Israel Chief Rabbinate in Serious Disputes; Goren May Quit Army Post By MOSHE RON Jewish News Special Israel Correspondent TEL AVIV—For 23 years Chief Military Chaplain Shlomo Goren kept watch like a devoted soldier on the front, and accompanied the Israeli army in all its activities. Immediately after the establish- ment of the Israeli army, Rabbi Goren found a synthesis and co- existence between the religious and non-religious soldiers. He opened the religious department of the army, which safeguards the uphold- ing of Jewish religious tradition in the army. This department always refrained from putting hardships on soldiers serving on the front line, Rabbi Goren always tried to adapt reli- gious laws and customs to the special front-line conditions. The Chief Rabbinate and the rabbis were dissatisfied with the vast activities of the army religious de- partment. Rabbi Goren was elected Chief Rabbi of Tel Aviv three years ago. As he could not abandon his important job in the Army, he put off taking over his office in Tel Aviv. In recent years, the Israeli Chief Rabbinate became very active. Not one week passes without the press being full of revelations and sen sations about stormy sessions of the Chief Rabbinate and differences of opinion between the two Chief Rabbis, Sephardi Rabbi Yitzhak Nissim and Ashkenazi Rabbi Isser Untermann, concerning questions such as •conversions in Vienna, il- legitimate children, etc.\ Relations also are tense between the Chief Rabbinate and Minister for Reli- gious Affairs Dr. Zerach Warhaftig. The two Chief Rabbis were elect- ed seven years ago. It always was proposed that their period of office should be prolonged, but according to the law, the Chief Rabbis cannot be candidates for another term owing to their high age. They are both past 75 years, but their parti- sans already have taken the initia- tive for altering the law to enable them to run for another term of Office. Rabbi Goren, who is a member of the Chief Rabbinate, has decided to free himself from his military duties and to take over the office of Chief Rabbi of Tel Aviv, in order to moderate the anti-religious at- mosphere in Israel, and, in due time, to be a candidate for Chief Rabbi of Israel. He and his Seph- ardi colleague, Josef Ovadia, could be the new religious leaders of Israel and find a "peaceful co- existence" with the non-religious circles by, the delicate problems o conversions, illegiti- mate children, etc. In the meantime, a new contro- versy has broken out between the Chief Rabbinate and Defense Min- ister Moshe Dayan. As Chief Rabbi 16 - Goren is about to end his 23-year Lerm of office as chief military rabbi, Dayan wishes to appoint his deputy, Mordechai Firon, as his successor. However, the Chief Rab- binate argues that the candidate for this office, who would be re- sponsible for all religious affairs in the army, should be nominated by the Chief Rabbinate. Dayan reacted to this demand, saying the Chief Rabbinate has no right to interfere in army appoint- ments. The Chief Rabbinate an- swered that the defense minister could nominate his candidate, but he should not be invested in his new office without the approval of the Chief Rabbinate. If this demand should- not be accepted, the Chief Rabbinate would not, recognize the Army Chief Rabbi. Israeli public opinion is angry about this new demand of the Chief Rabbinate, and thinks that the army should not give in over this dispute. When Rabbi Goren was appointed chief military rabbi in 1948, there were no terms yet for procedure in the Israeli army about the elec- tion of such a rabbi. Then the _Chief Rabbis, Herzog and Uziel, gave their consent to the nomination of Rabbi Goren. Now, when Rabbi Mordechai Firon is about to be appointed military chief rabbi there are laws which enable the army to appoint its Chief Rabbi without the consent of the Chief Rabbinate. The dispute between the Chief Rabbinate and Dayan could prevent Rabbi Goren from leaving t his of- fice in the army to become Chief Rabbi of Tel Aviv. Dayan also is in the midst of a dispute with the Chief Rabbinate on the question of two soldiers, who are Jews and Israeli citizens and have had difficulty in getting marriage permits from the Chief Rabbinate, because the latter main- 44—Friday, May 21, 1971 Angela Davis' Candidacy for President of Brandeis Alunmi Is Rejected WALTHAM, Mass.