THE ENLIGHTENED BRIGADE THE JEWISH NEWS 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 Mlle Road, Detroit, Mich. 48235, VE 8-9364. Subscription $7 a year. Foreign $8. Second Class Postage Paid at Detroit, Michigan PHILIP SLOMOVITZ ' CARMI M. SLOMOVITZ Editor and Publisher Business Manager SIDNEY SHMARAK Advertising Manager CHARLOTTE DUBIN City Editor Sabbath Scriptural Selections This Sabbath, the 13th day of Shevat, 5729, the following scriptural selections will be read in our synagogues: Pentateuchal portion, Ex. 13:17.17:16. Prophetical portion, Judges 4:4-5:31. Candle lighting, Friday, Jan. 31, 5:26 p.m. VOL. LIV. No. 20 Page Four January 31, 1969 The Time for Genuine Generosity American Jewry is currently charged with the task of refuting the spread of vile rumors about Israel. A serious duty is inherent in the need to defend Israel's position on the diplomatic arenas. The admonition always to suspect unanimity is emerging as a grave reality at this time, with the nations of the world in so distressing a pact to ignore Israel's basic rights that it becomes neces- sary for the kinsmen of the afflicted to unite in defense of the people whose very existence is at stake. While fulfilling obligations that call for action on the diplomatic front, there is the pressing need to honor the debt we owe to those who have survived the Holocaust, the responsibility we have to care for the de- classed and stateless for whom Israel is the only haven. In our community the duty is to the major fund-raising instrument—to the Allied Jewish Campaign—and for the third time additionally to the Israel Emergency Fund. The initial meeting, by the section in the drive called the Pacesetters, always serves as a signal to the community at large to mobilize for action in the great yearly effort to secure the means for Israel's protection as a haven for the oppressed. That meet- ing now is a matter of history—it was held, it reached the highest goal on record. and now the entire community must respond in equal measure, with larger gifts than ever. Inspired by the visit here of Israel's am- bassador to the United States. General Itzhak Rabin. the Pacesetters have set new stand- ards fc_ giving. The generosity of the past was surpassed in the response of the 100 men who gave a vast sum towards the great philanthropic effort. These men knew. when they enlarged upon their previous gen- erosity, that Israel alone must carry the burden of defense. But they also were aware that the means for settling many tens of thousands more of new settlers, the provi- sion for health and education for the im- migrants who have flocked to Israel as escapees from persecutions, can not be borne by the Israelis alone. We must share in these duties to the hordes who seek haven from indignities. The facts involved in the threats to the very life of Israel and to the security of its citizens are well known. There are renewed machinations to undermine the life of a peo- ple struggling for life against great odds. Occasionally a kind word is heard from an understanding Christian. Often a realistic Muslim speaks out in protest against the in- humanities that endanger the peace of the Middle East. But the total burden is ours. the organized community's. of each of the citizens among us. The Allied Jewish Campaign must now 1 .4,, • ' 01 ;1 . crEE- .1:;. V ,?_._5, v , , 4 , • ■ •• 'V. , ■ .,.. • _..0.00 .' .<27. • A, 1, 04,6„...........:411C0 .,..10.74 NY ' XS 1 • l 1 .... lv •f r -1::;" .. ■ ,/ ri Holmes and Wise Friendship: Impressive Tribute by Voss "Rabbi and Minister — The Friendship of Stephen S. Wise and John Haynes Holmes," by Dr. Carl Hermann Voss, first published in 1964 as a hard cover book, drew nationwide attention for its revealing sociological and political, as well as religious approaches. Now, as a paperback, it remains valuable now for an understanding of the events of the first half of this century as the superb study merited when it first be viewed as having begun, although the attracted nationwide attention. formal and official commencement is not due for some weeks. Therefore, the task of mobilizing the volunteer army of workers is at hand. and the time has arrived for each of us to determine the way towards genuine generosity. Assuring Activis m for the Youth In a protesting age, we are challenged to take into account the attitude of youth, the demands for action by the young people, and are faced with the responsibility to understand what is happening in our midst, the reasons for outcries for alleviation of want and abandonment of racial prejudices. Because Jews have so much to protest against even in normal times—because of the Sin'at olam l'am olam—the eternal hatred for the eternal people—we can understand the attitude of our young people when they cry out against want, in protest against poverty, in condemnation of injustice imposed upon people because of the color of their skin or their beliefs. Such are our traditions, so basic are the teachings of our sages, that the protesting moods are understandable. They are obli- gatory upon all peoples of all faiths. It is when people protest against every- thing except the injustices done to their own kinsmen that the aim in protest becomes useless, that a time arrives to question whether those who revolt understand the causes they uphold. Youth needs a purpose. Youth has a pur- pose. The struggle for civil rights must go on. The young should have their say in the manner in which universities are function- ing. who directs their affairs, what courses are taught. But youth, in the course of its actions, can not and must not destroy: it must build; it must not vandalize: