Ex-Detroiter Urges Community: Give the Young a R esponsible Arena (Editor's Note: Sol Silver, for- mer Detroiter and graduate from the school of architecture at the University of Michigan, is an ac- tive member of the San Fran- cisco Jewish community, having served as co-chairman of the Marin Division of the Jewish Welfare Federation campaign and co-chairman of the young leadership development program, as well as many other activities. This article is excerpted from his paper submitted to a sym- posium, "Y outh Looks at the Jewish Community," at the re- cent general assembly of the Council of Jewish Federations and Welfare Funds in Mont- real.) * * BY SOL SILVER Just as the young American Jew has drifted away from the Jewish community, so has Jewish com- munity life drifted away from him. Instead of finding a vital com- munity, with meaningful roles and purposes and opportunities for significant participation, the young American Jew finds a relatively closed structure, with little seri- ous dialogue and meager oppor- tunities for education. It would be unfair to place all the blame for this situation on the Jewish community. External forces in our complex, pluralistic society have had a great deal to do with assimilation and an acceptance in- to the nonsectarian mainstream of that anonymous culture we call the American way of life. Our young generation enters this stream with little under- standing of that Jewish heritage of spiritual, cultural and ethical values which could give mean- ing to its participation. Our contemporary American cul- tural life, without deep feelings of social commitment, is even more conducive to alienation than our contemporary Jewish cultural life. While we can understand the general pressures f or c i n g with- drawal, it is equally true that there is nowhere else to go. Sooner or later rebellious youth must come to terms with conditions as they are. This is not analogous to Jew- ish community life. In the general community to- day, there are encouraging sights that the swing is towards enthu- siasm and involvement, social ac- tion and commitment and away from apathy and indifference. This generation is increasingly involved in group action for universal lib- erties. The civil rights movement and the youthful vigor of the Ken- ledy administration both helped ndle a spirit of purpose and dedi- Ilk- cation. However, as to participa- ) tion in dynamic Jewish community purposes, there is no sign of a change from indifference and apathy, withdrawal and disaffec- tion. Looking at Jewish life, one would expect our young intellect- uals to be active and articulate critics, attempting to reshape a way of life that they are expected to participate in, but they are silent, bored, and uncommitted. When they go through the motions of par- ticipation, it is a cursory, super- ficial gesture. If the young generation in America can be roused from its indifference and apathy towards Jewish life, it will require a re- construction of Jewish commit- ment. The young generation wants to be useful, more import- antly, it wants to belong to a dynamic community. Belonging is essential to full and equal par- ticipation. To establish this participation, the Jewish community must help reconstruct Jewish commitment to a way of life in America today, based on our great heritage of Jew- ish ethics and values. There is a growing need for a community umbrella which relates the fragmented elements of Jew- ish life into an organic Jewish com- munity. Out of the moral crisis in today's society comes this oppor- tunity for community action. The internal forces that operate to sustain a cohesive Jewish com- munity must be strengthened. This means providing challenging op- portunities for volunteers to make decisions on social, cultural and religious issues through their par- ticipation. If the young are expected to be- come involved and committed to purposeful r o 1 e s, they must be given a responsible arena in which to play these roles; they must also be given an adequate educational foundation if they are to act wisely. The leaders in the community must be prepared to sacrifice some of their illusions about traditional procedures that have worked in the past and are fail- frig today. Unless we are pre- pared to test new ways of obtain- ing positive identification, we may be faced with a community of adults working through out- moded establishments with only memories to share. Our young will be serving other causes, re- maining indifferent to the prom- ise and potential of the Jewish way of life. Use me, but first educate me to the role of a dynamic and mean- ingful Jewish community life in America; thereby you can assist me to serve the needs of my fel- low man. Plans Formulated for '66 Campaign (Continued from Page 1) younger generation. In attendance were 10 invited college students and 16 active members of the junior division. In his report for the education division, Dr. Drachler said there has been a stabilization in the schools, with a slight decline in enrollment due to: 1. a decline in the total Detroit Jewish popu- lation; 2. a drop in the birth rate in our community, and 3. the movement of young Jewish families to the suburbs and the enrollment of their children in Day Schools or congregational schools. Dr. Drachler indicated anew that Bar Mitzvah has become a term- inal point in Jewish education, that 85 to 90 per cent of the boys end their Jewish studies at the age of 13. He also deplored continuing dropouts and warned of the short- age of teachers in Jewish schools. In a report for the capital needs committee, Louis Tabashnick said many buildings need renovations. He said the committee's plans for the coming year include the con- struction of a branch of the United Hebrew