2 Friday, June 1, 1919 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Purely Commentary Remarkable NYTimes Editorial: On Capital Punishment Issue On the morning when there were to be two electrocu- tions in Florida, on May 23, before the death penalties were ordered stayed by two judges, the New York Times pub- lished the following as its leading editorial, under the head- ing "Who Gets the Chair?" "There will be less brutality in our society if it is made clear we value human life." So said Gover- nor Graham of Florida as he decreed that John Spenkelink, a drifter who murdered a fellow drif- ter, and Willie Jasper Darden Jr., who killed a merchant during a holdup, should be executed this morning. Whether one or both in fact die, the Governor's dictum is not supportable. No one can say with certainty that killing deters killing. Even in sym- bolic terms, the Governor's words are a kind of gallows humor. What else can "less brutality" mean when used to describe the reactivation of the electric chair after a 15-year lapse? What else can "value human life" mean when a state with 132 people on Death Row, more than any other, starts to clear out the inventory? And as for "made clear," the only thing being clarified is that society values some lives more than others. It would be easier to defend capital punishment if at least it were applied consistently — if the rich or the notable went to the chair. But that rarely happens, as in newly evident from the violence on the streets of San Francisco. A jury has found Dan White guilty only of manslaughter for gunning down a jmayor and a city supervisor. Drifters, even those who get religion, get fried; former county officials, "filled with remorse," get seven years, eight months. Why is there not more remorse about this "sys- tem" cif capital punishment? One reason'is that all its faces are hooded. There is a division of labor and no person or agency — be it prosecutor, jury, judge, governor, state, nation or hangman — need accept responsibility. And from all this diversity of laws, juries and defendants emeges a pattern of who among guilty murderers is condemned: they are all poor. We abhor capital punishment because we be- lieve it is wrong for the state so to take life; be- cause it is applied capriciously even among the clearly guilty; because even juries make mistakes; and because we think that, far from deterring, it creates a tolerance for killing. But no argument against capital punishment is more damning than to find out who is condemned. The way to value human life, Governor Graham, is to do This is too powerful a message to be addressed only to the readers of the NYTimes. Was it a lack of judicial courage that failed to prevent the execution of one of the convicted in Florida last Friday? Perhaps murder by the state — this is how an execution must be judged — will revive concern sufficiently to pre- vent continued exacting of the death penalty for crime anywhere in this land that is steeped in human ideals. Murder in any form must be declared impermissible. Sentiment in support of the death penalty is growing. It is understandable. Crimes are horrendous. The inhuman acts are multiplying so rapidly that it is easy to understand why many people believe that the extremest punishment for crimes will deter others from re-enacting them. But even if the criminals were really to experience fear and if some were to be deterred from committing crimes, it is yet to be proven that capital punishment is the answer to the inhumanities that have become universal. On the con- trary, the social scientists lean toward contrary conclusions from their studies on the subject There remains the human factor, the question whether the state is suddenly to become the criminal. Jewish law, the Hebraic tradition, militates against the death penalty. It remains at the center of the arguments relating to crime: The NYTimes excellently defined it editorially. The quoted editorial merits a Pulitzer Prize. It has the Human Prize. . West Germany at 30: The Guilt and the Atonement Observing the 30th anniversary of the West German Republic, historians delving into the past observe that the West German state is now so solidly established that it has outlived the Weimar Republic, Hitler's rule and the prophets of doom Who may have doubted the solidity that had been planned for the Germans in the post-Hitler era. A year younger than the state of Israel, West Germany commenced with a sense of guilt. Under the leadership of Konrad Adenauer, there were negotiations for reparations, Adenauer leaning for decisions upon Dr. Nahum Goldmann. The compensations included the personal repa- rations to tens of thousands and the assistance that was Capital Punishment and the Impermissible Crime of Resorting to the Death Penalty . . . West Germany's 30th Anniversary and Memory of Genocide . . . Horrors Emanating from Argentina provided for Israel's industrial needs. The Adenauer role in the German atonement for guilt has gained a significant place in Jewish and world history. He was his nation's leader in the years when the undeni- able guilt hung heavy on every German. Chancellor Adenauer utilized every occasion to express his feelings to the Jews of Germany and the Jews of the world. He sought in every possible way to correct the errors of his people under Nazism, to repair the damage wherever he could. The accompanying photograph shows him speaking at a synagogue that was being consecrated in Germany in the early 1950s, replacing one that was destroyed in Cologne. lif/A111WA r 'r,i vaiyakvao AVAWAIIIIIIA11111FAINU WAftrAVA. TA IVA I k VA I Li • valvAlLva Adenauer, like most of his associates, was anti-Nazi. He was in hiding from the Hitler persecutors whose fate was sealed in their recdrds from 1933 until the end of Nazism. He credited Jews with having saved his life. He had faith that the Hitler poison could not germinate again. It became evident in recent years that he was over- confident. The neo-Nazis, no matter how few in number, are in evidence and are a problem to the German govern- ment. The election of Karl Carstens as president of West Germany marked a setback in the remorse over the Nazi crimes. Carstens will be able to justify his having been de-Nazified only with most serious efforts to stem whatever tides of neo-Nazism may continue to emerge in the country of_which he will be the nominal head. The aim of German officials to keep the Nazi spirit at a low ebb is apparent. While the Nazi virus cannot be totally eliminated, every effort is made to prevent its spread, as evidenced in the ban on eight books and recordings for glorifying the Nazi regime. It included