Boris Smolar's 'Between You ... and Me' Editor-in-Chief Emeritus, JTA (Copyright 1971, JTA Inc.) I THE HASIDIC IMAGE: The Hasidic movement is attracting more interest on the part of American Jews and non-Jews, as seen from the constantly growing literature on Hasidism. Testifying to it is a beauti- fully issued book, "A People Apart," published by Dutton publishers. It is different from other books on Hasidic life that appeared during the last few years because it portrays with dignity the life of Hasidic groups in New York in 150 selected large photographs. It shows them at home and at work, at worship and in business, in communal and in family life. The project was a labor of love to Philip Garvin, the photographer, who is the holder of a fine arts degree awarded to him by Yale School of Arts and Architecture. It took him three years to achieve his faith- ful portrayal of Hasidic life. He gained the trust of the Hasidim—who usually distrust photographers—by his respect and admiration for them. The 150 photographs in the book are only a small part of the hundreds of pictures he has taken during the three years. The text, written by Arthur A. Cohen, is a remarkable essay on Hasidim displaying deep understanding of the movement. A former vice-president and editor-in-chief of Holt, Rinehart and Winston and a founder of other American publishing houses, Cohen is an able writer. He has among his other works also published a book on Dr. Martin Buber. Cohen does not limit himself to modern Hasidism which originated in the 18th century or to the Baal Shim Tov. Me goes back to Hasidic mysticism of the 12th Century in Germany, and to Hasidism of biblical times. • • • • JEWISH KNOWLEDGE: The Leningrad State Library, to which foreigners are rarely admitted, is known to have in its possession the most important collection in the world of ancient Hebrew manuscripts dating back to the 9th and 10th Centuries. The only American scholar ever permitted by Soviet authorities to microfilm these manuscripts— known as Geniza—is Dr. Abraham I. Katsh, president of Dropsie Uni- versity in Philadelphia. It took him 14 years and five visits to the Soviet Union to gather and microfilm the rare Geniza fragments stored away In the Leningrad Library which carries the name of the Russian author Saltykov-Schedrin. - Dr. Katsh is now seeing the fruit of his work. His complete study of 159 Geniis fragments—hitherto unavailable to Western scholars— has now been published under the title "Geniza Mishna". It is an im- pressive volume of photostats of the fragments appearing for the first time. The volume is of inestimable value to scholars throughout the world. The Geniza fragments come from an important collection of ancient Hebrew manuscripts discovered in the mid-19th Century in Cairo, Egypt. They were acquired by the Russian Archimandrite Antonin Kapustin who resided in Jerusalem for about 30 years until his death in 1804. The fragments, microfilmed by Dr. Katsh, are all part of the Mahn& which codifies the orally transmitted legal rules derived from the Bible. Dr. Katsh emphasizes that the material in the Geniza fragments appears to have been written at a very early period, when the Talmud was studied by oral tranamiaaion and not from a written book. Many of the fragments differ completely from the generally available printed texts of the Misbna, including the Babylonian and the Palestinian Tal- muds. The entire Geniza • collection at the Leningrad Library consists of 1189 numbers. About 600 items deal with biblical material, some on parchment and others on paper. The rest of the material covers a variety of subjects, Including philosophy, history and medicine. Every Talmudic tract is represented there. There are much larger Geniza collections in the United States and in Britain, but the Leningrad col- lection is considered the best in quality. JEWS IN TRANSITION: A newsletter by S. J. Goldsmith, London editor of the Jewish Telegraphic Agency, has been published by the Herzl Press. His "Jews In Transition" gives one the feeling that the author is not 3,000 miles away from the United States, but is sitting in front of you and "shmussing" with you. There is warmth and in- timacy in his style of writing. And, needless to say, his writing is sat- urated with Jewish knowledge. The author deals with a wide variety of subjects—political, cultur- al, social and literary—and his observations on each of them are in- teresting. Especially valuable are his essays on Ben-Gurion, Sholom Aleichem, the poet Itzik Marger, the Noel Prize winner S. J. Agnon and others. JNF Official Says Govt. Plan to Sell Its Land Will Encourage Speculation JERUSALEM (JTA)—The Jew- ish National Fund is embroiled in a controversy with the Israel gov- ernment over the latter's plan to make state-owned and JNF lands available for sale. Herman L. Weisman, president of the JNF of America, claimed at a news conference here that the government's proposal amount- ed to a "breach of trust" and was vigorously opposed by the JNF. The JNF, the land acquisition and reclamation agency of the world Zionist movement, was founded 70 years ago and ranks second only to the government as the largest landholder in Israel. The JNF operates