairs, greater moderation in Egyptian policies, improvement in the objectivity of the Egyptian press, the agreement to end the Yemen war, the settlement of American claims and the encour- agement of private economic de- velopment. The decision followed consulta- tion on the White House level with key members of Congress. There was no comment on questions of whether the new program is a forerunner of a $500,000,000 pro- gram. The food-aid agreement with Egypt terminated in June 1965, under pressure from Congress. It was pointed out that Egypt was diverting her own resources to acquire ultra -modern Soviet arms, shipping her rice to Com- munist countries and having shortages thus created filled by American aid. The new program will reflect some limitations re- quired by Congress. Rep. Leonard Farbstein, a mem- ber of the House Committee on Foreign Affairs and a ranking member of the Near East subcom- mittee, in a statement on the de- cision to authorize the beginning of negotiations for the resumption of the sale of foodstuffs to Egypt, declared: "I am disturbed that the United States is opening negotiations with Egypt for the shipment of food from American stocks. These ship- ments were halted last year when Congress raised objections to Egyptian policies which were both anti-American and inimical to the interest of peace in the Middle East." Rep. Farbstein stressed that "as a minimum concession" the United States must request that the Egyptians cease using their re- sources to buy arms, then ask the U.S. to make up their deficit with food. "I think it would also be wise t' negotiate with our food in favor 0, settling the Arab refugee problem; - open the Suez Canal to all ship- ping; withdraw Egyptian troops from Yemen; halt provocative propaganda; and anything else that would help reduce Middle Eastern tension." Rep. Seymour Halpern, New York Republican, announced that he is informing the Executive De- partment that Congressional lead- ers who are said to have agreed on the resumption of aid to Egypt did not speak for him and that he "deplored the decision." Israel's Itaboker Wi 11 Cease Publication; Merge With Hersh (Direct JTA Teletype Wire to The Jewish News) TEL AVIV — Haboker, one of Israel's oldest daily news- papers and organ of the Liberal Party, sent dismissal notices Wednesday to all employes effective Jan. 1, when the paper will halt publications. It may merge with "Herut" the publi- cation of the Herut Party. Both papers have small circulations and huge deficits covered by the two political parties which formed an align. ment, Gahal, for the Nov. 2 municipal and parliamentary elec- tions. The Herut paper also sent dismissal notices to its staff members. The merger may presage closer ties between the two parties, observers said. A number of Liberal Party members declined to participate in the merger and ran an independent Liberal slate in the elections. 5