Tears Mff aff and Hope BY CHARLOTTE HYAMS 5726—a year for headines that stunned the Jewish community of Detroit, of the nation and of the world. Many were stories that sim- mered. A few exploded. The latter took place Feb. 5 at /? Shaarey Zedek Synagogue, where the calm of a Sabbath morning, was shattered by bullets. Dr. Mor- ris Adler, scholar and spokesman for his people, assassinated. Until his death March 11, a com- munity forgot all differences to pray for his recovery. Even as they consoled his wife, she was consol- 'ng the family of Rabbi Adler's -young assailant, who took his own life. Three weeks before his 60th birthday, Dr. Adler died, Thou- sands crowded to Shaarey Zedek for the funeral, said to be possibly the largest in Michigan history. And Jews throughout the world mourned. * * * As the Issues of anti-Semitism and the fight for civil rights con- tinued into the year 5726, they took on new, frightening aspects. While Jewish defense organizations were joining Negroes in their quest for equality, some Negro leaders were admitting in public that Jewish leadership of rights groups was no longer "appre- ciated." Indeed, they questioned how much of the rioting in big- city ghettoes was hit-miss and how much by anti-Jewish design. The foe of both Negro and Jew took up the "white power" cause. Under the guise of a "fight for white men's rights," George Lin- coln Rockwell's brownshirts car- ried their hate on a banner into Chicago's racially troubled areas. The Nazi emblem came back again and again, first as a "harmless" teen-age fad (which moved at least one Detroit high school principal to ban the Iron Cross with a warning to his stu- dents about its horrible mean- ing) and later in the form of repeated vandalism on houses of worship. This time, the reports were corn- ing not only from Austria, where evidence of anti-Semitism has been mounting, but from our own land of the free, from cities as near as Teaneck, N. J., where one synagogue was desecrated almost daily for a week. It wasn't the type of thing, America could boast about in urg- ing the Soviet government: Lib- erate your Jews; give them the rights we give our Jews in a democracy. Soviet discrimination against the Jews continued to be a priority item on the agenda for action map- ped by world Jewry. Expert wit- nesses continued to give testimony against the unwavering Moscow policy, which, indeed, might waver toward leniency in one area only to fall back into its old pattern— ,-the "economic crimes" charge, for example. Communists in the Western world, including America, were finding it most embarrassing. What could be done to move an obstinate Moscow? Communal organizations, such as Detroit's Jewish Community Council formed action committees in the hope that public opinion could help their oppressed brothers. It was a cause that beckoned to youth. Thousands in New York turned out for a protest rally. For all the talk of their leaving the Jewish fold, they recognized an injustice that their parents may have been slower to meet. 5726 was a year when everyone talked of peace, although it look- ed more remote than ever. Presi- dent Johnson reiterated the ad- ministration's commitment to the 9 Vietnam war; American Jewry was badly split over how far that policy should go. But while peace seemed far, far away, 36 Americans, including De- trailers Emma Schaver and Abra- ham Borman, dedicated a peace center named for former President Harry S. Truman at the Hebrew University, Jerusalem. -- _Filled 3726 The City of Peace also saw, at last, the dedication of its parliament building. Representa- tives of many nations viewed this milestone in the life of the 18-year-old State of Israel. Only David Ben-Gurion stayed away. He and President Levi Eshkol were still at war. Internally, Israel was beset with problems. For Eshkol's new coali- tion government, B-G and his oppo- sition "Rafi" Party were the least of them. After a seven-year boom, the economy was feeling the worst pinches of inflation and jobless- ness. Immigration had slackened; so had the demand for housing and consumer goods. Where it would stop, no one could tell. But a tight- ening up was coming. trouble-beset Israel. His name was Able Nathan. He flew a rickety plane to Egypt to meet with President Nasser for a little peace talk. The Egyptians laughed. But so did the rest of the world. Judge Tannenwald to Address Detroit AJCommittee Group THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, September 16, 1966 9 - AS A REMEMBRANCE Rabbi Abahu said "Why do we blow with a ram's horn? So that I might be reminded of the sacrifice of Isaac, the son of