48 Friday, July 25, 1975 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS A Bicentennial Feature <9, The Government of Moses and the United States (Editor's Note: The fol- sonahle to examine the na- seven years, in the year of lowing article is a portion ture of government He did jubilee, all debts should be of the book "The Origin of ordain, and we shall find it cancelled and all unful- Republican Form of Gov- consisted of those parts, filled obligations annulled. ernment" written by Os- besides the magistrates of In that year, likewise, all car Straus (1850-1926), the several tribes and cities: agricultural property and who served as Minister they had a chief Magistrate, all realty other than real Plenipotentiary under who was called Judge or estate located in walled ci- Presidents Grover Cleve- Captain, as Joshua, Gideon, ties was to revert to the land and William McKin- and others; a council of sev- original owner or to his ley. Straus' book showed enty chosen men, and the heirs at law, discharged that the form of govern- General Assembly of the from all lien, debts, en- ment established by Moses people. cumbrances, etc. In this was followed in later wise the permanent accu- The first was merely oc- mulation of large tracts of times. This article is an- other in a series published casional, like to the Dicta- lands in single hands or by the Jewish News dur- . tors of Rome . . . The second families was rendered im- ing the American Bicen- is known by the name of the possible, and thereby would Great Sanhedrim, which tennial.) being instituted by Moses, have been preventive of the according to the command of G-d, continued till they were all, save one, slain by Herod. And the third, which is the Assembly of the people, was so common that none can be ignorant of it, but such as never looked into the Scripture. The author then cites Josephus, Philo, Mai- monides, and Abarbanel in confirmation of his text. OSCAR STRAUS Algernon Sidney, whose "Discourses Concerning Government" was the chief text-book of the founders of our government, and whose works were to he found in the libraries of Franklin, Adams, Jefferson, and many others of our scholars, statesmen, and divines, sums up his estimate of the Hebrew Commonwealth in these words: "Having seen .what government G-d did not ordain, it may be rea- Aside from this popular and progressive system of government that was or- ganized by Moses and his immediate successors, a number of statutes were passed, doubtless with a view of raising the people up to such standard of moral worth that they might be a law unto them- selves-and long cherish the blessings of civil freedom under their G-d given gov- ernment; statutes that lie at the root of our most ad- vanced civilization, that embody the highest justice and the broadest human- ity. They had their stat- utes of limitations, which provided that at the end of every cycle of seven times species of slavery known as the feudal system. No better law than that of Moses. could have been de- vised to maintain political equality. The effect was the same as if the state retained the fee and every 50 years made leases to every head of a family at a nominal rental. In fact, we find a positive provision that the land should not be perma- nently alienated: "The land shall not he sold forever; for the land is mine, for ye are strangers and sojourners with me" (Legit. XXV 23). The Homestead and ex- emption laws find their ori- gin in the following humane provision of the Mosaic code: "No man shall take the up- per or nether millstone to pledge; for he taketh a man's life to pledge." The principle embodied in this law is being gradually rec- ognized in the civil laws of all nations, that a man can- not by distraint for debt be deprived of the necessary means of sustaining life. Provisions were also made prohibiting the land proprietor from gleaning the fields and reaping the corners, so that the poor and the stranger might gather the leavings, and thus be relieved without being hu- miliated. (Copyright 1975, JTA. Inc.) VIENNA — The Jewish community in Austria is dying. In Vienna, which was one of the world's greatest Jewish centers before World War II, only 7,311 Jews are registered. In 1938, it was more than 200,000. "I cannot see much of a future for Jews in Austria," said Anton Pick, president of the Vienna Jewish Com- munity (Kultusgemeinde). There are about 500 regis- tered Jews living in other parts of Austria. The num- ber of Jews who did not reg- ister with community or- ganizations is estimated at about 2,000 persons. The Kultusgemeinde opened a new administra- tion building combined with a home for the aged in 1972. The home — with space for 150 old-age pensioners — was combined with a geria- tric clinic that can take care of 40 patients. At the 1972 election of the Vienna Jewish Com- munity the Poale Zion (Bund Werktaetiger Ju- den) representing Zionist and Socialist politics — gained 14 seats. The Or- thodox group won three seats; the Bund Jued- ischer Verfolgter Des Nazi Regimes (led by Nazi-hun- ter Simon Wiesenthal) three; and the Zionists four seats. The community offers a new kindergarten which is attended by more than 30 children. About 250 children attend two Talmud Torahs. The Kultusgemeinde is working on plans for a youth exchange program with Israel. Pick said there were sev- eral reasons why the num- ber of Jews is still declining in Austria. He listed the shock caused by the Nazi Holocaust 'and latent anti- Semitism in Austria as main causes, besides the old age of many members. Some people are also wor- ried by the neutral position the Austrian government takes in the Middle East conflict, a Jewish source said. Bruno Kreisky, Aus- tria's Jewish-horn Chancel- lor, claimed there is no anti- Semitism in Austria. This statement was con- tradicted by a public opin- ion poll published by the weekly magazine Profile last winter. The poll showed that 70 percent of all Austri- ans over 16 had at least some anti-Semitic feelings. Of these, 24 percent admit- ted they had strong anti- Semitic opinions; 35 percent would not marry a Jew; 21 percent felt that it would be best if there were no Jews at all in Austria. Jews are also very un- happy because of Austria's attitude towards the Mid- dle East. Austria adheres, in its official policy, to res- olution 242 of the United Nations Security Council, ordering Israel to return all occupied territories. Kreisky visited the Middle East twice in recent years heading fact-finding mis- sions of the Socialist Inter- national. He has tried to ease the path for the solu- tion of the Middle East con- flict, as he sees it. Kreisky hosted President Anwar Sadat of Egypt in Vienna late in May. Israeli Premier Yitzhak Rabin is expected to pay a long-de- from