Entire Community Prays for Rabbi Adler's Speedy Recovery

(Continued from Page 12)
ing of confidence on the part of a
Man who knew the boy's case, who
had faith that he could instill a
sense of reason and realism in the
boy. It proved a wrong conjec-
ture. •
When he asked those with him
on the bimah to leave them alone,
Rabbi Adler also had the Bar
Mitzvah take his seat with his par-
ents off the bimah.
Among the first person to get
on the bimah and to assist the
doctors in aiding the rabbi and his
assailant was Eugene Merkow.
Jacob Epel, the synagogue's
shammes, was on vacation and
was called back to the city on
Monday.
There were consistent signs of
compassion toward the family of
Richard Wishnetsky. Rabbis, lay-
men, community personalities of
note, officers of Shaarey Zedek,
visited with the family at New
Providence Hospital while awaiting
the fate of the boy. It was a com-
munity of compassion that con-
trasted with both the words and
the dramatic and spectacular act
of a young man who may have had
delusions of grandeur in his reli-
gious involvements.
Relatives of both families began
to arrive. Rabbi Adler's brother,
a restaurateur, came froth New
York. Richard's grandparents and
an uncle arrived from the Bronx.
Relatives who had left for Florida
only a day before the shooting
immediately returned to Detroit to
be with Richard's family.
It was a total negation of the
charges of hypocrisy leveled at the
Jewish communities by the assai-
lant. Rabbi Adler's associate rabbi,
Rabbi Irwin Groner, who was at
Camp Tamarack for a week-end at
the annual Shaarey Zedek Kibbutz
upon his return to the city and
after visiting with Mrs. Adler, went
to Providence Hospital to express
his compassion to the boy's family.
This has been a routine, and neith-

,

er the community nor the newspa-
pers nor the congregation treated
the matter with anything but kind-
ness and compassion.
The horrifying evidence of the
tragic occurrence was the blood-
stained tallith, Rabbi Adler's yar-
mulka with a bullet hole, the floor
drenched in blood.
Some 150 guests from communi-
ty churches were in attendance
at the service.

* * *

The young man's torment,
which has aroused the interest
of the entire world, has disturbed
many people. Officials of the
University of Michigan and the
University of Detroit expressed

their sympathies to the family.
Prof. William Haber, dean of
the U. of M. College of Litera-
ture, Science and the Arts, made
an interesting statement to the
editor of The Jewish News,
incorporated in the Purely Com-
mentary column in this issue.

Wishnetsky's unhappiness is ev-
ident in the letters and state-.
ments that were found at the
Strathmore Hotel on West Alex-
andrine, where he had registered
for Friday night, apparently pre-
paratory to committing his des-

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was graduated from the University
of Michigan in 1964 with Phi Beta
Kappa honors and received a
coveted Woodrow Wilson Fellow-
ship. Then he chose the University
of Detroit for a post-graduate
course on a high scholarship and
interested himself in comparative
religion.

He became so involved that,
several months ago, long past
midnight, he visited the promi-
nent Lubavitcher Rebbe in Brook-
lyn who then advised him to study
Judaism, to learn the tenets of
his own faith, before becoming in-
volved in comparative religion.

"Wait with that until you are 50,"

the Brooklyn rabbi advised him.
It was learned this week that
Wishnetsky willed whatever funds

he posessed to the Jewish National
Fund and the Lubavitcher Chabad.
He is survived by his parents,

Mr. and Mrs. Edward Wishnetsky
of Lincolnshire Rd.; two sisters,
Terry and Ellen; .his maternal
grandmother, Mrs. William Hordes,
and paternal grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Wishnetsky of the Bronx.

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Adler's condition.