Nazi propaganda photographs found in candy boxes. According to the New York Times: The books prohibited for sale to minors in- cluded "The Fraud of the Century," which implies that reports of the Nazi genocide were fabricated, and "Dictatorship, War, Destroyed Homeland tographs produced by 1933-1945," which has pho the Nazi Propaganda Ministry. Among the re- cords banned were speeches by Hitler and by Joseph Goebbels, the Propaganda Minister. The West German restriction on sale to minors does not prevent the sale to adults, but it prohibits manufacturers and others from advertising or displaying the material, thus achieving the same purpose. On the 30th anniversary of West Germany the record of barbarism under NaZism is not forgotten and will not be erased. The pragmatic Germans know better than to hide the facts and to ask either total_ forgiveness or forgetful- ness. The aim of advancing the results of the atonement remains uppermost and those who strive for it gain respect for,,,sincerity when they strive to eliminate every vestige of hatred. In that spirit the good will sought by the Germans of the post-Hitler era becomes a major factor in the Jewish — Israel — West German and' global relations. The Argentinian Horrors: Is There Hope for Solution? If ever there was doubt abouTt the reported persecution of political minorities who differ with the existing govern- ment in Argentina, they vanished with the publication of the two articles by John B. Oakes, former senior editor of the New York Times, analyzing the Argentinian situation. His articles on the NYTimes Op-Ed pages shock the imagi- nation. They create a chill in the mind of anyone who has a human spark and they puzzle the reader. Why would any- one seeking to protect his powers over a great country resort to the cruelties described? Oakes' accumulated facts about the existing horrors in a great South American country may have been sum- marized in the opening paragraphs of his second article in which he stated: BUENOS AIRES — As he left his apartment on a By Philip Slomovitz recent morning, the young man told his wife that he was going down the street on a brief errand and would soon return. When he failed to reap- pear after several hours, his wife went to the local police station to see if there had been an accident. Neither she nor her husband has been seen or heard from since. This is life in Argentina today. This young couple may yet turn up — after the usual questioning under torture — among the nearly 3,000 political prisoner's suspected by the secret police of "ideological subversion" and known to be held without charges, without trial, without hope of release except at discretion of the President. But, more likely, they will have already joined the lengthening lists of the "disappeared." These are the victims — now mostly presumed dead — of that secret and savage war of terror against ter- rorism that has already cost the lives of 5,000 to 15,000 people and has poisoned Argentine politi- cal life for at least the past three years. Having beaten the urban and rural guerrillas at their own game and virtually destroyed them by their methods, the army's clandestine forces gradually widened their counter-terrorist net in ever-increasing circles. Oakes enumerated the various categories of endangered professionals and merchants who are subject to arrest on the slightest suspicions and he comments: "These are the labor leaders, lawyers, doctors, social workers, in- tellectuals, students suspected of any leanings — or poten- tial leanings — towards the left. And if they happen to be Jewish so much the worse for them." This explains everything. The entire procedure is not anti-Semitic. It is anti-human. Anyone suspected of bef- riending a radical, of entertaining views that are contra- government may as well bid goodbye to his freedom. The New York Times, after publishing these articles, commented upon them editorially under the heading "The Mad Doctors of Argentina,"- and stated: The Argentine tragedy exposes again the to- talitarian delusion that a society can be made bet- ter by reshaping from above. Disgusted by the tendency of the people to elect Peronist govern- ments and trade union leaders, the military de- cided on an "operation" to cut the Peronist dis- ease out of the body politic. Once started, they have not known how to stop. To insure that the cancer won't recur, they now seek, like mad doc- tors, to cut out all politics and to eliminate all who doubt that the operation is necessary. And so, month by month, a society so rich in productive capacity and human creativity pro- ceeds with its own destruction. Listen again to the mother of a "disappeared" couple, quoted by John Oakes: "The most capable and most re- nowned people become used to keeping quiet. And while they do so, the most unscrupulous, arrogant, bloodthirsty and cowardly become .. . the masters." There is horror in many places. The barbarism that - rules Iran can be equated only with the extremest cases of religious fanaticism in the Middle Ages. In Argentina, it is politics of the right, akin to the leftism of the Soviet Union. Whence cometh help? Even time does not resolve some of the world ills, if the inhuman terror could embrace Argentina in an age of enlightenment. Yeshiva University Event: Impressive Cast of Personae A fund-raising project often brings to the fore interest- ing personalities. This is the case this year with the annual Yeshiva University dinner. Since Sadie and Irwin Cohn are to be the honorees, the initial objective already attains special interest. This is couple with an enviable background for services to the loci, community and assistance to the national and overseas causes. They are not newcomers in the ranks of Yeshiva University. They have been on the important school's led- gers as generous givers for many years. The chairmanship of Bill Berman adds merit to the event. He is a national figure in the ranks of the Council of Jewish Federations, the American Association for Jewish Education and other movements. As a past president of the Detroit Jewish Welfare Federation and as an active leader in the United Hebrew Schobls, his role is well known. It is the guest speaker who adds glory to an annual event here. Morris Abram is a former president of the American Jewish Committee. He is one of the best known lawyers in the country. As a native Georgian he had been close to the important families in that state and became an ally of President Jimmy Carter. He has shown courage when he needed to differ with the President. He is an admired leader whose appearance here adds importance to the cause of Yeshiva University.