64 Friday, October 14, 1977 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Herzl Role Recalled in Urging Perpetuation of Zionist Organization JERUSALEM—In order ment, the Jewish Colonial to demonstrate the exist- Trust. A detailed report on ence of the Zionist Organi- conditions in PaleStine was zation as a permanent presented by Leo Motzkin; national institution, Theodor efforts were made to recon- Herzl insisted that the Sec- cile the views of "political ond Congress must be held Zionists," who supported a year after the first. Herzl in stressing the para- Despite many obstacles and mount importance of obtain- attacks, it opened according ing a "charter" from the to schedule in Basle on Aug. Sultan; "practical Zion- 28, 1898. ists," who wanted to lose no There were twice as -time in stepping up settle- many delegates as at the ment work; and "cultural First Congress, and this Zionists," who upheld the time most of them were ideology of Ahad Ha'am. actually elected by Jewish Among the new delegates communities and Zionist were Nahman Syrkin, the societies. Significantly, first ideologist of Socialist there was a large contingent Zionism, and the 24-year-old from Russia and Galicia, Chaim Weizmann. including many Orthodox The Third Congress, held rabbis. in Basle on Aug. 15-18, 1899, In his opening address, was concerned mainly with Herzl attacked the commu- political activities. nal leaders and rabbis who The "practical Zionists" opposed Zionism, those did not win approval for "who pray for Zion and their program of immediate attack it in the same settlement work, and breath," and called for an although there was much effort to "conquer the com- rhetoric about the impar--- munities." Where Zionism tance of Hebrew culture, no was attacked by heads of practical decisions on the communal institutions, local subject were adopted. Zionists must try to have Herzl was able to report responsible and capable on his meetings with the men, who supported the Kaiser in the previous fall, national idea, elected to which, although they pro- positions of authority, he duced no practical results, said. were of great significance Among the most impor- in enhancing the prestige of tant practical decisions was the movement. one to establish the finan- While Herzl's pre-emi- cial instrument of the move- nance was unquestioned, the - congress was by no means a rubber stamp for his deci- sions. There was vigorous criticism of several features in the constitution of the Jewish Colonial Trust, and Motzkin objected to what he regarded as exaggerated claims of political suc- cesses, which, he believed, would distract attention from the need for patient, constructive work. Permanent arrangements were adopted for the organi- zation of the movement: the small "Inner Actions Corn- rnittee" (the executive) and the "Large Actions Com- mittee," which would meet between congresses. "The congress has passed out of its boyhood; it has entered the stage of manhood, Herzl noted in his diary. The Fourth Congress (Aug. 13-16, 1900) was held in London as a political demonstration, and Herzl began his opening speech in English. Later, speaking in German, he declared: "England the great, Eng- land the free. England whose vision embraces the seven seas, will understand us and our aims." It was a quiet congress; recording little significant progress. Weizmann joined in the criticism of the glow- ing reports depicting the growth of the movement, and the religious delegates, led by Rabbi Jacob Reines (later, founder of the Miz- rachi), demanded that the Zionist Organization abstain from cultural work, fearing that nationalist or secularist education might be a dan- ger to religious influence. However, the congress fulfilled the aim of bringing Zionism to the attention of British public opinion. The leading newspapers com- mented on the movement. and Herzl met Lord Lan- sdowne,' the foreign secre- tary. and the private secre- tary of Lord Salisbury, the prime minister. At the Fifth Congress, held again in Basle on Dec. 26-30, 1901, Herzl was able to report on his audience with the Sultan Abdul- Hamid. Many of the dele- gates, however, especially the Russians, were tired of waiting for a diplomatic miracle and insistently demanded more practical work in Palestine. For the first time, an offi- cial oppositionist group was organized: the Democratic Zionist Faction, led by Mot- zkin, Weizmann and Martin Buber. It had been formed largely in reaction to the clash over cultural activi- ties at the Fourth Congress, and aimed at a more deeply rooted nationalism, in line with the ideas of Ahad Ha'am, more democratic control of the movement, and a program of cultural activity among the Jewish people. Although it had only 37 delegates, the faction's influence was out of propor- tion to its numbers, since it was the only organized group at the congress, and sometimes it appeared to dominate the proceedings. Towards the end of the congress, the oppossition marched out of the hall en bloc in protest against a procedural decision by Herzl, but returned and was able to get its resolutions on cultural activities adopted. (In reaction against this decision, the Mizrachi was founded in the following year.) The main importance of the congress, perhaps, lay in its success in completing the organizational struc- ture. The Jewish Colonial Trust was now open for business and the congress resolved on the estab- lishment of the Jewish National Fund for the pur- chase of land in Palest - It also adopted a set. of statutes for the Zionist Organization. A Congress Court was formed to settle organizational disputes, and provision was made for the establishment of local Zion- ist federations. In the future, the congress was to meet every two years, with a •`Jahreskonferenz,•• more limited in size, between congresses. Herzl stressed the impor- tance of the completion of this stable structure. which did not depend on the ele- ment of personality. "Only the impersonal can endure," he said. "Today