Photo shows Rabbi and Mrs.
Adler on the tenth • anniversary
of Rabbi Adler's ministry at the
Shaarey • Zedek.

r

a note to Mrs. Wishnetsky, at
Providence Hospital, where her
family was gathered awaiting news
about her son's state of health.
Mrs. Adler's message to the mother
of her husband's assailant was
that "I am most concerned for
you," informing her that "the rab-
bi is holding his own." After the
Wishnetsky funeral, Mrs. Adler
sent a message of condolence to
the family.
The doctors had- given up hope
for Richard's recovery from the
very beginning.
When he was rushed to Sinai
Hospital Louis Berry, president of
the congregation, and Mrs. Adler
were with the rabbi in the ambu-
lance.
Dr. Teitelbaum, who also is a
member of Shaarey Zedek, was in
attendance from the very first.
Sinai Hospital experienced a
record number of calls during the
crucial days. There were scores of
calls from every part of the coun-
try and from overseas inquiring
about the rabbi's welfare.
Sinai Hospital administrator
Sydney Peimer was highly com-
mended by attending physicians,
staff and family for the manner
in which -reports on the rabbi's
condition were handled. He was
particularly noted for the clarity
of his statements, which kept the
community aware of Rabbi

perate act. One of these state-
ments may have been intended as
an ex post facto — to explain his
intended deed after its occur-
rence, for in it he wrote:
"Since I feel that I am no
longer able to make any significant
creative contributions, I shall make
a destructive one. What happened
in Shaarey Zedek happens only
once in a lifetime — it occurs in
Vietnam, it occurs every day — the
slaughtering of the innocent, ex-
cept that the Vietnamese are real-
ly innocent. . ."
A copyrighted article in Tues-
day's Detroit Free Press made pub-
lic a long statement that was writ-
ten by Wishnetsky in which he
imagined himself as a savior, as a
fighter "for a better world" and as
the assassin of U.S. Secretary of
Defense Robert McNamara, who, he
wrote, "symbolizes that which I
despise — the business mentality
which is more concerned with ma-
terial matters than with human
matters."
* *
In the communities of world
Jewry there was so much sadness,
that the news of what had tran-
spired in the Shaarey Zedek over-
shadowed all of the grim world
events.
Mrs. Adler was the bravest of
all, retaining faith, refusing to be-
lieve the worst, insisting her hus-
band will be well, conforting oth-
ers.
Mrs. Adler, optimistic, having
faith in her husband's recovery,
was thinking of the sick boy who
did the shooting and his parents.
During the turmoil in the syna-
gogue, she went to Evelyn Wishnet-
sky to comfort her, just before she
accompanied her husband to the
hospital in an ambulance.
During the day, Mrs. Adler sent

A statement expressing hope for
Rabbi Adler's speedy recovery and
paying tribute to the man he had
befriended in the course of many
years of joint communal efforts
was issued by Governor George
Romney. The governor said in
Lansing Saturday night:
"Rabbi Adler has dedicated
his life to the service of his
people and all the people of
Michigan. My wife and I join
all our citizens in praying for
his fast and complete recovery."
Mayor Jerome Cavanagh and
Emil Mazey, secretary of the UAW
of Michigan, issued calls for peo-
ple of all faiths to pray for Rabbi
Adler's recovery.
Messages praying for Rabbi
Adler's recovery are pouring in
from all parts of the globe, includ-
ing Israel, the Orient where he
served as the first Jewish chaplain
in Japan during World War II,
England, France, Canada and
scores of American cities.
Archbishop John F. Dearden,
the Roman Catholic prelate in
Detroit, added to the messages of
hope and prayer with this state-
ment: "I was profoundly shocked
by the tragic news," he wrote in
a telegram to Congregation
Shaarey Zedek. "In my personal
esteem for him I will especially
remember him in my prayers
that this dedicated life will not
be lost to the community."
His assailant's act came out of a
confusion that was part of his
mental illness. Two years ago he
underwent mental tests at Receiv-
ing Hospital. He was in a mental
private hospital and later was
transferred to the Ypsilanti State
Hospital. He rebelled, was releas-
ed, began an activity of giving
religious lectures at Wayne State
University and said he was teach-
ing in local schools on a temporary
basis, yet there is no record of it
in Board of Education files.
But there is no doubt about his
having been an honor student. He

Brandeis $100,000 Gift to Aid
Students in Judaic Studies

WALTHAM (JTA)—Michael Saf-
ran and his wife May, of Lynn,
have established a major scholar-
ship fund at Brandeis University
with a $100,000 gift, it was an-
nounced here today. Founded in
memory of their parents, Jacob
and Fannie Safran and David S.
and Agnes Lowenthal Greenbaum,
the scholarship will be used to pro-
vide assistance to gifted and needy
students concentrating in Judaic
studies.

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Friday, February 18, 1966-13

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