Hasidic Response to Crisis 'Dr. Schwarzschild to Take Up Dilemma' for Series Explored by Dr. Greenberg 'German "The German Dilemma" will be ence on Jewish Philosophy, the In an age of crisis, in which ous is to take its spirit and guts Judaism is put to test after test. out." Hasidism did something else. Hasidism could offer a model, said Dr. Greenberg: It justified an alternative if n o t the sole it did not blame them for a searching American Jews; answer, to their condition. Never mind that Jewry, a noted historian believes. the teamster davened wh:le he ' Dr. Irving Greenberg, associate greased the wheels of his dray. professor of history a t y es hi va The Besht would say, "You see University, discussed "A Hassidic how pious the Jews are? Even Response to Crisis" as the open- while they grease the wheels, ing lecture in the annual Mid- they pray." - rasha Institute, Tuesday evening But for all its strengths, Hasi- at the new United Hebrew Schools dism had weaknesses. said Dr. campus complex. Greenberg. Even as it was uniting, Interspersing his talk with isolated Jews, it was weakening, excerpts from Ilasidic wisdom, family life. Where was the woman Dr. Greenberg traced the Hasi- of the house while her husband dic movement from its founding was dancing in the spirit of ec- in another age -of crisis — the stasy? Why, in the house. Century, when East Euro- 17th. And the emphasis on ecstasy pean Jewry was _foundering on and emotionalism also weakened dispair, its numbers decimated Ilasidism because, at the same by pogroms, its spiritual hope time, it was resisting the forces dashed by false messiahs. of intellectualism. Bitterly opposed in its time (the Dr. Greenberg, who admits to Vilna Gaon put a herem, or ban, being the descendent of a "mit. on its practitioners to the point naeid." a foe of Hasidism. said that "intermarriage" and pray- that Ilasidism "came at a great ing with them was forbidden). moment, but it can't be duplicated Hasidism with its joy and emotion, today." It is a world that has offered an answer to the unmet changed, "and the Jewish people needs of common. uneducated needs more." he said. Jews who had blindly followed However, the Hasidim can ex- Shabatai Zvi, the false messiah. ist as an alternative group: per- out of their own longing and reli- haps the "yearning for commun- giosity. ity" can bridge the gap, he said. "They were wrong for the right "But we must do what Hasidism reason." commented Dr. Greens- did in our own way." berg, who added, "We are right The vital religion is the religion for the wrong reason." After that can renew itself. said Dr. Auschwitz, not to have sought Greenberg, who suggested that in after a messiah, he explained, this affluent society a renewal of "shows how hard-hearted we have Jewish life with an emotion and I excitement, with "a new spiritual become." The Baai Shem Toe (Keeper of and religious unity" is needed. the Good Name, known also as "The synagogue today doesn't of- the Besht), who founded the move- fer this." And just as Hasidism did in its ment, took the structure of Kab- ala, with its emphasis on the cos- own day. "we have to defend the Jews after the Holocaust. If they- mic significance of man's every act, and popularized it made it 're not living as Jews we must know why. We must stress that applicable to everyday life. He stressed the striving for in- having a child is an act of pro- found faith. We must have a dividual perfection and God's lib- erating force, at the same time messianic dream — a new under- ridding the philosophy of messi- standing and a new prayer after Auschwitz." anic references. Unfortunately, the strength it offered to that geneation was a 1st Year Studies weakness 200 years later, when political liberation could have been in Science Moved within the grasp of the .Tews. Yet their rebbes hung onto. the idea of to Scopus Campus God as the sole liberator. JERUSALEM — Some 850 first- He pointed briefly to the on year students of the Hebrew Uni- of Cl6bad Lubavitch, the versity faculty of science are now intellectual arm of Ilasidism which grew up in Lithuania, the studying on the Mount Scopus center of learning which was the campus. In the first stage of the transfer original hotbed of opposition to of first-year science studies to the Hasidism. Because it kept the mass of Jews — however isolated they may be from the centers of Jewish life — religiously identified and restored their sense of commun- ity, Hasidism made tremendous headway. "It took the struggling Jew and brought in the theme of joy, experience and participation. It said every act is significant. (The humblest tailor, according to the Hasidim, was performing an act of cosmic unification by his sewing of one piece of materiar to another). Hasidism gave new hope to the Je•." To the Jew in America, often faced with the same isolation of the Jew in Eastern Europe, the Hasidic experience could provide lessons. What comfort if a man believes. "Wherever you are, God is there" and if he believes himself to be part of a greater living community, said Dr. Greensberg. Hasidism also brought a new kind of rabbinic leadership — in- spired but non-intellectual leaders who emerged out of the life of the common folk. It is a weakness of the Ameri- can rabbinate, he added, that "the life of his people is not shared" by the average pulpit rabbi, whose congregation "has set him on a pedestal . . . The tzadilc was able to take the Jew out of his uptight existence and transform him into a mood of ecstasy. To make religion decor- explored by Dr. Steven Schwarz- Academic Council of the National schild, professor of philosophy at Foundation for Jewish Culture and Washington University, St. Louis. the academic supervisory board of 8:15 p.m. Tuesday at the LaMed the post-PhD Rogosin Institute of