v. 2 Abe Kasle's Many Communal Services Recalled as Jewry Pays Final Tribute to Noted Leader; Hind Day School Project Honors His Memory Abe Kasle's numerous communal , ship in the movement to give pri- interests, his many gifts to major ority to Jewish educational needs, Jewish and civic causes, his leader- j are being recalled as final tributes are being paid to his memory. Mr. Kasle died last Friday night after a prolonged illness. Funeral services were held at Kaufman Chapel Sunday afternoon. Rabbi Jacob Segal, who has just returned from his sabbatical in Israel, con- ducted the services. Associate Can- tor Larry Vieder of Adas Shalom chanted psalms and the El Molei Rahamim. Surviving the distinguished leader are his wife, the former Pearl Sil- verstein, to whom he was married 54 years; a daughter, Mrs. Ben (Esther) Jones; sons, Leonard, Ben and Robert; 10 grandchildren, four great-grandchildren; three broth- ers, Jacob, Joseph and Louis; and! two sisters, Mrs. Joseph (Dorothy) Pollens and Mrs. Herman (Blanche) Abrams. Honoring Mr. Kasle's major in- terest in recent years, the Hillel Day School, the family has asked WSU Librarian Dr. G. Flint Purdy was shown here, March 27, 1956, accepting a Judaica gift from Abe Kasle. that all memorial contributions be made to this school and to its building fund. It was due to Mr. Kasle's efforts that the move- ment was inaugurated for the Ilillel Day School Building which is scheduled to be ready for use Fear for Remainino- Jews in Poland Voiced by Refugee A gencies in Geneva (Direct JTA Teletype Wire to The Jewish News) WASHINGTON — Refugee agen- cies in Geneva are expressing con- cern over the fate of the estimated 15,000 to 20,000 Jews in Poland who were told by the Gomulka Com- munist regime more than a year ago they must emigrate and then were told subsequently they can- not leave after Sept. 1. the Wash- ington Post reported Tuesday from Geneva. The report noted that the Nether- lands diplomatic mission in War- saw, handling Israeli interests on a caretaker basis, had been em- powered to grant-visas to Israel to departing Polish Jews. The mis- sion reportedly issued about 10,000 such visas, but only about 5,000 Polish Jews have left for Israel, i raising the question about what will happen to the other 5,000 since most of them "cannot possibly complete the bureaucratic exit process' by Sept. 1, the Post re- casionally confiscation, the Post said. When the process was completed —a procedure of three to four months—he was given a travel document with orders to leave within one month. He then boarded a train leaving Warsaw, which became known as "The Chopin Express" to arrive the next day in Vienna where Jew- ish relief agency officials helped him on his way to Israel or else- where. The Post said that between 30 per cent and 60 per cent went to Israel, and the rest joined rela- tives in Western Europe or in North and South America. Since the recent Gomulka an- nouncement banning further de- partures as of Sept. 1, there has been no clarification from the Gomulka regime and no informa- tion on what is happening to the ported. The Post said it was feared that many of the other 10,000 to 20,000 who have not applied for emigration will be stateless in Po- The Post said no one in Geneva knew why the cutoff had been ordered, whether no more travel permits will be issued after that date or whether all departures will end, even for the Jews who They will be in the critical posi- tion of being forbidden to leave, while their presence is declared objectionable. The remnant of the prewar conditions of life for the trap- ped Polish Jews "must be as dangerous as they are cruel." land, stripped of their citizenship. have gone through the separa- tions process. Refugee officials were quoted as believing that In another development, the Gomulka regime announced Mon- day a pardon that could benefit munist government, many of student demonstrators who were them becoming ardent Commu- convicted last year, some of whom nists and rising to high positions were identified at the time as Jews. The pardon was announced in the Wladyslaw Gomulka gov- at the start of the regime's 25th ernment. After the Six-Day War, anniversary celebration. It pro- when Poland severed relations vides for full remission of prison with Israel, Gomulka declared sentences of up to two years and ip a speech that "Zionists"—a up to half of the sentences of up euphemism for Polish Jews who had adhered to their Jewish ties to 15 years. Nine Warsaw Univer- sity students and three teachers —were no longer wanted in Po- land, and he said they could were given terms of 18 months to 31/2 years for participation in the leave, if they went to Israel. Jews who had risen in the Com- March 1968 demonstrations. munist hierarchy were imme- diately ousted from office, as were Date Palms at Dead Sea economists, university professors EIN GEDI—An avenue of date and other professionals. After a palms has been planted by the Polish Jew obtained the Dutch Jewish National Fund at the Neve visas, he had to negotiate depar- Zohar camping site on the Dead ture payment with Polish officials, Sea shore. The 40 palms are irri- "voluntarily" renouncing his Polish gated by the "drip" system, citizenship and submitting posses- through underground plastic pipes sions he hoped to take with him which feed water to the trees' to government inspection - and oc- r oots. 3.000,000 Polish Jews remaining after the Nazi holocaust coped as best they could with the Com- 6—Friday, holy 25, 1969 THE DETROIT IEWISH NEWS Yirmiyahu Haggai, Editor, Unionist, Dead in Israel; Son of Late Teacher Yirmiyahu Haggai, who left De- troit in 1936 as a young pioneer and rose to become a prominent Israeli labor unionist. kibutz founder and editor, died last Saturday at age 56. Mr. Haggai, son of Rebecca Hag- gai of Coyle Ave. and the late Jos- eph Haggai, well- known Hebrew educator, was a member of Ein Haggai Hashofet and in recent years 