no one among us is indispensable. This one or that one may fall out of the ranks; the cause itself goes on." He was able to attend only one more Zionist, con- gress, but the cause went on. Henry Ford's Anti-Semitism, The Guggenheims' Jewish Devotions Among the Many Historic Incidents in 'Great American Families' Gore Vidal, in an tecting the property of the introduction to the fascinat- worthy for 200 years whilst ing stories about five fami- protecting in the Bill of lies in this country, "Great Rights (that sublime after- American Families" (W. W. thought) certain freedoms Norton), makes these inter- of speech and assembly esting observations: which are still unknown "The inventors of the even now to that irritable United States decided that fount of America's political there would be no heredi- and "actual being. old tary titles in God's country. Europe. Although the inventors were "The inventors under- hostile to the idea of democ- stood human greed and self racy and believed pro- interest. Combining brutal foundly in the sacredness of cynicism with a Puritan property and the necessary sense of virtue, they used dignity of those who owned those essential drives to it, they' did not like the idea - power the machinery of the of king, duke. marquess. state. If Karl Marx had earl. Such a system of taken seriously the debates hereditary nobility was of the inventors as set forth liable to produce aristocrats in the Federalist papers. his who tended to mix in poli- vision of the good society tics (like the egregious Lord might have been less pure North) instead of politically but the harvests in the vast responsible burghers. Ukraine might today equal "But the inventors were those of smaller Iowa. practical men and the fed- "From the beginning, eral constitution that they greed and vanity and envy assembled in 1787 was an were accepted by the inven- exquisite machine that: with tors as being the human a repair here and a twist norm and no-one thought to there. has gone on - pro- change the way people - were. In 1796, conservative inventor John Jay wrote: As to political reforma- tion in Europe or eLsewhere. I confess that..I do not amuse myself with dreams about an age of reason. I am content that little men should be as free as big ones and }rave and enjoy the same rights, but nothing strikes me as more absurd than projects to stretch little men into big ones, or shrink big men into little ones...We must take men and measures as they are. and act accordingly.' — "That is the very voice of the American inventors: conservative. commonsen- sical and just — within (as opposed to the- age of) reason." The great families recorded in this large and extensively . illustrated vol- ume are the Adamses. the Vanderbilts. the Fords. the Guggenheims. the Roose- velts and the Rockefellers. The Guggenheims are the industrial giants who, like the other families, acquired power in the land. They were Jewish immigrants who never forgot their back- ground. They were at the outset synagogue minded. They were philanthropic. They came to the aid of oppressed Jews. The Guggenheims. as depicted here, form an inerasable chapter from both American and Jewish history. Their business ven- tures are interlinked with the charitable. They inter- marry. their power is no longer supreme. but the family history is immense. Of special interest in this volume also is the story of the Fords. written by David Caute. As in the other fam- ily portrayals. no punches are pulled. The complete story of the anti-Semitism of Henry Ford is related here. Here is Caute's account: - "Ford's populism was of the most dangerous sort: narrow. bigoted. racist. at root profoundly author- itarian. We have been unfaithful to the White Man's traditions and privi- leges.' he declared in the Dearborn Independent. the weekly paper he purchased in 1918. 'We have permitted a corrupt orientalism to overspread us...' On to Ellis Island were pressing the anarchistic scum of foreign lands, hordes programmed to destroy the United States. In May 1920_he launched in the Independent a 91-week campaign dedicated to exposing the 'international Jew'. the Protocols of the Elders of Zion (already exposed as a forgery) and the fact that Jews were responsible for Bolshevism. Wall Street. alcohol profit- eering, gambling. short skirts and rolled stockings, jazz and cheap Hollywood movies: 'Father of Psycho- analysis a Jew'. But when Aaron Sapiro. a Chicago lawyer whom the paper had accused of attempting to defraud American farmers on behalf of a Jewish inter- national syndicate, sued Ford for defamation, Ford settled out of court. "In July 1927 he 'announced his high regard for Jews, his deep regret that they had been cruelly slandered in his paper. and his own absolute innocence in the matter — his subordi- nates, evidently had been solely responsible... "Forty years after Ford's anti-Semitic campaign. his great-grand-daughter Anne married Giancarlo Uzielli. a Wall Street hanker and a Jew. The present generation of Fords have short memo- ries not by default, but by intention. Sadly enough. Ford's own anti-Semitic feelings were shared by the one genius to whom he accorded lifelong admira- tion and devotion. his erst- while employer and fre- quent camping companion. Thomas Edison. Ford trans- ported Edison's Menlo Park laboratory, the cradle of the light bulb and the phono- graph. from New Jersey to Greenfield Village, and then named the whole $30 million museum the Edison Institute. "Edison's prejudices were gospel to Ford." The Ford story. as related here. substantiates the - that one of Ford's c. friends. Thomas Edison. was an anti-Semite. The other biographers of the great families in this imposing work are V.S. Pritchett, Peter Conrad and Edward Jay Epstein. This is a powerfully com- piled account of the dynasties under review. The photographs are in them- selves an historical com- pilation and the stories make revealing reading as subjects that will be dis- cussed for a long time to come.