Auditorium of tht Southfield cam- Yeshiva University. He is a direc- pus complex of the 'United Hebrew tor of the Jewish Peace Fellowship and has been chairman of the com- Schools. It will be the second lecture in mission on social justice of the the Midrasha Institute, series New England Region, United Syna- gogue of America. named for Mina and Theodore I3argman. D r . Schwarz schild, who holds the chair in Ju- daic studies at Washington U n versity, also teaches Jewish- Christian studies at Eden Theolog- ical Seminary. He Schwarzschild was editor from 1961 to 1969 of Judaism Quarterl y, authored "Franz Rosenzweig—Guide to Re- versioners - published in Londcm and has written many articles for scholarly journals. Born in 1924, Dr. Schwarzschild holds a doctor of Hebrew letters from Hebrew Union College-Jew- ish Institute of Religion, where he also was ordained. He was rabbi of the Jewish community of Berlin from 1948 to 1950 and served in several pulpits in this country before holding the Got- tesman Chair in religious studies at Brown University from 1964 to 1965. He holds a number of honorary positions, including membership on Fort Wilkins at Copper Harbor in Michigan's Keweenaw Peninsula is the only wooden fort east of the Mississippi with its original buildings still standing, according to the Michigan Tourist Council. DICK STEIN THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 34—Friday, May 8, 1970 ■•••■.•■■••••••■•••■•■••••••■■••••••••••■ • BILL FREUND'S OLYMPIC' CYCLE SHOP ONE DAY SERVICE SALES Presents THE DICK STEIN ORCHESTRA AND THE JEEP SMITH ORCHESTRA LI 7-2770 SERVICE • QUALITY BICYCLES BUDGET TERMS 22125 COOLIDGE HWY. LI 1-8500, OAK PK. NUTRI-FOODS FOR EVERY DIETARY NEED NATURAL VITAMINS AND MINERALS ROYAL OAK 120 S. MAIN L I 1-6820 the executive board of the Confer- EXPECTING OUT OF TOWN GUESTS FOR A WEDDING OR A BAR MITZI/A ? Schayes Renews Coaching Career BY JESSE SILVER Jewish Telegraphic Agency, Inc. Adolph Schayes is back in coach- ing after four years' service as supervisor of National Basketball . Association officials. Schayes re -'I turns next season to lead the Bur Palo expansion team. Carl Scheer, former administra- tive assistant to the NBA president, will join Schayes at Buffalo as ' president of the upstate New York club. I "I was itching to get back into coaching as soon as I heard that Carl and Eddie (Donovan) were involved in the new franchise," , said Schayes. "I called them be- cause central New York is where I want to stay and I want to he with these guys." A former All-America player at NYU, Schayes joined the Syracuse Mount Scopus campus, students National in 1948. During his 16 will snend from 3 to 4 days per years as a player with Syracuse week of their course there and the and the Philadelphia 76ers the 6'8" remainder of the time on the forward made the NBA all-star GiVat Ram campus — this split team 12 times. In 1955 he led the necessitated by the fact that re- Nationals to their only league construction and building of the ' championship. Schayes was the Mount Scopus science lecture NBA's all-time scorer when he retired as a player after the 1963- rooms is not yet complete. The faculty is structuring, its 64 season. His 1,059 games played timetable so that a student whose is still a league record. Schayes compiled a won - lost program begins on Mount Scopus on any given day will continue record of 129-111 in his three years as coach of the 76ers. In 1966 Philadelphia won the Eastern Div- ision title and Schayes was named coach of the year. Differences with Wilt Chamberlain led to his dis- missal as coach. I Scheer, 32, is a native of Spring- . field, Mass., and was graduated from Middlebury College where he was captain of the basketball and baseball teams. He received a law degree from the University of Miami Law School and for some years practiced in Greensboro, North Carolina. Scheer was captain of Spring- field's Classical High School bas- ketball teams in his junior and senior years and won all-state honors in both basketball and base- ball. Following graduation, he en- tered Colgate University on a bas- ketball scholarship, winning a var- sity letter in his sophomore year. Few states equal Michigan in He then transferred to Middlebury per capita support of higher edu- and played two more years of varsity basketball there. cation. that day's work on the Scopus campus. At the beginning of the next academic year, when building work will have been completed, all first-year science studies will be transferred to Mount Scopus. Currently at the disposal of the faculty are a building com- prising the library, faculty offi- ces and a number of classrooms; and a laboratory building, which includes teaching laboratories. Nearing complelion is a complex of lecture halls which will be ready by October. Additional facilities for students now studying and living on the Mount Scopus campus (and these include the entire faculty of law) are a restaurant for 800 persons, and a snack bar — the latter in the law faculty building. • • Cranbrook House Motel 20500 JAMES COUZENS (8 Mile & Greenfield—Across from Northland) Call 342-3000 For the Finest Accommodations COMPLIMENTARY CONTINENTAL BREAKFAST Try Our Barber Shop Dine at the SCOTCH & SIRLOIN RESTAURANT Airport Limousine Service Available • EXPERT GROOMING ALL BREEDS • PET_S.U_PPI IFS . A PUPPY TU FIT YEAR GUARANTEE EVERY PERSONALITY • EASY CREDIT TERMS • • OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK • 10. 1 1 • USE YOUR — MASTER CHARGE • BANK AMERICARD 11111101ku.._ H E 11 1 Y 2837 Coolidge Hwy. 3 Blks. S. of 12kui. Berkley, Mich. (3131 399-8448 Th• only love you con buy Is th• tow. of a puppy CONFIDENTIALLY YOURS Helen Zinberg R. E. The hair you pluck will come back to haunt you. 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