—New York tains that their father was a Gen- tile and they have not undergone attorney Morton L. Ginsberg has been overwhelmingly re-elected conversion to Judaism. '. * president of the Brandeis Univer Mordechai Firon came to Israel sity Alumni Association (BUAA) 35 years ago with Youth Aliya from by decisively defeating petition Vienna. He was a student at the candidate Angela Y. Davis, black agricultural school in Mikve Israel, radical who is in prison awaiting in Yeshivot in Jerusalem, and at trial on charges of murder and the Hebrew University where he conspiracy. graduated in philosophy. He wrote In making the announcement, a book, "Legends of Our Sages." Sanford I. Freedman, chairman of He has served in the Israeli army since 1948 and is active in the the BUAA's nominating commit- religious and cultural life of the tee, said that more than half of country, He has a son and two Brandeis' 6,000 alumni voted in daughters.' His wife is a teacher the election, which drew nation- wide attention. Ginsberg, a 1956 in a religious school in Bat-Yam. Firon often is mobilized for the Brandeis graduate, was placed in Magbit and Bonds actions all over nomination by the alumni associa- the world. He speaks Hebrew, tion's nominating committee, while Yiddish, English, French and Ger- an independent group, utilizing a man. His cooperation with Rabbi provision in the alumni constitu- Goren for many years has made tion, placed Miss Davis' name in him able to continue the traditional nomination by petition. She is a way of synthesis between religious 1965 Brandeis graduate. and non-religious soldiers in the The final vote was Ginsberg, army, and the coexistence between 2,489; Miss Davis, 793. them. Commenting on the election, Brandeis University President Charles I. Schottland said that the vote shows clearly "that the over- whelming majority of our alumni, having deep concern for their uni- age 78, continued his interest and versity, would not accept having activities on behalf of the AJC any individual or group use the throughout his lifetime. Brandeis Alumni Association for Dr. Blaustein, speaking for him- political purposes. self and on behalf of his mother, "There are those, I am sure, Mrs. Hilda K. Blaustein, and other members of the family, explained who will interpret negatively the that the institute would be estab- votes w h i c h Miss Davis re- lished by a $1,000,000 endowment ceived," Schottland said. How- ever, I think they err for the grant from the family. The institute will engage in a . trend to use established insti- wide variety of projects involving tutions for political purposes is increasingly prevalent in these action and research programs, and furthering the AJC's current activ- intensely troubled times for our ities, particularly on the interna- young people, many of whom utilize opportunities such as this tional and human rights scene. Blaustein. Institute for Human Rights Established in Name of Blaustein NEW YORK—The Jacob Blau- stein Institute for the Advance- ment of Human Rights, dedicated to the furtherance of Jewish se- curity and universal human rights, is to be established as a memorial to the late Baltimore industrialist, statesman and philanthropist. The institute will function as an arm of the American Jewish Com- mittee and will be located at the New York headquarters of the AJC in the Institute of Human Re- lations, which also houses the Fishman Re-Elected PS Prexy [ LATE JACOB BLAUSTEIN Jacob and Hilda Blaustein Library and Center for Human Relations Research. The establishment of the Insti- tute, which will operate through the offices of the AJC, was an- nounced by Dr. Morton K. Blau- stein of Baltimore, Jacob Blau- stein's son, at the 65th annual din- ner of the AJC. Blaustein, president of the American Jewish Committee from 1949 to 1954, and honorary president from 1954 until the time of his death last November at Reports Must Be True TEL AVIV (ZINS)—If confir- mation were needed that the So- viet Union is a Godless land, it has come from the postal authori- ties in Leningrad. Manahem Levin, a Tel Avivian, addressed a letter to the USSR in the name of "Rebono Shel Olam" (Hebrew for Lord of the Uni- verse) 7 Gorki St., Leningrad. For months the postal authori- ties sought to locate the addressee without success and finally re- turned the letter to the sender with a notation, "Addressee Un- known in the Soviet Union." PHILADELPHIA — William S. Fishman, president of ARA Serv- ices, was re-elected to a third term as president of the Jewish Publi- cation Society of America at the 83rd annual membership meeting held at the Warwick Hotel Sunday. The society, established in 1888 with headquarters in Philadelphia at 222 N. 15th St., publishes and distributes books on Jewish sub- jects. During its history it has published more than 700 books, exceeding 7,500,000 copies, for lay- men, scholars, children and adults. In his annual report Fishman pointed out that the society, with a membership enrollment of more than 13,000, published 12 new volumes and reprinted 14 titles during 1970. Best-selling books for the year were S. Y. Agnon's "Twenty-One Stories" and "Notes on the New Transla- tion of the Torah." There are more than 250,000 copies of the society's new translation of the Torah now in print. It was pub- lished in 1962. Re-elected with Fishman to serve third terms as vice presidents