'maintained a home there and in Tel Aviv. At the time of his death, he was serving with the international affairs depart- ment of Histadrut. He was taken ill while conducting a seminar tour of trade union leaders. Besides his mother, Mr. Haggai - is survived by a sister Tikva, who for the opening of the September also lives here. His wife "Syd" school term. (the former Sarah Zelner of New Special projects at Hillel Day York) and three sons, Aviram, School and an exerted effort to Hosea and Gad, and three grand- assure completion of the school children reside in Israel. Both Avi- building are projected as major ram, who is a reservist on active memorials to the deceased leader. duty, and Hosea are serving with While his interests were many the paratroopers in the Israel and varied. it was to Jewish educa- Army. The youngest, Gad, is a tion that Mr. Kasle gave his chief flutist with the Israel Army orches- concern and as president of the tra. United Hebrew Schools for 15 years Mr. Haggai. a native Detroiter, he raised the standards of local ' visited in 1963 for the unveiling educational efforts and secured pri- of a monument to his late father. ority treatment for educational en- It was the first visit since he emi- deavors by the Allied Jewish grated as a young leader of Has- Campaign and the Jewish Welfare homer Hatzair. Federation. A graduate of the United Hebrew Born in Russia, March 18. 1895. Schools, he was a master of the Mr. Kasle came to this country in Hebrew language, and he put his 1909, settled in Monore, Mich., then knowledge to use in Israel. For went to Toledo and from 1923 had many years. be was editor of the resided in Detroit. Mapam Party newspaper Al Ha- He had a phenomenal rise in in- mishmar, and currently he was dustry. He was the founder, in 1935, editing the monthly Histadrut jour- of the Kasle Steel and Aluminum nal "Labor in Israel," for English- Corporation, and its president since speaking countries. then, and he climbed the ladder of A number of his essays on Israel success as a skillful organizer of a appeared in The Jewish News; he large business venture. He began was editor of a 12-volume work of as a "scrap slugger" who worked history, which he translated into for $1 a day, then became a broker English; and shortly before his of scrap iron to steel mills, until he death, he translated from the He- established his own steel and alum- brew into English "Essays on Yid- inum service in a modest 12,000 dish Poetry and Prose Writers square foot building which had of the 20th Century" by Israel He left Detroit as a senior at Wayne State University, worked on kibutzim in Palestine—notably Ein Hashofet, of which he was a foun- der—and in 1942 joined the Pales- tine Brigade, fighting under the British forces in Egypt. In an article appearing in The Jewish News, Sept. 4, 1942, were portions of a letter from Mr. Haggai to his parents, informing them of his enlistment in the "Palestine Buffs:" "'My conscience gave me no rest,' Yirmiyahu wrote . . . He ex- plained at length that when the United States became involved in the war he saw constantly flashing before his mind's eye groups of Detroiters, friends and acquaint- ances, in the uniforms of Uncle Sam, ready for battle against the Axis, and he knew that he would have to leave his wife and child for active service." (See Commentary, Page 2) Teller Quits Histadrut for Post in Bnai Brith Dr. Judd. L. Teller, promin- ent writer and lecturer on Jewish themes, has been named to Bnai Brith's International Council staff. Dr. Teller resigned as executive vice-chairman of the American Histadrut Cultural Exchange Insti- since grown into one of the largest Biletzky. Uncompleted at the time 1 tote, a program he initiated in distribution centers in the midwest. of his death was a work on kibutz 1964, to become coordinator of Kasle Steel Corp. now has process- life. Bnai Brith international programs. ing plants and warehouses in De- As a guiding light of Hashomer He is the author of a number of troit, Chicago and Cleveland. Hatzair in this country, Mr. Haggai critically acclaimed volumes on Mr. Kasle rose to a national formed a strong Zionist youth group contemporary Jewish affairs, and chairmanship of the United Jew- here and helped direct national ac- formerly held executive posts with ish Appeal. He was chairman of tivities from New York. He also the Jewish Agency for Israel and Detroit's Jewish Campaign in served as an editor of the move- Conference on Jewish Material 1951 and 1952 and in 1957 and 1958 ment's magazine. 'Claims Against Germany. he chaired the Israel Bond Com- mittee here. During his presidency of the I United Hebrew Schools, he estab- lished the Midrasha — College of Jewish Studies. Among his most constructive gifts in the past decade was a special fund to encourage Hebrew and Jewish history studies by Univer- sity of Michigan students. He helped finance the Midrasha section at the U. of M. and its progress in the past year was a special source of pride to him. He established the Kasle Judaica Section at Wayne State University Library and his civic interests in- cluded participation in the work of the Detroit Round Table, member- ship on the advisory committee of Wayne State University Press, as- sistance to United Negro College Fund and projects of the University of Detroit.' He was a dedicated Zionist, and the Jewish National Fund honored him four years ago with the planting of the Abe and Pearl Kasle Forest in Israel. He was active in the Zionist Or- ganization, was devoted to the American Jewish Congress as a re- sult of his friendship with the late Dr. Stephen S. Wise and was deep- ly interested in congregational affairs, being an active member of Cong. Adas Shalom and the syna- gogue's board of directors. abiL XaA.62, In His Life We Were Blessed. In His Death We, of The Hillel Day School, Stand Bereaved. May the Blessing of His Memory Serve to Guide and Strengthen Us. Melvin Weisz, President .n