THE JEWISH NEWS U.N.SESSION —SOME O NEW U.11 its HEADACHES,,, Incorporating The Detroit Jewish Chronicle commencing with issue of July 20, 1951 Member American Association of English—Jewish Newspapers, Michigan Press Association, National Editorial Association. Published every Friday by The Jewish News Publishing Co., 17100 West Seven Mile Road, Detroit, Mich. 48235. VE 8-9364. Subscription $6 a year. Foreign $7. Class Postage Paid at Detroit, Michigan Second PHILIP SLOMOVITZ Editor and Publisher CARMI M. SLOMOVITZ Business Manager SIDNEY SHMARAK CHARLOTTE HYAMS Advertising Manager City Editor Yom Kippur Scriptural Selections Pentateuchat portions: Morning, Levit, 16:1-34, Num. 29:7-11; afternoon, Levit. 18:1-30. 1:1-4:11, Micah Prophetical portions: Mornings, Isaiah, 57:14-58:14; afternoon, Jonah 7:18-20. Sukkot Scriptural Selections 29:12-16. Pentateuchal portions: Thursday and Friday, Levit. 22:26-23:44, Num. Prophetical portions, Thursday, Zechariah 14:1-22; Friday, I Kings 8:2-21. 28, 7:01 p.m.; Sept. 29, 8:03 p.m. Licht Benshen: Sept. 23, 7:09 p.m.; Sept. Page 4 Vol. L. No. 5 Sept. 23, 1966 Yom Kippur: Day of Repentance for Man With mankind it is even more serious Yom Kippur, as the Day of Atonement, today. We are organized into an international has the universal connotation for mankind. movement for peace, yet the cause of uniting While world Jewry gathers in houses of wor- the nations of the world is hitting snags, and ship to ask forgiveness for the misdeeds of enforcement of amity is becoming more the year that has gone by, the entire world rather than less, difficult. Mankind remains the sinner. At a time needs to atone and to pray—to be pardoned for the sins that have turned the universe when instruments for peace are more readily available, we are making greater use of into an armed camp. Human beings err frequently, and no weapons of destruction. Therefore Yom Kip- one is immune from some sort of misguid- pur has become even more significantly a day ance. All of us have something to atone for— of atonement for the entire world. May there much or little—whatever the case may be. be not only forgiveness for sins, but more Even the saintliest of people have turned to especially the vitally needed resolutions that the Almighty on Yom Kippur to ask to be the inhumanity of man to man should not Information on Kashrut pardoned for sins of omission or commission. again be so evident among thinking men. Forty Years of Communal Achievements Four decades of community services, account of which will be made at the 40th anniversary meeting of the Jewish Welfare Federation, next Tuesday, point to the im- pressive progress in our community. Not only money-wire—in the course of the 40 years that have passed, Detroit Jewry has risen from campaigns during which less than $200,000 was raised annually to fund- raising drives that have approached the $6,- 000,000 mark—but in the act of solidifying ranks, in the effort to advance cultural aims, in fields of social, vocational and recreational activities, we have emerged among the leaders in American Jewish communities. Except for one other community in the land—barring New York City, which, because of its large Jewish population, is an area not to be likened to Detroit and Cleveland—De- roit Jews are top fund raisers. But if it were that alone we might be subjected to challenge if we could not produce well functioning ag- encies in our own midst. It is not only by our generosity to Israel and to other causes — overseas, on the national American scene and locally—that we have played a role of being Conscious Jews who are well able to link the best of the American and Jewish principles and traditions; it is because, primarily, we have raised the standards of Jewish educa- tion, we have welcomed refugees, we have provided good camping facilities, we are car- ing for the aged to the best of our ability. - anniversary, one name will stand out — a name that is linked with all of the important pioneering efforts in Detroit Jewry: that of Fred Magnus Buzel. He had served as one of the early chairmen of our Allied Jewish Cam- paigns, but he was never a president of the Federation, although he had served it as chairman of its executive committee. The presidency was unnecessary and unimportant in his instance. He was the community's guide, the inspirer to great deeds, the man who understood the challenges whenever there were crises—and there were plenty of them. He was a Zionist at a time when many of his contemporaries did not know how to value the messianic movement in Jewry, and at the time of his death he was honorary president of the Zionist Organization of De- troit. He was esteemed by non-Jews as much as by Jews, and when we take into account the historic events that marked that progress of our Federation we must consider the But- zel name as inseparable from its history. The great progress in solidifying agencies, in advancing the Hebrew School system, in making our fund-raising so successful is due in large measure to the work of Isidore Sobe- loff who served this community as the Fed- eration's executive director for 26 years. Mr. Sobeloff trained a good staff to suc- ceed him. He was a strong man. He rose to many occasions to assure the successes that were charted here, and his name, too, is im- portant in Federation history. 