'Poellenberg Inherl Lance — strong New Novel
THE
"ISRAEL PRIZE"
to
ABRAHAM HARZFELD
London, Paris and Munich arc
linked in a drama about a fortune
represented by the Poellenberg
Salt, a most valuable ,jeweled art
the story.
store, Classified Ads Get Quick Results
work by Cellini, which ti Nazi gen- 1.
It is a steeply nun in ,-
cral had hidden for his daughter, marked by an impressive plot But THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
1 Paula Syanley, the heroine of the the revealing factor is that the
Friday, August 11, 1972-19
new novel by Evelyn Anthony. general, who had escaped arse'-I
Inheritance."
for his crimes, to the very last
"T h e Pollenberg
adhered to the Ilitler r rime ideas.
published by Coward, N1cCann and
defending Nazism crying out with
Geoghegan.
passion against Jews, in 'defense
The Nazi general was belie‘ed
of the cruelties of the SS.
HUNDREDS
his wife remarried, the
At this year's awarding of the "Israel Prize. - given annuaks to
eminent personalities in the country', cultural life and an-
dead,
nounced always 00 the ere of Independence Day. a spec ;at
honor was bestowed upon Abraham Ilarzfeld.teieran prom er
daughter becomes the means of a
si „irch for the former criminal
of the Yishus. He received the hruct Prize for his eat:matt/iv,
t
ofarthal ton to Israel society.
Following is a tribute sit litcred by the ?IOW President of !Ara,:
Zalman Shazar. upon the tinth arinivecsars ot the - Settlement
f The One / hii,and. - initiated by Abraham Ilarzfihl. ash,)
I hi, arid, ,N is reprinted with
established in the C -oastal
erzl Preis. trim! iii,'
permission of the
Mohler." a biography of Abraham
' , IA,
The
Londoner, because she had be- heritance ' a deeply moving narra
licved her husband was dead, is'. live that holds the reader's atten-
among the distressing elements in Lion from cover to cover.
•
Village
.5 unto Kushner.
"Not To Let Go From His Seed Basket..."
by Zalman Shazar
As you gather to celebrate the anniversary of the "Set-
tlement of the One Thousand," may I be permitted to
honor Abraham Harzfeld, the initiator of this settlement
project and the guest of honor at your celebration, by
submitting my interpretation of a quotation from the
writings of a. Hebrew pioneer of another age. The verse
to which I refer has been chanted by Jews for centuries
at the conclusion of every festive meal.
It is a simple verse—one we all learned in childhood:
"They who sow with tears shall reap their harvest with
joyous song. -
I must admit, haverim, that ever since I was able to
understand and to follow the verses of our sacred litera-
ture practically with my eves closed, I have puzzled over
this one verse. Why should one need tears for sowing?
The pioneer of today knows, as surely the pioneer of
yore must also have known, the ingredients of a good
harvest: fertile soil, sufficient rain and sunshine, toil,
perseverance and an iron will. All these serve as guaran-
tees to the pioneers that they will indeed "reap their
harvest with joyous song. - But what is the place of the
tears? Why should there he suffering at sowing time?
As I grew older, I became increasingly skeptical of
the comsection between tears and song. How could one
possibly claim the existence of a casual relationship be-
tween the two? You could shed tears like rain at sowing
time, and still get a disappointing harvest. On the other
hand, we have seen with our own eyes that men have
sown their seed with joyous song and then reaped a
It is in the course of the gen-
eral's identity being establi,he
by an international detective. Erie
Fisher, that another German fam-
ily, which had employed Fisher 1,,
do the searching, becomes in‘ob.ed
in order to acquire the jeweled
treasure.
There are murders, betrayals —
Fisher's partner plotted to kill him
and Paula in order to gain a hand-
some fee from the German royal
family.
When the Poellenberg treasure
finally is rediscovered, from the
Nazi general's hiding place in
Paris, and when Paula refuses to
take the loot, her father, the gen-
eral, destroys the valued art work.
Paula's love affair with Fisher
a highlight of the story, and her
unfortunate complica-
mother's
tions, in her second marriage to a
is
OF NEW -
CHEVROLETS
TO CHOOSE
FROM
In this expose the nos•list has
portrayed the bitterness of the in
human era and the inhumanities
of the German Third Reich.
In its Motivations, in the expose
of the Nazi terror, the fusing of
among the
family conflicts are
several factors that make Eselyn
Anthony's "The Poellenberg In-
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harvest of tears.
The question today is no longer whether a man needs
tears for a rich harvest. but rather what the man does
at a time of tears so that he may still have hopes for a
good yield. What does a man do when he is stricken
with sorrow, and his heart is full of tears not only for
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own soil will he permit despair to overwhelm him and
sap at his strength so that he will cease to sow his seed
altogether? Let the tiller of the soil give way to panic
for only a moment, and he will become powerless in the
face of his troubles.
On the other hand, if, even in th -e midst of blood and
tears, suffering and bereavement. evil and tragedy. the
farmer will know enough not to let go of his seed basket
but to bear it forth into the field in due season, then
he is sure to have a harvest.
It is this will to live, this dogged determination. this
finn covenant which links the pioneer with his seed
basket, that provide the guarantee that the forces of evil
will not prevail against him. Such determination in the
midst of suffering and tears cannot possibly blossom
forth into anything else but the exultant rejoicing that
comes with a rich and fruitful harvest.
Special Feature Prepared by Tarbuth Foundation
for the Advancement of Hebrew Culture
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