THE JEWISH NEWS Incorporating The Detroit Jewish Chmniele ■ .rtrnmencing with the tssue ■ of.11111. 20. 19.51 Nlernher 1Inerican AS.K. 1:1i11111 of EnszlIsh-lewl-h New,p:Iper, MIchlgan Pre,, I...elation. Nat luny] Editor-1.11 \ o a t Published every Friday by The Jewish News Publishing Co., 17515 \V. Nine Mile. Suite 865, Southfield, Mich. 48075 Secend-•la,, .it S■ut 11.1tchig:In .rod Addltional PHILIP SLOMOVITZ Editor and Publisher ALAN HITSKY News Editor Office- 51.11,-cription 512 .1 year CARMI M. SLOMOVITZ Business Manager HEIDI PRESS Assistant News Editor DREW LIEBERWITZ Advertising Manager Sabbath Scriptural Selections This Sabbath, the sixth day of lyar, 5738, the following scriptural selections will be read in our synagogues: Pentateuchal portion, Leviticus 19:1-20:27. Prophetical portion, Exeliiel 22:1-19. Candle lighting. Fridya, May 12, 8i24 p.m. VOL. LXXIII, No. 10 Page Four Friday, May 12, 1978 A Time for Rejoicing Israel's Thirtieth Anniversary Thirty years is a brief span in history. For the Jewish people 30 becomes. a numeral of great significance. After two millenia of sufferings, as a recom- pense for 2,000 years of homelessness, the Zionist ideal was fulfilled on the Fifth Day of Iyar, 5708 — May 14, 1948 — with the rebirth of Israel. The 30th anniversary of the state of Is- rael now is occasion for thanksgiving, for recog- nition of the truism that a people with ideals, with a will to live, can not be crushed. The rebirth of Jewish national independence did, indeed, follow a decade of horror during which barbarians aimed at the total annihila- tion of the Jewish people. There were Six Mil- lion casualties, but the adherence to faith and the eventual collapse of the savage forces of Nazism became the symbol of libertarianism that embraced the Zionist ideal. It is because many Jews adopted as their credo the declaration of Theodor Herzl who de- clared that "Zionism is the Sabbath of my life" that what had been a dream became reality. Indeed, it had been a dream but it was a major factor in the daily prayers of faithful Jews who expressed faith in the hope of "Zion redeemed in justice." This was Prophecy, and Prophecy was fulfilled. The road to national sovereignty was a dif- ficult one. It was strewn with obstacles. It took a generation in agony and the sufferers in the Holocaust to unite the Jewish people in support of the great Zionist ideal. Even now the bigots whose minds are akin to the Nazis speak of Zionism as a negation to human decency. There continues the need to erase the prejudices that fail to recognize,in Zionism the acme of liber- tarianism. But this is what it is, and it is not based on militarism or injustice to any one. It seeks justice with Israel's neighbors and it in- sists on Jewry's equal right with other nations to a free role in history. •• • It was difficult to pursue and the continuous efforts to assure the security of the state, the nation and the ideal that gave birth to Israel are confronted with obstacles. That which gave strength to Zionism also gives courage to the defenders of the people of Israel. The celebration of the 30th anniversary of Israel has its joys; it also has its tensions. Israel craves for peace with neighbors who overwhelm her in area, in num- erical strength, in the number of states that are waging war against her in the 22-to-1 contest of being begrudged the very right to exist. This is where the unity of the Jewish people becomes the strongest factor in the need for security for a small nation surrounded by enmities. The faith that is Jewry's becomes the strongest defense for Israel. Therefore, all of the acclaim for Israel demon- strated during the 30th anniversary year must be rooted in a solidarity that gives Israel the courage so vital in a nation's existence. An un- divided Jewry is Israel's most vital defensive weapon. In the process of observing an important an- niversary, Israel and the Jewish people take into account the encouragement Israel has re- ceived from the noble humanitarians in man- kind. The noblest of them all are the Americans. A great friendship has been established be- tween Israel and the United States. This coun- try was the first to give full recognition to Israel in a matter of minutes after the historic Dec- laration of Independence on May 14, 1948. Whatever the confrontations, now with the American government, even the severest critics of Israel keep re-asserting that the friendship between the two peoples is unbreakable, that the American commitment to Israel's