Boris Smolar's 'Between You .. and Me' Isaac Deutscher's 'Ironies of History': Essays Relevant to study Current World Conditions Isaac Deutscher is recognized as one of the world's most noted au- thorities on Communism„ on Sovi- et Russia and its leaders- . His bio- By BORIS SMOLAR ! graphical works on Stalin and (Copyright, 1966, JTA, Inc.) Trotsky are the most authoritative question whether Jews should live available on the two Soviet leaders. JEWS IN GERMANY: The floe in Germany—especially when neo-Nazism shows 'signs of grow- . His newest work is "Ironies of on Contemporary ept n History: . Essays ing—constitutes an issue on which opinions among Jews in the United t s shed b y s irnii s isa valuable States and in other countries are sharply divided . . . It is a delicate University . Some believe Jews should boycott Ger- collection of his most impressive and emotional question . many the way they boycotted Spain for centuries after the Spanish I article, especially those dealing . . Others feel it is a personal matter for each Jew to with political events related to Inquisition Eastern Europe. China and the reside in Germany now . . . An answer Soviet Union. decide whether he wants Because he has inserted in this to this sensitive question is now provided in a study of the present corn- life of the Jews in Germany and the activities of their organized co- , collection his views on President mutinies there . . . The study was conducted by a group of leaders Johnson's Vietnamese policies, this collection of essays assumes added of the United Jewish Appeal and .)oint Distribution Committee, inter .- icance. Deutscher, the Marx- significance. ested primarily in the problems of the Jews in Germany in the tradi- ist. is here, of course, as he has tional way the UJA and the JDC are interested in the problems of been for many years, also the anti. UJA leaders also studied Communist. Yet he has met with Jews in any other country abroad . . . The whether the spirit of democracy is strong enough in Germany today criticisms, and he states to in o the be e entitled preface: c e: to prevent a repetition of the Nazi years. and to what extent anti- judged bythevieew, views -I am n I have Semitisin still prevails in the country . . . Whether some Jews in other pressed, not by those that others countries like it or not. the fact is that there is existent a Jewish com- attribute to me." And in this pre- face he states he considered munity in Germany today. and that it stands on its own feet . . . iAt naienr. honor to be invited by the The fact is also that the number of Jews in Germany is growing; that wan Inter-University Com- they concentrate their efforts on developing Jewish communal life: mittee to be the only non•American that they seek to give their children a Jewish education; that they are to participate in the National a community not of "takers" but of "givers." taking care of their own Teach-In in Washington in May 1965. commu nal needs and contributing generously to Israeli causes . . • Deutscher is the severe critic of Stalinism, as he was of * * * Khruschev, yet he makes this A SATISFIED COMMUNITY: About ten years ago. there were ap- important declaration: "As a his. proximately 16.000 Jews in West Germany: today more than 27.000 torian I remain convinced that Jews are officially registered as members of the Jewish community in Stalinism would have never suc- ceeded as it did (in the cold various parts of the country . . . This does not include about 8,000 war) if the Soviet Union had Je%%, who are not members of the Jewish communities; also not the not been exposed to constant Jews living in East Berlin and East Germany under the Communist hostile and war-like pressures from outside. Those pressures regime . . . The fact that the number of Jews in West Germany has enabled Stalin to blackmail the increased by about 11.000 in the course of ten years—despite the fact Soviet people (and foreign com- that during that period 4.600 Jews died and only 650 Jewish Chil- munists too) into total obed- dren were horn—speaks for itself . . . It shows that more and more ience. Without the very real Jews are either returning to Germany or immigrating to Germany threat from Hitler, Without the . . . lArho are the Jews in Germany today? . . . The majority of them need to counter that threat with have . not even resided there before the Nazi regime; they are Jews a desperate arms race, the peo- from Poland. Hungary. Romania. Czechoslovakia, who made Germany ple of the Soviet Union would their home after the war. and are all well off economically . . . Added not have submitted to Stalinist to them are Jews, mostly elderly people, who returned to Germany to terroristic exactions as meekly live on their old-age pensions . . . Recently, Jews from Argentina and as they did submit in the 1930s other Latin American countries. where the economic situation is not and in the years of the war. stable. have begun to settle in Germany . . . They find