THE JEWISH NEWS USPS 275 520) Incorporating The Detroit Jewish Chronicle commencing with the issue of July 20, 1951 Member American Association of English-Jewish Newspapers, Michigan Press Association, National Editorial Association Published every Friday by The . Jewish News Publishing Co., 17515 W. Nine Mile, Suite 865, Southfield, Mich. 48075 Postmaster: Send address changes to The Jewish News, 17515 W. Nine Mile, Suite 865, Southfield, Mich. 48075 Second-Class Postage Paid at Southfield, Michigan and Additional Mailing Offices. Subscription $12 a year. PHILIP SLOMOVITZ Editor and Publisher ALAN HITSKY News Editor CARMI M. SLOMOVITZ Business Manager HEIDI PRESS Assistant News Editor DREW LIEBERWITZ Advertising Manager Sabbath Scriptural Selections This Sabbath, the seventh day of Sivan, 5739, is the second day of Shavuot and the following scriptural selections will be read in our synagogues: Pentateuchal portion, Deuteronomy 15:19-16:17, Numbers 28:26-31. Prophetical portion, Habbakuk 3:1-19. Candle lighting, Friday, June 1, 8:43 p.m. Page Four VOL. LXXV, No. 13 Friday, June 1, 1979 THE TEN WORDS Shavuot has a basic message to the festival's celebrants and to humanity. As the Festival of the Giving of the Law, it is dominated by the Decalogue, the Ten Com- mandments. Therefore, the message is not for the Jews alone but for those who now share in having received the Ten Sacred Words, the Decalogue which commands people to be human. Therefore, in the giving there also is the obli- gation of the taking and accepting. Perhaps the gravest of problems is in the fail- ure to achieve the latter. Human beings have been given a code of laws; a guide for honorable living, to respect human values. The Ten Words carry responsibility to make people aware of life's values, to respect the dig- nity of man. They call for a society that abhors `If God Lets Me Live' terror and murder. It is in such a society that anything responsible for the sacrifice of life, under any circumstances, would be deplored and could not even be atoned for. If the laws had not been broken constantly there might be lesser reason for emphasis on Shavuot as a major festival for Jews, as a carrier of a message for moral and human values to humanity. - In all these aspects there is the guidance in the sacred text, the Decalogue, that has become the property of mankind. It demands adherence to the human_ and values that retain the respect of man- an- kind. They were given and there is the expected acceptance. In the taking lies as much glory as in the giving. Ktav-Published 'Perspectives' Rabbi Wolfe Kelman Honored by Colleagues in 'Festschrift' Rabbi Wolfe Kelman, executive director of the Rabbinical As- sembly, the representative movement of Conservative Judaism, is honored in an impressive volume, "Perspectives on Jews and Judaism" (Ktav). The Conservative leader was accorded special honors at the Rab- binical Assembly convention in 1975 on the occasion of his 25th anniversary as directing head of the movement, and the texts of the major addresses are included in this volume. Published as a festschrift, the traditional form of recognizing scholarship, the volume is filled with the writings of some of the most distinguished religious leaders in America. will be God, too, who will raise us up again. If we The volume was edited by Rabbi Arthur A. Chiel and it corn- bear all this suffering and if there are still Jews mences appropriately with a personal tribute to Rabbi Kelman by the left, when it is over, then Jews, instead of being president of the Jewish Theological Seminary of America, Dr. Gerson doomed, will be held up as an example. Who D. Cohen. Indicative of the scholarly aspects of knows, it might even be our religion from which the essays is the one by one of Ameri- the world and all peoples learn good, and for can Jewry's most noted scholars, Dr. that reason and that reason only do we have to Jacob B. -Agus, on the subject suffer now. We can never become just Nether- "Perspectives for the Study of the Book landers, or just English, or representatives of of Acts." "Atheism as a Religious _ any country for that matter, we will always Phenomenon" by Rabbi Ben-Zion remain Jews, but we want to, too .. . Bokser indicates the multifaceted as- "If God lets me live, I shall attain more than pects of the studies pursued and evaluated in this festschrift. Mummy ever has done, I shall not remain in- The editor of the volume, Rabbi significant, I shall work in the world and for Chiel, also authored the essay "Heb- mankind! raic Allusions in Lescarbot." "And now I know that first and foremost I Dr. Louis Finkelstein is the author of the article "The Origin and De- shall require courage and cheerfulness!" velopment of the Qedushah." History will record this, as part of the deeply Much interest attaches also to the moving Anne Frank record of courage and faith, essay "Psychoanalytic Insights That among the most challenging of documents to the RABBI KELMAN Spark Details of the Hasidim" by conscience of man. It is not merely an expres- Rabbi S. Michael Gelber. sion of faith: it is an indictment of indecency and Noteworthy also, because he is the son of the late Dr. Louis injustice, of the threats to human lives by the Ginzberg, who authored the great work, "Legends of the Jews," the beasts who disgraced the German name and essay by Dr. Eli Ginzberg, "The Seminary Family: A View From My , who had turned themselves into beasts. Parents' Home" will be read with great interest. Noteworthy also is Dr. Nahum Goldmann's article "Israel's Cul- They were not only the Germans. The col- tural Mission." laborating peoples, many of them in Holland, There is a spirit of universality in this volume in the attention became allies of the insaned in whom not a given to the works of Yiddish, as expressed in the Yiddish poems by spark of humanity was left during the era of the eminent Yiddish novelist, Chaim Grade, entitled "Poems." The mass murders of more than 11,000,000, half of fact that the poems are presented in Yiddish adds significance to the editorial wisdom in the preparation of this book. them Jews. The late Dr. Abraham Joshua Heschel is represented in this Therefore, that which is a document of faith voluine with an essay "Rabbi Pinhas of Kpretz and the History of also becomes an instrument for justice, a chal- lenge to the human mind never again to permit Poland." It was translated by Rabbi Samuel H. Dresner. Elie Wiesel authored the essay "The Tale of a Nigun." anything like what had happened to Anne There are essays on Zionism and Conservative Judaism and Frank to recur. several detailed accounts about historic personalities and important It is part of the Holocaust story and it asserts Jewish occurrences. ' to the beasts who give the appearance of hu- In its totality, "Perspectives on Jews and Judaism" is an enrich- mans that what had occurred under the ungodly ment of scholastic research. It is a tribute to Dr. Kelman, to his will never be permitted recurrence. This is what associates who undertook the task of creating the festschrift and the stems forth from the Anne Frank message, re- Rabbinical Assembly for having sponsored the publishing of such an impressive collection of essays. called on the 50th anniversary of her birth. ANNE FRANIPS FAITH Anne Frank would have been 50 on June 12. The story of this young girl, whose diary is among the indestructible documents of a young girl in hiding from the Nazis, continues to move even the most hard-hearted into deep emotion about the inhumanity of man to man and the terror that affected mankind in the 1930s and 1940s. Born in Germany in 1929, her family moved to Holland in 1933. When the Germans occupied Holland, she and her family went into hiding in an attic in Amsterdam and they survived the Nazi threat until 1944 when she was taken to Bergen Belsen and died in that concentration camp in March 1945. Her diary, which was found in the rubble of the attic in Amsterdam after the collapse of the Nazi regime, was written from 1942 to 1944. She and the group in hiding with her were detected and sent to concentration camps in the latter year. Only her father survived. He found and gathered for publication his daughter's dairy which has become historic in the litera- ture about the period of the Nazi threat to the world. "Anne Frank: Diary" includes many memor- able passages. Among the most moving is this one, "If God Lets Me Live . ." "We have been pointedly reminded that we are in hiding, that we are Jews in chains, chained to one spot, without any rights, but with a thousand duties. We Jews mustn't show out feelings, must be brave and strong, must accept all inconveniences and not grumble, must do what is within our power and trust in God. Sometime this terrible war will be over. Surely the time will come when we are people again, and not just Jews. "Who has inflicted this upon us? Who has made us Jews different from all other people? Who has allowed us to suffer so terribly up till now? It is God that has made us as we are, but it ,