Abraham, and I will consider it as though you yourself were prepared for an act of self-sacrifice on my behalf?' God expects personal submission, not a gift of material resources. —Talmud, Rosh Hashanah, 16a How to say Happy New Year in Hebrew: Judge Theodore Tannenwald, Jr., the federal judge in the tax court of the United States in Wash- ington, D.C., will address the De- troit Chapter of the American Jew- ish Committee, 8 p.m. Wednes- day, at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Norman Levey, 2727 W. Seven Mile. Judge Tannen- wald, who is a member of the executive board of the American Jewish Commit- • tee and chairman Judge Tannewald of the committee on Israel, will speak on "Reflections on Israel- 1966." Judge Tannenwald recently re- turned from a trip to Israel with other AJC leaders during which extended discussions were held with governmental, religious and educational leaders. There will be a panel of reactors composed of two Israeli students and one American student who will respond to Judge Tannenwald's discussion. Norman Katz, co-chairman of the communal affairs committee of the Detroit AJC Chapter, will mod- erate. Israel's good - neighbor policy didn't do much better in 5726. Jor- dan's El Fatah terrorists started the job; Syrian planes finished it. New Year Bartonette Miniature Chocolates, 1 lb. $2.29. In each case, Israel refused to stand by; reprisal raids were Come see all the other Barton's New Year chocolates , initiated. and pastries. The United Nations stepped in. But how long UN intervention could keep the peace was only a matter for conjecture. Out of the Middle East came a hopeful note, however. Jordan's King Hussein took a swipe at the ALSO IMPORTED CRYSTAL & OTHER FINE GIFTS _ "Palestine Liberation Army," whose avowed purpose is the des- truction of Israel. He also asked 1 Block N. for an end to the Arab refugee of Curtis camps that have been a festering sore for almost two decades. Other rulers were not so at 10 friendly. Saudi Arabia's King Mile Road Faisal came to the United States for a visit, insulted the Jews (he insisted he wasn't against Jews, Next Door to Dexter Davison Market only "Zionists") and got a re- turn kick from New York's Mayor Lindsay and Gov. Rocke- feller, who refused to see him. An angry man opens his mouth Israel's President Zalman Shazar and shuts up his eyes. — Cato. did much better in the statesman- ship line. He made friends where- ever he went throughout South BUSINESS AS USUAL - FIRE CONFINED TO UPPER STORE ROOM America, and diplomatic Washing- ton was charmed. President Johnson and President Shazar had much to talk about. Israel has been on Congress' agenda many times this year. The injustice of selling arms to Jordan, without supplying Israel with suf- LARGEST SELECTION OF ficient deterrent power, enraged many a Congressman until an arms deal favorable to Israel was finally concluded. Egypt's continuing intransigence also inspired impassioned speeches IN by Congressmen. They took action, COMPLETE WITH too; amendments to the foreign aid WOOL - SILK - RAYON bill would halt all assistance to countries that pledge war on America's friends. The United Arab Republic was at the head From Please Shop Early While of the list. Selection Is Complete! Many important documents were signed this year. Notable among them was the vote by the Vatican Ecumenical Council for the "Jew- ish document", deploring anti- Semitism as a Christian teaching. The wording of the document spur- red much heated discussion by (High Holiday Prayer Books) Christian and Jew, but only time — and teaching — would tell if justice was done. Another important document was adopted by the UN General Assembly: the International Con- vention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Intolerance. And, at the end of a six-year struggle with the Soviet Union, the UN Human Rights Commis- sion adopted a draft convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Religious Intolerance, actual- ly including the word anti-Semit- ism. ELECTRIC ISRAELI GREEN PATINA (Not Plastic) ELECTRIC * * * YAHRZEIT (Memorial) STAND AND LAMP Reg. $3.00 The deaths of three of America's best loved entertainers, Sophie Tucker, Ed Wynn and Billy Rose, made 5726 less than a happy year. There was another death, not mourned the same way, perhaps, but mourned nevertheless. It was the destruction by fire and fire- hose of 200,600 rare volumes in the library of the Jewish Thelogical IN THE DEXTER-DAVISON SHOPPING PLAZA Seminary. A sad year, indeed, but in many OPEN SATURDAY NIGHT AND ALL DAY SUNDAY ways full of hope. 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