of the society were Dr. Samuel A. Ajl and Dr. Edward B. Shils of Philadelphia, Judge Phillip Forman of Trenton and Gustave L. Levy of New York. Isaac L. Auerbach of Philadelphia was named to a first term as vice president. Robert P. Abrams of Philadelphia was named to his first term as treasurer of the society and Philip D. Sang of Chicago was re-elected for a third term as secretary. Dr. Chaim. Potok was named to a sixth term as editor while Lesser Zussman was re-elected to serve a 22nd term as executive director. • Named as trustees for three-year terms were Leo Guzik, New York attorney; A. Leo Levin, professor THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS of law at the University of Penn- sylvania; Robert P. Frankel, Phila- delphia attorney; Morris Cohen, librarian at the University of Penn- sylvania Law School; Gershon Kekst, New York financial rela- tions expert; and Mrs. Alfred Soffa of Wynnewood, who is active in educational organizations. Elected trustees for two-year terms were Dr. Marvin Wachman, Temple University vice president in charge of academic affairs; and Harry Silver, Baltimore attorney. Renamed as trustees were Fish- man, Dr. Ajl and Sang, as well as Samuel N. Katzin of Chicago; Ber- nard G. Segal and Jerome J. Shes- tack of Philadelphia, Philip Slomo- vitz of Detroit, Albert A. Spiegel of Los Angeles and Morton H. Wilner of Washington. Speaker for the afternoon was Dr. Salo W. Baron, historian, who discussed the cultural reconstruc- tion of Russian Jewry. Wexler Sees Fight With Nixon on M.E. LONDON (JTA) — Dr. William A. Wexler, president of Bnai Brith, declared that "Israel-American re- lations are causing anxiety to American Jews and to the world Jewish community. It may be nec- essary for American Jews to fight the administration over its atti- tudes to Israel." Delivering the keynote address at the opening session of the 11th plenary session of the Bnai Brith International Council here, Wexler said: "I believe that during the first missile crisis the U.S. should have shown a tougher stand," and stated his fear that "another Mun- ich is in the air," to Make what they believe to be a statement of protest. "The one truly negative aspect of this whole election is the fact that one of the foundations of a free society, the university, has been exploited by certain groups for an unrelated political gesture." Schottland's remark referred to statements by supporters of Miss Davis who said last month when they announced her candidacy that they would use the alumni election to "make a serious political state- ment and express rejection of the racist, imperialistic and repressive policies of the reactionary estab- lishment." • In accepting re-election, Gins- berg said that he was confident that "the Brandeis University Alumni Association would be stronger because of the experience it just underwent." Ginsberg, who graduated from Brandeis cum laude with distinc- tion in politics, earned his LLB cum laude from Harvard Univer- sity Law School and an LLM in taxation from New York Univer- sity. He served as an assistant U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York in 1960-63. Federation Job Unit Plans Aging Parley; Aid to Orthodox Told NEW YORK—The success of a special employment program for Orthodox Jews in New York was related at the annual meeting of Federation Employment and Guid- ance Service (FEGS) here recently. Burton M. Strauss was elected the agency's fifth president. FEGS, which provides employment, counseling, test- ing and guidance services on a non- sectarian b a s i s, is supported in part by the Fed- eration of Jewish Philanthropies. It was an- nounced that a national confer- ence on the vo- Strauss cational rehabili- tation of older disabled persons is to be held in Washington, D.C., Sept. 14-16. The conclave is sched- uled to produce a policy statement and program proposals for sub- mission to the White House Con- ference for Aging in December. FEGS will organize and run the conference. FEGS Executive Director Ro- land Baxt cited a special em- ployment program centering about two Brooklyn communi- ties with a- high proportion of Ultra-Orthodox and Hasidic Jew- ish residents, Williamsburg and Boro Park. He reported that a second manpower training cen- ter had been established April 29 in Williamsburg; the first has been operating since last year in the Boro Park area. More than 500 Boro Park resi- dents were placed during the year, he reported. The Boro Park - Williamsburg programs include not only job re- ferrals, Baxt indicated, but also training courses. "The 533 Boro Park applicants who were placed in jobs this past year were all unemployed when they came to the FEGS center," Baxt noted. "At that point, there- fore, their earnings totaled zero dollars per year. Now, a survey indicates that their aggregate earnings total more than $2,000,000 annually."