THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Exciting Memoirs in 'Decade of Destiny' By ALLEN A. WARSEN "Decade of Destiny" (Con- temporary Books) by Judah L. Graubart and Alice V. Graubart is a collection of memoirs reflecting the era of the Great Depression of the 1930s. The memorialists include Emanuel Celler, Wilbur Cohen, Hannah Haskell Kreindler, Simon Weber and others. Emanuel Celler, Con- gressman from New York (1922-1972) and chairman the House Judiciary ommittee, relates his en- counters with the late Pres- ident Franklin Delano Roosevelt. He describes his opposition to FDR's court- packing bill, fearing its enactment would jeopardize the Supreme Court's inde- pendence. In retaliation, Celler notes, Roosevelt "did every- thing to hurt me." He, , moreover, "quar- reled' with the ident Pres over his refusal to help German Jewish refugees to immigrate to Palestine. Once the President told Celler, .`Stop making waves. I have an agreement with Churchill that we will surreptitiously allow Jews to enter Palestine un- limitedly. So forget about Orthodox Group Hits Berkowitz NEW YORK — The use of the name of the late Or- thodox Jewish scholar, Rabbi Aharon Kotler, by a prominent Conservative rabbi in raising funds for his institutions was denounced by Agudath - Israel of America as "an unconscion- able act of naked exploita- tion of a Torah giant who devoted his life to promot- ing authentic Judaism and combating the spurious teachings of the Conserva- tive movement." The Or- thodox Jewish organization demanded that the fun- draising letter be im- mediately retracted. The controversy erupted over a letter recently circu- lated by the well-known Conservative rabbi, Dr. William Berkowitz, appeal- ing for funds for the Insti- tute of Adult Jewish Studies sponsored by Cong. Bnai Jeshurun, a Conservative . synagogue he heads in Manhattan. The solicitation opens with a paragraph referring to "The late and unforgetta- e Rabbi Aharon Kotler .. . marked that Jewish his- tory conclusively showed that those Jewish areas which were centers of Torah — survived, and those which were not — ended up as footnotes in the history books . . . . For Rabbi Kotler foresaw on the horizon the challenge that would soon knock at American Jewry's door . . . what worried Rabbi Kotler, worries me as well," and the letter concludes "Your act of support will show that Torah learning can flourish and that through the programs' like our Institute, American Jewry will endure . , stirring up trouble. This will be taken care of." The above statement turned out to be untrue. Similarly, Celler "quar- reled" with Cordell Hull, then secretary of state, who rejected his request that more refugees than the quota prescribed be admit- ted to the U.S. He argued that the immigration law did not apply to displaced persons. . Wilbur Cohen, secret- ary of health, education and welfare under Presi- dent Kennedy and at pre- sent dean of the School of Education of the Univer- sity of Michigan, traces the evolution of the So- cial Security system from its inception to its present form. He' asserts that it came about as a result of the economic conditions that then prevailed, and as a means of reducing poverty in the U.S. The memorialist recalls that his first job in Washington in 1934, as a research assistant, was with the Cabinet committee on economic security. His yearly Salary, was less than $1,500. A year later, he be- came assistant to the head of the Social Security Board. He then describes the Townsend plan. It advo- cated that people aged 60 and older be given a pension of $200 a month on condi- tion that they spend it in 30 days. He also recounts Sen. Huey Long's filibuster in the Senate in 1935 that kil- led the first appropriation bill for Social Security. Long demanded that Con- gress pass his "Every Man a King" program. Wilbur Coheh records some of the forces chat, by their attacks on Social Security, inadverte ntly helped elect FDR to a second term in -1936. They inc lud- ed the automobile manufac- turers who placed "stuffers into their workers' checks, saying their wages were going to be cut one percent by Social Security"; the fake photo in the Hearst n ews- papers "showing a chain around a man's neck with his Social Security number; and Republican presi den- tial nominee Alfred Land- son's reference to Social Sec- urity as a "cruel hoax." Wilbur Cohen natur ally is proud of his contribution to Social Security w hich from embryonic beginni ngs became "the single biggest governmental program." Mrs. Hannah Haskell Kreindler, secretary for 15 years to David Dubinsky, president of the ILGWU (Interna- tional Ladies Garment Workers' Union), recalls the economic condition of the working people in 1929; the union's strug- gles with the employers and its unionizing efforts. She relates that during Dubinsky's presidency the union membership had grown from 29,000 to 500,000. Herbert, Lehman, then lieutenant governor of New York State and Fiorello LaGuardia, mayor of New York City, assisted the ILGWU in its struggles. In return, the union supported them throughout their terms of office. Mrs. Kreindler writes that the ILGWU helped found the American Labor Party, but left it when the Communists took it over. The union then was instru- mental in organizing the Liberal Party of New York State "which is still operat- ing and is still a good influ= ence in state politics." Simon Weber, editoI of the Jewish Daily For- ward, remembers Ab- raham Cahan, the news- paper's first and long- time editor, as an able And strong-willed — "some called him tyranical." For -a long time, writes Weber, the Forward staff consisted of 70 local people and 60 correspondents scat- tered throughout the world. In addition, the foremost Yiddish writers worked for the paper, including I.L. Peretz, Sholom Asch, Ab- raham Reisen and I.J. Singer, the late brother of Isaac Bashevis Singer. Sholom Asch, Weber ob- serves, though he was a great writer, was ignorant of Yiddish grammar and syntax. When he started writing his christological novels, Cahan refused to ac- cept them stating that the Forward would never pub- • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •-• lish "missionary works." Weber recalls that in the not too distant past there were three great Yiddish newspapers in New York: the Forward, the Morning Journal and the Tog, plus the Freiheit. 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