in Germany They might have refused to ac- the possibility of establishing themselves in business with the limited cept his dictates after the war if capital they brought with them. and they prosper economically as a Russia had not had to rebuild result of the general prosperity in the country . . . In a city like Ham- her runis amid new and danger- burg. one can find today 250 Jews from Iran, doing, prosperous busi- ous pressures from the out- ness in Persian rugs, and intending to remain there as a part of the side." local Jewish community . . . There are today in West Germany numer- Could this he applied to the ous Jewish lawyers. about 300 physicians. .Jewish professors in the anti- protests against universities—all of them intending to live in Germany, because they current encounter no anti-Semitism and practice their professions in a normal Semitism in the USSR and is there way . . Gone are the days when American Jewry' had to help Jews another way, applying the above in Germany. through the .Joint Distribution Committee, in the early by Deutscher to the current condi- . Today. the organized Jewish community in West lions, in dealing with the bias post-war years . extant in the Soviet Union? It German ∎ has a reserve capital of $30.000.000 for communal needs . would be interesting to get Deut- The was obtained from the Bonn Government for Nazi-destroyed scher's views on this. Jewish communal property and is being'managed jointly by the boards In his speech on Vietnam. Deut- of of the largest Jewish communities in Germany . The interest scher had said that China and on the- sum. reaching 51.500.000 a year. is more than sufficient to perhaps even Soviet Russia might cope %% Ali the communal needs of Gin - ► nan Jewry . . . Not to speak be drawn into the conflict and he contributions which registered meipbers make to their communities of . . As to contributions for Israel causes, thc, Jews in Germany boast of the fact that last year they gave for Israel about 5500,000 in various Launch New Israel forms .. They emphasize Oho this is a Much larger sum than the Jewish High School Program community in France--the 1:ir- _;est in Europe today—is giving for Israeli causes . for U.S. Students A program for a year's study in Israel for second year American OUTLOOK FOR JEWS: There is no question that, should the high school students, - beginning present economic conditions prevail in Germany. no Jew residing there I with the 1967-68 academic year, will leave the country . . . On the contrary. the outlook is that some will be offered by the American- Jew s from Latin American and other countries. where the situation is Israel Secondary School Program. not stable. will he attracted to move to Germany . . . This is because it was announced by Rabbi Mor- neither the United States nor any other country is willing to admit decai Chertoff, director of the new- Jewish immigrants as liberally as Germany does and without any eco- ly organized group. which has of- nomi• restrictions . . . Spread over 70 larger and smaller towns through. fices at 515 Park, New York. West Germany. the great majority of all the 27.000 Jews in the Two leading Israeli secondary Country live in the larger cities . . . About 65 percent of them live in schools, Alonei Yitzchak in the Frankfurt. Munich. Dusseldorf. Hamburg. Cologne and West Berlin ... Shomron Valley about five miles In West Berlin alone there are today about 6,000 Jews, constituting from Caesaria, and Shafir's Yeshi- almost a quarter of all the Jews in West Germany Neither the Jews in the larger cities nor in the smaller towns complain about their economic ' vat. Or-Etzion, in the Lachish area. near Ashkelon. are participating in , Situation: their main complaint is about the lack of Jewish education the program. Both schools will offer They would like to have qualified Jewish teachers sent to them from full American second year high the United States . . . The real problem are the children in the small communities where there are not enough youngsters to open even a • school programs augmented by special courses in the Hebrew Jewish Sunday school . . In a community like Bonn. where there is a language and Israeli studies. The brand-new .-4ynagogue facing the German Foreign Office, there are hard- curriculum to be offered has been ly 204) Jews and less than a half-dozen Jewish children of school age : approved by an advisory commit- This is because the Jewish birth rate is very small in Germany today ... tee of noted American educators Howe ■ er. no .Iew in Germany tells you that he intends to leave the and will he supervised by the Israel Country . . . This was clearly summarized in Cologne by one of the Ministry of Education. Jewish community leaders there who expressed the general- sentiment The academic year. which will Of the Jews in Germany . . . we should leave Germany." he said. begin next September. will be pre- 'we would Only carry out exactly what Hitler wanted to make Germany ceded by a six-weeks course in Hebrew. beginning in July, at an THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Ulpan in Israel. 