security continues as an assurance that Israel will not be abandoned, as she has not been in past crises. This may well be the most heartening ele- ment in Israel's faith in a secure future, akin to the strong links that bind Israel with world Jewry. The American principles ofjustice and of fair play are being demonstrated whenever there are concerns over the enmities that could undermine the security of a nation so very small in comparison with antagonists who would de- stroy her if she abandoned faith and lost confi- dence in her friends. Israel lives by the friend- ship that is America's and with such confidence three decades of independence and political sov- ereignty must be viewed as indestructible. •• • This is, indeed, a time for rejoicing. Despite difficulties in Israel's path, considering all of the obligations Diaspora Jewry must adhere to in the striving for Israel's security, the historic significance of national redemption will always be in evidence in viewing the fulfillment of Prophecy and the realization of the dream of the ages. Two milennia marked by horrors that reached their climax in the Holocaust could not dim the hopes of the Jewish' people that the augury of "Zion redeemed in justice" would be realized. It is in the same spirit of remembering the past and applying it to the future that the Holocaust will not be forgotten and that the redeemed Israel will send forth messages for all time to come that never again will the savageries be permitted; that never will the re- deemed bend their backs with submission-s to tyranny. It is in redeemed Israel and the will to live that the strength of the Jewish people will be re-affirmed in an inerasable eternity. •• • The chief hope which also is the chief obliga- tion of a nation in constant need for vigilance against enemies and security in unending stress is the striving for peace. The contest with unfriendly neighbors is tragic. The aim in all political efforts is for peace. It is a difficult task, with so little friend- ship from most quarters. But the craving for peace remains the dominant need for a secure Israel and a Middle East redeemed from war- mongering. The 30th anniversary of Israel has the one great aspiration: peace! Attaining it there will bring blessings for the entire Middle East and for all mankind. May it come soon! 'Everything But Money' Sam Levenson's Humor As an Adjunct to Philosophy Sam Levenson is the humorist whose wit has gained most acclaim for his philosophic humanism. He pokes fun even at his parents, but it is in good taste and there is always the great moral lesson in what he says. Having said it, he reverts to his initial role as teacher. Indeed, there is a lesson from the teacher in what he writes and what he says on the platform. SAM LEVENSON Having. charmed his audiences, he publishes what he has compiled. His books have become numerous and his paperbacks and hard covered collec- tions of humor have had best-selling status. Simon and Schuster have just re- published his "'Everything But Money." That's where parents and teachers, children and adults, share in the satirical and philosophic testing by a skilled master. No one can take offense at what Sam says. He can look straight through a person's mind and habits and he can diagnose humorously. But it is done kindly and never with bitterness. That is why he is loved for what he writes and what he orates. "Everything But Money" will be welcomed by his students and peers. His mother, who was an object of his kidding, takes no offense. Neither do the others who are the subjects of what is seldom irony. It is in such a process that Sam Levenson emerges as the most acceptable of American humorists. His Jewish themes, like the rest of his accumulated material, is to the point, wholesome, never abusive. That's the way Sam pursues a task that has gained him recognition as a humorist. By Collier Books Kertzer's `Tell Me Rabbi' Reissued as Paperback Rabbi Morris N. Kertzer is a good storyteller. He has compiled scores of stories from personal experiences with his congregants, as a student at the Jewish Theological Seminary, in his travels, in this country, in Israel and in European centers. "Tell Me Rabbi" (Collier Books) is now out in a paperback. It is a collection with an admixture of philosophy. Intermingled in the tales he relates is the psychological as well as the philosophical. Suitable for reading at leisure since nearly every anecdote can be read in a matter of minutes, the popularity of "Tell Me Rabbi" is assured