THE JEWISH NEWS Incorporating The Detroit Jewish Chronicle carrmorP 4 vn mith issue of July 20, 1951 Membor American Association of English-Jewish Newspapers, Michigan Press Association, National Editorial Associa- tion. Published every Friday by The Jewish News Publishing Co 17515 W. Nine Mile, Suite 665, Southfield, mien. 46075. Second-Class Postage Paid at Southfield, Michigan and Additional Mailing Offices. Subscription $10 a year. PHILIP SLOMOVITZ Editor and Publisher CARMI M. SLOMOVITZ Business Manager CHARLOTTE DUBIN City Editor DREW LIEBERWITZ Advertising Manager Sabbath Scriptural Selections This Sabbath, the first day of Av, 5734, the following scriptural selections will be read in our synagogues: Pentateuchal portions, Num. 30:2-36:13, 28:9-15. Prophetical portion, Jeremiah 2:4-28, 3:4. Candle lighting, Friday, July 19, 8:45 p.m. VOL. LXV. No. 19 Page Four July 19, 1974 Humanitarian Appeal Is Not Meddling For the businessmen of this country a trade deal with the Soviet Union is a matter of trading, but for the 'protesters against in- dignities and persecutions in Russia and those desiring to leave the country, the sacred right to change residence is a principle not to be debated. Official policies are aimed at granting the USSR favored nation treatment as part of the detente that is not as palatable as White House and State Department would portray the U.S.-USSR relationships. Not to be ig- nored is the basic principle of justice as interpreted in the United Nations Declaration of Human Rights. The moment that is aban- doned there may be no retracing of human- itarian steps for generation's to come. The evil spewed from Russia last week, in the form of military aid offered to Lebanon to foment increasing war against Israel added evidence of a desire to inject encouragement to hatred in the situation in that troubled area of the world. Lebanon is striving to avert war. If the Lebanese government could banish the terrorists it would, and the basic threat to security on Israel's border would end. But Russia, unallied until now with Lebanon in the Middle East struggle, apparently seeks to enter it — with weapons Lebanon does not ask for. There could no viler intention. That's how the Russian Bear seeks to make inroads into friendly areas, creating havoc and spreading fears, while seeking domination for the Kremlin. The Russian lessons are not new. Under the Czar it was necessary for this country to abrogate an 80-year-old trade treaty in 1911 — because Russia would not honor the pass- ports of American citizens who were born in Russia. During the last world war the de- mocracies were 'challenged to make some gestures to rescue the many millions who ultimately perished in the Nazi cauldron. The failures of the past should 'be lessons for a more humane future. The situation involving the efforts of Senator Henry M. Jackson and his many as- sociates in the U.S. Senate to deny favored treatment to Russia unless emigration rights are respected occasionally appears to be de- teriorating. This must be prevented. The fact is that the President himself had spoken in terms of rejecting protests that tend to show interference in the internal affairs of another nation. The moment such an ap- proach is encouraged, mankind will be back where it was in the late 1930s and in the 1940s. Then anything and everything ap- proaching the Nazi tactics will be condonable. The moment it is permitted to brand ap- peals for justice, wherever it becomes neces- sary to reject prejudices, as meddling, there will be a turning back of the clock of progress in civilized society. That danger exists. It is misleading. If tyranny, anywhere, becomes unprotestable, then Frenchmen and Englishmen had no right to make appeals in behalf of Sacco and Van- zetti; then Americans could have been pre- vented from expressing resentment in the Affaire Dreyfus; then 'Canadians and Ameri- cans and Englishmen should have been hushed when they spoke out against the Czarist scheme of charging an outrageous blood Libel in the Mendel Beiliss Case. It is because many in the democracies of the world, including American officialdom, failed to speak out against the Hitlerlite crimes, in the very days when it had already been revealed that mass extermination was planned, that the Nazi crimes became pos- sible. It is the repetition of injustice, even on a much more minor scale than the Hitlerites', that must be avoided. Some 26,000,000 people perished at the hands of the Nazis—including 6,000,000 Jews. The horrors might have been averted had the civilized world acted on time. There are dissidents in the Soviet Union who ask for the right to speak, to act, to express themselves — and to emigrate. They are rights to 'be supported by humanitarians everywhere. A country that rejects such rights has not earned favored nation privileges. Sen- ator Jackson and his associates who reject the requested special 'privileges must be fully supported in their aims, and if the President leans