'Jewish Dietary Laws': Valuable Guide to Meaning, Observance When the Jewish Welfare Federation was W formed here in 1926, it was the successor On the occasion of the 40th anniversary organization to the United Jewish Charities. celebration of the Federation there is cause Until that year, it was charity that motivated organized community effort. From that year for great satisfaction in the selection of the on, the newly-formed Federation included 1966 Fred M. Butzel Award recipient. By choosing Morris Garvett for this services for the United Hebrew Schools as the honor, the Federation's present officers community's educational arm, the Jewish have displayed proper understanding of gen- Centers as the recreational agencies, the tra- the free loan uine leadership. Mr. Garvett has held many ditional gemilut hassodim tasks for needy businessmen and others— important posts, including the presidencies of both Temple Beth El and Temple Israel, and the welfare activities. Then followed the merging of other move- having been the founding president of the latter. It is in the field of Jewish education ments, the establishment of the Community Council for civic-protective work and of Sinai that he stands out as one of the architects of our local system. He had begun his cultural Hospital for health purposes. There are men and women in our midst efforts in behalf of Temple Beth El, as chair- today who share in the glory of having aided man of the temple's education committee. in the establishment of the Federation. They Then, as chairman of the Federation educa- will be duly honored at the 40th anniversary tion division, he supervised many of the celebration of the Jewish Welfare Federa- programs that were introduced in our com- tion. In the process, the community will re- munity through the functioning educational call the names of distinguished pioneerS who system, and he has been a major factor in were among the first to serve as Federation giving priority in communal programing to presidents. Henry Wineman, Milford Stern, Jewish education. A man of culture, a lover of books, a Clarence H. Enggass, Julian H. Krolik, Abra- ham Srere and William Friedman were distinguished lawyer, an able leader of men, staunch in their efforts. They knew and un- Morris Garvett has well earned the honor to derstood the programs they were sponsoring be accorded him next Tuesday. The Detroit and encouraging. Their memories will be Jewish community is honored by the choice deservedly honored at Tuesday's celebration. now made of adding the Garvett name to the In the course of observing the Federation list of Butzel Awardees. — It isn't enough for those who adhere to the dietary laws to talk about them: it is necessary to know the purposes of the laws, the reasons for them, their meaning in Jewish traditions. Even those who sneer at Kashrut should at least know what the term means and what the word "kosher" stands for. "The Jewish Dietary Laws," a paperback issued by Burning Bush Press (280 E. 70th, NY 21), therefore serves a very valuable purpose. It has two parts. The first, "Their (Dietary Laws) Meaning For Our Time" is by Rabbi Samuel H. Dresner; the second, "A Guide to Observance," was written by Rabbi Seymour Siegel. To encourage the use of these explanatory essays, the foreword and introduction to this paperback were written by Marvin S. Wiener, director of the National Academy for Adult Jewish Studies of the United Synagogue of America, and Arthur S.. Bruckman, chairman of the United Synagogue commit- tee on adult education. Deploring the lack of interest in Jewish observances, Rabbi Dresner expresses confidence that if a call for kashrut observance were sounded in our congregations the response may be more positive than we think, that "there is a spark in every Jewish heart which needs only to be kindled with insight and meaning." Kashrut as related to holiness is explained by quoting biblical rules and passages such as: "Ye shall not eat anything that dieth of itself . . . ; for thou art a holy people unto the Lord thy God. Thou shalt not seethe a kid in its mother's milk." (Deut. 14:21). Rabbi Dresner describes the traditional Jewish way of hallowing -the act of eating by fulfilling the mitzvot of kashrut, by rejecting pagan glorifications which turn sumptuous feasts into vulgar and disgusting acts. He tells about the place for fasting in Jewish life and lore and the teaching of reverence for life. He points out: "Kashrut teaches, first of all, that the eating of meat is itself a sort of compromise. To many it will come as a surprise that Adam, the first man, was not permitted to eat meat." He quotes Gen. 1:27-29 to prove his point and shows how Adam, "the perfect man, as an inhabitant of the Garden of Eden," was limited in his diet to fruit and vegetables. Why, then, was Noah permitted to eat flesh? The answer given is "sin" and the author shows that the eating of meat "con- stantly posed a religious problem to Judaism, even when it has accepted the necessity of it." Rabbi Dresner conceded that man will eat meat, as Adam had craved for it, but he points to a return to "the original state" in the Garden of Eden, as prophesied by Isaiah (11:6, 7, 9) in the prediction that "the wolf shall dwell with the lamb," these passages including the assertion, foreseeing the future, "And the lion shall eat straw like the ox . . . " Explaining kashrut, Rabbi Dresner describes "the reverence for life" on Jewish teachings, that the observance of kashrut has helped in it, that kashrut also teaches how we eat. He describes kashrut in Jewish history, declares that its goal is holiness, declares that "kashrut makes two demands upon the modern Jew: under- standing of the mind and commitment of the will," both being indispensable. He concludes his essay by stating: "According to Aristotle's pupil Olearchus, his master once had a discourse with a Jew and came away deeply impressed with two things about this people: their admirable philosophy and their strict diet. Philosophy and diet, thought and practice, inner attitude and outward observance, agadah and halakha- this combination has characterized Judaism since earliest times. It is the very essence of the Jewish religion." Rabbi Siegel's "Guide to Observance" directs the reader how to conduct a kosher home and explains the kashering of meat, broiling, the laws of "milk and meat," to be on guard against blood spots in eggs, Passover observance, use of dishes and utensils and traditions regarding eating. He also admonishes against eating non-kosher food outside the home.