Schools in Southfield. Among the outlined needs for increased services during the corn- ing year, indicated in division re- ports, is an expected increase of new immigrants, as a result of the liberalization of the immigra- tion law, and the settling here of more refugees from Cuba. The budgeting conference had Declaration 'Only a Start'-Cushing Cardinal Cushing, Archbishop of Boston, was on record as believing that the Ecumenical Council promulgation on Catholic-Jewish relations was "only a beginning" for Catholics "to go further and to take out of Christian literature all that reflects upon the Jewish people." The Cardinal's view was con- tained in a letter he sent in reply to one from Charles H. Silver, former president of the New York Board of Education and a personal friend of the prelate. Silver had written to the Cardinal to thank him for seeking Silver's advice before going to Rome for the final session of the Council this fall and for "the valiant and uncompromising stand" the Card- inal took in battling for a strong draft declaration on Jews. The final approved version, which is now formal Catholic doctrine, re- pudiated the charges of collective guilt of the Jewish people in the crucifixion of Jesus and deplores anti-Semitism. The Cardinal wrote also that the declaration was "not perfect" but that "it is a good start." Peo- ple will forget this declaration as years go on but we must not for- get to follow it up to the end that all terrible things said about the Jews in Christian literature or all the evil insinuations against them must be eradicated," Cardinal Cushing stressed. SURWIN'S 29 Jewish Groups Honor Allan Bronfman at 70 LOT G NORTHLAND MONTREAL (JTA) — Allan Bronfman, one of Canada's out- standing Jewish communal and in- ternational leaders, was honored here at a testimonial dinner on his 70th birthday attended by more than 700 people. The testimonial event was arranged by 29 national and local Jewish organizations. He threatens who is afraid. — Bronfman's sons, Edward and French proverb. Peter, announced plans to contrib- ute an addition of the Shaar Hasho- mayin synagogue here, where the family worships, which will bear Bronfman's name and house a li- brary, museum and youth center. They also announced they would donate a reception center at the 2 DOORS Hebrew University of which WEST OF Bronfman is deputy chairman of the board of governors. Bronfman was presented with six glass vessels, discovered by archeologists in Israel, which date from the first to the third cen- turies of the Common Era. Two "ese uniformed guards watched over the vessels as they were unveiled. Bronfman called them "priceless" and "an unusual and extraordinary gift which I will treasure forever." YEAREND SALE SAVE UP TO 11 /2 'OFF Special Groups Designer Fashions LILLI ANN 1$139 COATS MINK TRIM $159 COATS DESIGNER $60 SUITS $ 29 $70 BRIDAL $39 GOWNS HAND BEADED $39 TOPS '8 $19 $15 REVERSIBLE SKI JACKET $8 $39 LEATHER JACKETS comes meaningful to them in a way that giving money can not." Junior Division President Ivan Boesky said ways to implement the suggestion would be sought, and he invited the college students to form an advisory body to the division. The Junior Division of Federa- tion is comprised of young adults— students and professionals — who contribute to the Allied Jewish Campaign. Board members spon- sor educational programs to at- tract young leadership and conduct the Junior Division AJ Campaign. They also serve as a liaison with members of other Federation agency boards as part of the Jun- ior Division leadership training program. GEORGE OHRENSTEIN Certified Master Watchmaker and Jeweler 18963 Livernois Ave. UN 1-8184 OPEN THURS. TO 9 P.M. Specializing in: • • • • • • • Fresh, Cutup Chicken Parts Ready Made Hamburger Patties Oven Ready Turkeys Mock Chicken Seasoned Meat Balls Veal for Scalopini Beef for Scalopini • • • • • • • Tenderloin Chip Steak Boneless Chicken Breasts Cartwheels Cube Steaks Kosher TV Dinners Beef Ribs Seasoned Meat Loaf KAPLAN BROS. Strictly Kosher Meats-Poultry 18229 WYOMING nr. Curtis FREE PARKING WE ACROSS STREET DELIVER UN 1-4770 Member Detroit Area Retail Kosher Meat Dealers Ass'n. AT SPITZER'S REPEATED BY POPULAR DEMAND! 33 1/3 RPM Stereo or Hi-Fi Recording of "FIDDLER ON THE ROOF" Reg. $3.98 89c ON ALL HANUKAH k OFF DECORATIONS AND PAPER PRODUCTS il SPITZER' S E B G I RF ET C E BNOTOE R 24900 COOLIDGE COR. 10 MILE In The Dexter Davison Shopping Plaza Open Saturday Night and All Day Sunday 542-7520-1 STORE FOR LEASE Corner 7 Mile Rd. and Washburn $39 PILE LINED 7999 CAR COATS $ 19 $16 WOOL DRESSES a new look. College students, most of them relatives and friends of Federation members, were in attendance, and division chairmen took special pains to explain the budgeting figures to the younger group. Federation Junior Division board members later hosted a luncheon for the vacationing collegians, most of them from the University of Michigan and Wayne State Uni- versity. During the luncheon and open board meeting, the students dis- cussed ways of bringing the Jew- ish community, through Federa- tion, to the campus. It was agreed that the current image of the Hillel Foundation has not attracted the majority of Jewish college stu- dents, but that there is a lesson to be learned from the drawing power of protest groups. One guest, working on her masters degree at Wayne, said students would prefer to perform service work for the community, say at the Jewish Home for the Aged, rather than make a finan- cial contribution. "When they can paint a house for some old per- son," she said, "the experience be- $19 ARBY'S RESTAURANT l *1 :1191e " S6".4 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, December 24, 1965-5 VAILABLE JANUARY 1st Phone WA 5-4900