it should set an ex- ample for human decency; it should avoid calling names: let youth remember that he who strikes the first blow or resorts to pro- fanity is the one usually to lose the battle. But this is generalizing and pontificat- ing. What is needed is understanding of the needs and an adherence to it. And to ap- preciate the idealism of youth we must, at the same time: determine to work with youth to achieve its goals. Therefore let it be said that honorable protest is not only justified but desirable, and honorable resort to means to attaki great goals in life calls for clarity and knowledge til ■ ••") ■ 110V4*,,, of the values of life and the aims for a higher life. To understand others and to fight for their rights, youth—and now we speak of Jewish youth—know themselves and their own people. If youth battles for the right of people to know the Negro, and to assure courses that teach the Negro's contributions to this nation, they also should know their own—their Jewish—background. If one does not know himself, how can he pos- sibly understand others? Jewish youth that strives for civil rights must know that Jewish tradition makes is obligatory for Jews to uphold the basic ethical principles that demand justice for all regardless of race or creed, protection of the impoverished and the raising of their standards of living, elimi- nation of want and bigotry. There can be a program for activism by our youth—if it is to be based on established principles in Jewish life. Our young people can and should fight for equality, and while doing it they should not forget the inequal- ity of their own kinsmen in lands of op- pression—the Moslem countries, Poland. Russia . . . . Our young people should fight for courses about the Afro-Asians and the blacks in our midst—and at the same time they should turn to the acquisition of knowledge about Jews and Judaism. They should protest against suppression —and in the course of it they should think of the outrageous anti-Semitic acts of Charles de Gaulle. They should take into account the threat of Nasser and his cohorts to turn I Israel into another Auschwitz. Yes, there are programs for activism by youth—and they must be on the basis of knowing that if they are not for themselves no one else will be, and while battling for Jewish rights they dare not think that they can be for themselves alone. In the knowl- edge that they must fight for the rights of all people, without excluding their own, they will be contributing towards a better life •_... • 2 J • , Published by Association Press (291 Broadway, NY 7), Dr. Voss' epic story is not only a great tribute to two great liber- tarians: it is in the main valuable for its research into events that involved the ,AV emergence of liberal movements, battles against persecutions, struggles for the liberation of the Jewish masses abroad and for relief of the impoverished in this country. A generation that is currently involved in civil rights efforts, in the advance. ment of the nation's cultural needs, in the battle against want, has much to learn from the lessons left by Wise and Dr. Voss Holmes, and Dr. Voss has tackled the subjects of his work with understanding and dedication. He emerges the admirer of both heroes of his work, and with justification. For Zionists, the Voss volume is of special significance because of its delving into early history of the movement for Jewish national redemption and because it introduces some of the early problems relating to the Arab question, the visit to the Holy Land of Rev. Holmes, his introduction to the various issues and those relating to Jewish aspirations when he met with men like Judah L. Magnes and other noted leaders. For both Wise and Holmes the friendship was a partnership in the battles against vice, poverty, political chicanery. As far back as 1929, Holmes foresaw triumph for the Zionist idea "as a matter of time." He was horrified by British rule which led to disquiet in those years. Voss takes occasion to comment on Holmes' book "Palestine: Today and Tomorrow—A Gentile's Survey of Zionism." He emphasizes that the pro-Zionism of the Christian clergyman was in no sense - marked by anti-Arab polemics." He calls Holmes a cultural Zionist. It is valuable in the Voss account of the two men to turn the pages of history back to the Roosevelt era. There were disillusionments but also triumphs in the lives of the two men. Dr. Wise had his disappointments as a Zionist leader towards the end of his life. But he had his glorious hour, having lived to be witness to the emergence of Israel. Theirs was a friendship to the end of tile/' days. About Holmes, Voss declares that he was "the last Puritan," that he was at heart "the New Englander: rigorous in his thinking and ethical code, convinced that God moves in both nature and history and that men are made for destinies higher than those upon this ear& "Even in the last weeks of his life , "- Voss writes, "Stephen 'use was a Lion of Judah. Through the battle - worn body coursed 8 new strength. He reared the scarred head, set anew the grim jaw, and attacked again on platform and in print." Mrs. Louise Waterman Wise, the brilliant wife of the eminent preacher and Zionist leader, his daughter, Justine Polier, SOOs James Waterman Wise, pass in review in accounts of their nraoF f n n np ti v e a fa eircle that continues tolive in the inenlaZI of appreciative generation. m ily Voss' tributes to the two great men, Holmes and Wise, serve Alle as a history of their time. It is an eminently worthy volume as biog- raphy, history and appreciation of the courage of men who gave much of themselves ves to country and humanity.