centuries of bondage, not only recognized the guiding principles of civil and religious library that "all men are created equal," that G-d and the law are the only kings but also estab- lished a free common- wealth, a pure democratic- republic under a written constitution, "a government of the people, by the p - and for the people." Akin to this humane and tender consideration for the poor are the statutes requiring the master to pay the hire of his servant promptly on the day when due: "Neither shall the sun go down upon it, for he is poor and setteth his heart upon it." There is a Boris Smolar's sense of mingled kindness and justice expressed in this injunction, and the reasons assigned for its strict obedience appeal touchingly to the master's o bliti ga on. Editor-in-Chief Numerous other laws of Emeritus, JTA universal application are s (Cop y ri g ht 1975, JTA, Inc.) contained in this code, which provides not only for justice tempered with THE RETIREMENT ISSUE: The method of retiring mercy, as between man highly experienced top executives by Jewish organizations and man, but prohibits and communal agencies is beginning to stir up special inter- cruelty towards the lower est in the communities. There are today in the field of Jew- animals. ish communal service at least 200 retirees from major Jew- 'Between You ... and Me' The lessons of the decline ish organizations, Jewish Community Centers and Jewish of this republic are as valua- education agencies. All of them have accumulated experi- ble and instructive as that of ences valuable to Jewish communal life. Some of them have its development. It was not distinguished themselves in making exceptional contribu- subverted by force, nor by tions not only to their own agencies but also to the Jewish the tricks or cunning devices community in general. of unscrupulous leaders, as In the last two years alone some 30 creative top execu- was the case with the Gre- tives have been retired, half of them executive vice presi- cian, Roman, and Venetian dents and executive directors — thinking men of high republics, but by the people standing in communal work and with enviable records of exercising their democratic achievements. The others were similarly well-seasoned and prerogative, the right of highly experienced, each serving 25 years or more. choice to set up over them- How have they been replaced? . . . Some of them selves such form of gover- very few—were succeeded by members of their own staff ment as they might elect. Their original construc- trained "to take over." But most of the replacements came tion provided such a contin- through luring away executives from other Jewish agencies. gency, and while giving As a result, somewhere in a Jewish community an executive warnings against it, con- place remained vacant in some agency. It was eventually tained instructions for es- filled by a candidate less experienced than his predecessor tablishing a form of monar- and with less knowledge in the field. chy which would be farthest A lot of valuable experiences have been lost also in the removed from tyranny. communities where organizations and agencies succeeded Thus we see at this early pe- in luring away good workers from their positions to fill the place of the retired top executive. Very few newly-appointed executive vice presidents or executive directors have the will to consult their predecessors; most of them prefer to go their own way. The consultative status which some of the retiring top executives are given in recognition of their ex- pert knowledge is in most cases fictional. layed official visit to Aus- FLEXIBILITY IN RETIREMENT: The National tria in late August. Rabin's visit had been postponed Conference of Jewish Communal Service, at its meeting last repeatedly because of grow- month, predicted in a resolution that problems related to ing differences between the retirement will eventually present a serious challenge to the two countries on the Middle entire American Jewish community. The basic question is: Is there a need for greater flexi- East assessment, Jewish sources said. bility as to retirement age, and whether retirement should These included Austria's he mandatory or perhaps gradual? The NCJCS anticipates position toward the Pales- that the number of retiring Jewish communal workers will tine Liberation Organiza- increase substantially in the next five years. The Council of tion. Another issue, which Jewish Federations and Welfare Funds similarly foresees influences relations be- this possibility. This is why the Council has embarked on a prograr? tween the Austrian govern- ment and the Jewish com- supporting the training of young men and women for c' munity is the refusal of tive positions in the Jewish communal apparatus. The 1:1-„in- Austria to compensate Is- ing process is going very well, as indicated by the Baltimore rael for lost property of Jewish College and other selected Jewish institutions of Jewish Nazi victims. higher learning where the program has been introduced. Jews are unhappy be- But it takes several years until a new crop of trainees for cause Austrian Justice executive posts is ready to enter the field. In the meantime authorities have not the cadres of thinking top executives with innovative ideas is thinning out. staged a single war crimes trial in the last three A very important factor that emerged from the respon- years. Simon Wiesenthal, ses to an NCJCS questionnaire is the current inadequacy of head of the Jewish Docu- some pension plans in the field; also the need for retirement mentation Center, said the income to be related to the changing economic conditions. Austrian government was Some of the national Jewish organizations and some Jewish afraid that trials would federations have already begun to make inflation adjust- end in acquittals. ments in the pensions of their retired executives. In 1970, a total of 800 war The Council of Jewish Federations has made a special criminal cases were under study of pension standards in Jewish communal 'institu- tions. The recommendations emanating from the study investigation in Austria. Five years later, all but were approved by the CJFWF General Assembly last year. about 30 of them were They urge, among other things, the reviewing of pension plans periodically to upgrade and update pension provi- closed without going to sions. trial, Wiesenthal said.' Austria's Jewish Community Is Dying By PETER FRIEDLINGER 7 6 - 19 I C' riod of mankind — 1,500 years and more before the Christian era, before Rome had obtained a foothold in history, 500 years before Homer sang, and 1,000 years before Plato had dreamed of his ideal re- public, when all western Europe was an untrodden wilderness — the children of Israel on the banks of Jor- dan, who had just emerged