backward, we must urge him to straighten up in defense of justice and hu- manitarianism. Defying InflatLon on Communal Fronts Distressing figures revealing the infla- tionary trends which are affecting mankind are certain to have serious impacts on social services and the philanthropies of many com- munities. Overseas agencies already suffered in the past two years from the blows accorded the American dollar in European countries. The trend had serious repercussions in Israel. Now, with the drastic increases in Israel's taxation, with the drop in tourism and revo- lutionary developments in import-export trad- ing, the situation may become even more serious with time. There is little doubt that the worldwide developments will cause 'havoc and the Jew- ish communities throughout the world will be confronted with even greater, challenges than ever before. While the American inflationary trend for the year was on an 8 per cent level, Israel's reportedly is 45 per cent. The people of that nation's already seriously injured nation are laboring under great stress. No matter how 'Collected Poems' Pays Tribute to Isaac Rosenberg's Genius Isaac Rosenberg was one of the great poets of this century. He was an English Jew, and his Jewish works were an inspiration, just as his poetry was universal and supreme. He was 27 when he died in action in France, April, 1918, and by that time he had 'already produced great works that drew widest interest. Fortunately, he is not forgotten. The• new Schocken volume, of his "Collected Poems" serves as a new inspiration for lovers of good literature. Edited by Gordon Bottomley and Danys Harding, the volume is prefaced by a tribute in which Siegfried Sasson applies to him the terms "scriptural and spiritual." Sassoon further asserts that he did not carve or chisel; he modeled words with fierce energy and aspiration, finding ecstasy in form, dreaming in grandeurs of supreme light and deep shadow; his poetic visions are mostly in somber colors and looming sculptural masses molten and amply wrought." One of his great works, "Moses: A Play, 1916," is such a masterful creation that it serves as an undying tribute to a great master. In this impressive book are included his poems: "Night and Day, 1912," "Youth, 1915," and his "Trench Poems, 1916-1918." Even in the trenches he produces, among them "The Jew: Moses, from whose loins I sprung, Lit by a lamp in his blood Ten immutable rules, a moon For mutable lampless men The blonde, the bronze, the ruddy, With the same heaving blood, Keep tide to the moon of Moses. Then why do they sneer at me? In this section are his "Lusitania" and "The Dying Soldier," among numerous other classics. extensive foreign aid, the difficulties are great There is "The Unicorn," another of his great works; and the and the struggle for life there is grave. All editors 'collected for these collected poems Rosenberg's unpublished the help that can be given must therefore be work of •1914-15; also his earlier poems of 1912, 1913 and 1915, and a viewed as of the utmost necessity. set of Fragments which include the following from "an earlier con- Let it not be forgotten that Israel alone ception of 'Moses' ": carries the military burden — with whatever MOSES. I feel inert, strange, a losing of myself, A presence as though million years were forcing aid comes from the United States. If not for Into me. I will light a fire. the latter, the conditions might turn into trag- (The angel appears out of the burning bush) edy. But since the defensive means come from I see no shape. I look for my own soul. the Israelis themselves, the economic assist- MOSES. Your fold is not a. butchery. Run, dog, ance that is required to aid newcomers, the I cannot bring the fold here — make them frisk. Why do they cower so, support to be given to the educational insti- Huddled and bleating? Vivid on their brains the tawny panther races. tutions, must be increased by the Diaspora Nothing . . . What can they mean? communities, even if it is to 'be at a sacrifice. Yesterday's same nibbled slopes, The same sun's key to open same safe miles. And if it is to be a •sacrifice to retain the 0, wooly white flocks, I will allow your anguished self-conceit existence of functioning agencies, then it is And knowledge of your unique purpose here To line man's belly inside and without, equally important to emphasize that no matter But what should stir it now? how inflationary the dollar, it must be avail- What secret terror, what instinct doth Coax the safe hill to frighted meanings, and able to our social service, educational, recrea- Give such earnest cunning praises To life by that deep terror? tional and •health and welfare agencies. Life goes on, 'even at great cost, and the commun- A great and deserving tribute to a superb poet perpetuates the ity structures must never suffer, even under works of a genius in these collected poems. They bless the memory economically recessional strains. of one of the great of this century.