32—Friday, December 30, 1961 that the class munists and perhaps also for the reiterated his view - struggle is the norive forde of anti-socialists because of the au- history, "that only a socialist thoritativeness of a defender of a world — one socialist world — system which, in his view, has can cope with the problems of failed in Russia but can and should succeed worldwide. Therefore his modern society." Of major interest in his collected views are relevant to the study of essays are those dealing with the political and international condi- works and the attitudes of Boris tions in our time. Pasternak, Ilya Ehrenburg and E. Hebrew Corner Yevtushenko. There is a passing comment on Hunter Pasternak's Christianity and Deut- scher points out that the censors The heroes of the drama were a young zoologist from Austria, a poison- had nothing to fear from that be- ous snake from Jordan, and a number cause "the Soviet State Publishers of Jordanian and Israeli doctors who print in millions of copies the fought, watch in hand, for the life young Austrian. works of Tolstoy and Dostoyev of A the few months ago, he arrived in the s ky, h every aburtenaetnhteies deserts of Turkey. He looked for and of found special kinds of snakes which aorf more y a ad do not exist in Europe. But one of his "loves" gave him a "kiss" of death. ;Ilan Pasternak's." Snake only after great efforts did they The reviews of the Ehrenburg and succeed in saving his life. But one "kiss" did not suffice for and the Yevtushenko autobiog- our Austrian. After his recovery, he raphies are most impressive. look for poisonous e at to Jordan to Here, u Deutscher points out in rela- "' t,,h.jetb Judean tees err t . cam e in he met a . k tx7o lion to Ehrenburg's memoirs snakes and tried to "milk" one po ol u butthe snake s cceeded in bit- that after the Nazi-Soviet pact them, of 1939 the Jewish author was Again the young man was in danger time the danger was filled with "the humiliation and of jieraetl. e Jordan had no serum be he horror" occasioned by the ;very the against snake poison. s in- Israel e was act of "Soviet-German friend- 1 W hat a o a rubl d b ane ddoi r?balsr% Deutscher adds: "Here, dseed welle c sy a world famous spe :ir ali m si a evidently, his deep and wounded . in therctieT stood of snake bites. But Jewish emotion gets the better the patien t. tood between salvation and of him, and instead of the slick the to the s Undited Na- ti nTnlise pdecircstoon rsnZ and requested, reconteur, a suffering and fright- us open the •eel : Gate in order t L . sa "% ii ened human being speaks to us." hinuamag e men t lib feor every mo i[ e aus t i ckly l United e 1Ninartranns. s Deut s cher's "Ironies of History" cued quickly. but th a e t Yevtushenko's au obiography. hi, - !peopl were not accustomed b,norride a guards !" , itann y, border account of the Russian poet's ex n ight. And meanwhile time was passing and the poison was be- periences with anti-Semites. his ra tn. ni ne d g . to effect. Finally day scholar reiascheea rejection of anti-Semitism, is a the border. T ehe yl ear t ie g opened , concluding and most powerful part i , taomobulance was waiting for him and copter. witti- inicnkulL sto t ge h 4ellain of this impressive book. This chap- _. ka h/emw qm ter is a forceful evaluation of . i ipnatipeenttabwaTsi at the Beilinsgin eroll io s sy pitli al kvah. His life was saved. Russian attitudes, It is a tribut e t t o • : and restored to him as a gift. Yevtushenko concluding with: "Through him young Russia g is crying out against the shame and the suffering of her fathers and grandfathers." Deutscher's Ironies of History" , is a magnificent and impressive work. Because it contains the ideas of a Marxist it has a special message even for the anti-corn- Will he come back and hunt for snakes for the third time? (Published by the Brit Ivrit Olamit with the Assistance of the Memorial Foundation for Jewish Culture). Material in vowelized. easy Hebrew can be obtained by writing, direct to the Brit Ivrit Olamit. P.O. Box 7111, Jerusalem. Israel. rl zrri "1"e71 D'Vri4;11 1:4 Ink! tvrTis ,rintpyix?? 117* a*ixit rrr 137'?t3ltr? 1 :17n1! liwtV DV 7171 TM? "itPtPHT) 73:1 L217 nin4 - rpL2 Tarr trim lash? 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"13 172,7 L 7p , 'p 1;773 .10 -rAt 7rj i ,171113 1 171.7: y . traiT yl ngps, t3 511.17_1 Ln=FI 7.70t 12';1r13 .r0r):24 trn451 '7,17;nr1 Olkp19 roo rpo 17p731 . 171= z7 12'47.; oenznzi iL? ;inn inix x,mrn n11, 13= •: • 1VDi7'1271 b) 11;?73 Ronri 1 ► 71n1 ;r)7 rr44 i/7 lanai *33 . rn ,117n - nnnntri lior'rn" nuttp- r .rinnrt .r141Y24 :..?rintr 177/71 C31_793 trt0;r1t7pre? 31v; taxa n*- 017 nv1; mcp14) nivint? tftv Reading material in vowelized Easy Hebrew, and also material for advanced students may be obtained by writing to: Brit Ivrit P.O.B. 7111. Jerusalem, Israel. Published by Brit Ivrit Maxon