on the principle that the land of Israel is the 'prop- erty of the Jewish people" and can never be sold. Occupants of JNF land hold leases which must be renewed THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 14-4ridey, Miriam 29, 1971 Similar Goals Tie Jewish Students of l arly 1900 , ith Today's Youth every 49 years. A 1960 act by the Knesset applied the same non-saleable principle to state- owned land. But the government is now trying to have the act rescinded. The matter has been under dis- cussion in the Land Administration Authority, a joint government-JNF body on which the government -has seven representatives, including the chairman, Minister of Agricul- ture Chaim Gvati, and the JNF, six. The authority can alter the land- holding principle by simple ma- jority vote. Weisman claimed that converting the land from lease- hold to freehold would encourage land- speculation and profiteering. He said the sale orthe land would not bring in the large sums of money originally anticipated by the government planners. WALTH 3 compara- tive analyst Jewish student groups in the early 1900s and the present by the American Jewish Historical Society shows that Jew- ish college youth were seeking similar goals—a search for Jewish identity, Jewish studies at univer- sities, fostering Jewish religious and cultural ideals, security for the state of Israel and freedom for persecuted brethren overseas. An exhibit on student move- ments at the headquarters and library of the 79-year-old Historical Society shows that today's young Jew engages in greater social action concerns, both Jewish and non-Jewish, and, unlike his pre- decessor, shows a willingness to use militant approaches to achieve his goal. Most early Jewish student move- ments languished under voluntary leadership until the formation of - the Bnai Brith Hillel Foundation in 1923 at the University of Illinois. With professional assist- ance, organized programming and financing, the Hillel Foundation created Jewish cultural programs, publications and other activities. Currently, a number of Inde- pendent Jewish student organi- zations have developed ea col- lege campuses. They publish between 35 and 40 newsapers an over the country. These groups are particularly active in the cause of Soviet Jewry and work- ing for Israel, but are equally as involved in campus peace and civil rights movements. Bernard Wax, executive director of the Historical Society, estimated that there are 50,000 Jewish col- lege students engaged in thehe in- dependent campus organizations. "Some itudents," he said, "who do not desire any identity with regularly associated Jewish activi- ties have become part of the New Left movement, frequently espous- ing violent anti-Zionist and anti- Jewish ideologies." Wax indicated that no figures are available on bow many Jewish students are engaged in New Left groups . because "not only are their views negative, but they frequently hide their. Jewish identity." The first- Jewish campus body in the United States was the Zeta Beta Tau fraternity, founded in 1898, under the name Zion Be- mishpat Tippadeh, to foster the study of Jewish history. and cut= ture. Other Jewish groups formed during thtat period included Zion- ist societies at the College of the City of New York, 1902, and at Harvard and Columbia in 1905; The University Jewish Literary Society at Minnesota, -1903; The Ivrim ("Hebrews") at the Uni- verity of Illinois, and the Society for. the Study of Jewish Literature at the University of Texas, both ni 1907; the Hebraic Club at Yale, 1909; and. the Caliphs Club to Examine Jewish Culture and Other Questlions, at the University of California in- 1910. In 1906, a group of Jewish stu- dents at Harvard University estab- lished the Menorah Society for the study and promotion of Hebraic culture and ideals. A propectus on display at the Historical So- ciety shows that these students sought to maintain the Jewish identity of their peers through the study of Hebrew, and the ristory, science. religion, art, literature and politics of the Jewish people. The Menorah Society quickly spread to other campuses so that by January 1913 more than 10 groups had formed. A total of 30 groups were organized before the Menorah Society dissolved in June 1963. The Menorah Society of the University of Minnesota_ carried .,"; FREDERIC PEARSON, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Pearson of Kingston Ave., Huntinetan Woods, has received his PhD in political science from - the Uniiersity of Michigan- He is teaching interna- tional relations at the'•UniierSitY of Missouri In St: Ltilds; out the Jewish ideal of social service by teaching new immi- grants the English language. All of the Menorah groups actively worked toward the estblishment of Menorah Chairs of Jewish History and Culture on their campuses. Another youth organization, The League of Jewish Youth of Ameri- caca, held its first mass meeting on Sunday afternoon, April 22, 1917, at the Century Theatre in New York City. . „ Vemco ELECTRONIC OPENER : ;-- 411411‘4113 DOOR 111111m.-_ N.TARNOW &CO. Cell treeing Meta 9 353-3254 EXPECTING OUT OF TOWN GUESTS FOR A WHOM OR A BAR AUTZVA ? 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