•-•.• •• ■ .4• •••(11.- • THE JEWISH NEWS lUSPS 275-520) Incorporating The Detroit Jewish Chronicle commencing with the issue of July 20, 1951 Copyright The Jewish News Publishing Co. Member of American Association of English-Jewish Newspapers, National Editorial Association and National Newspaper Association and its Capital Club. 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 $15 a year. PHILIP SLOMOVITZ Editor and Publisher ALAN HITSKY News Editor CARMI M. SLOMOVITZ Business Manager HEIDI PRESS Associate News Editor DREW LIEBERWITZ Advertising Manager .rf. • :I. • - Sabbath Scriptural Selections This Sabbath, the 19th day of lyar, 5741, the following scriptural selections will be read in our synagogues: Pentateuchal portion, Leviticus 26:3-27:34. Prophetical portion, Jeremiah 16:19-17:14. Candle lighting, Friday, May 22, 8:34 p.m. VOL. LXXIX, No. 12 Page Four Friday, May 22, 1981 HUMANISM'S BITTER LESSON Israel Independence Day — Yom HaAtzmaut — celebrated here together with Jewish and friendly Christian communities throughout the world on May 10, provided new lessons in Illiman relations. There were many lessons for that day, and for the months and years to follow. The primary fact relating to the festive occa- sion was the holiday spirit that induced Jews and non-Jews to celebrate the day. It was the response of kinfolk saying to their fellow Jews in Israel that there was a unified people's gratitude for the emergence of a peoplehood able to proclaim the end of homelessness and the right of Jews to be masters of their own destiny. Celebrating with them were Christians with a sense of honor and self-respect joining in a brotherhood that values liberty as a guideline for justice. Perhaps it is the tragedy of mankindthat in the Shakespearean definition the evil that men do lives after them, the good is often inter- red with their bones." There are in mankind those who would perpetuate it. It was evident on Yom HaAtzmaut when haters_ of Jews gathered to mar the festivities. They assembled to propa- gate another Genocide, a revival of the era of the Holocaust. Therefore, those who were witnesses to the Holocaust and all who will not forget its horrors and consequences were outraged. They ex- pressed it, while many felt like merely em- phasizing the contempt for the terrorizing and the brutalizing. The anger was understandable, even though the 30-more-or-less in the group of the inhuman mimicks of Nazism were so insignificant amidst the thousands whose very presence repudiated the advocates of destruction of everything that is decent in mankind. To emphasize the contrast, the elders of Southfield, Mich., should be given the respect and commendation due to responsibly-elected government officials. Due recognition should be given to the protectors of the peace of our- com- munities. The handful who came to disrupt the peace of the community of Jews and Christians would have loved to witness bloodshed. They would have welcomed ruination of the spirit of jubila- tion in the glory of Israel's rebirth. On that score they failed. The celebrants held their heads high; with dignity. They had the support of a responsible U.S. Congressman, William Brodhead; the mayor of the city of Southfield, Donald Fracassi; the directing head of the De- troit Round Table of the National.Conference of Christians and Jews, Charles Benham; a re- spected member of the Michigan State Legisla- ture, Joe Forbes, their many eminent associ- ates. They echoed an interest in fair play and in common decency. There were casualties. Those who remember the Holocaust would not listen to the "Kill more Jews" cries from the insaned protesters, the few who came to destroy. A few were unfortunately hurt in an unnecessary melee. It was regret- table, saddening, upsetting. It was the price one pays for democracy. It is the price of freedom. This costly price must not be misjudged. It is paid with anguish. It does not negate the realism of life in a free land. In this free land there was a celebration and there was a melee. In the long run, that which is the American way prevailed: police prevented rioting and danger to many lives. The commu- nity in which they work provided the attractive Southfield area for a great celebration. The de- cent, the civilized prevailed; the Nazi spirit was sunk in contempt. The latter may always repre- sent a threat to the human free spirit; those who subsist under the "Never Again" ideology will never permit recurrence of the horrors. The celebration of Yom HaAtzmaut marked that spirit of the will to live and to protect the civilized society. This is what emerged from the celebration of the 33rd anniversary of Israel in Southfield. This is what it will undoubtedly al- ways be. Blessed be the 33rd Yom HaAtzmaut. PRAYERS FOR TERRORIZED Another resort to murder, at the Vatican, in- creased the sense of horror with which mankind has been gripped during the years of increased terrorism. The prayers of all faiths, of the peoples of the world, continue to be chanted for the well being of Pope John Paul II. With the prayers go the expressions of thanks that the leader and guide of the hundreds of millions of Catholics is recovering from the as- sassin's bullets, that he will be well and will again lead his people towards a better era de- void of terror. What has occurred in the recent weeks, the assassin's insane intensions, the distorted minds intent upon abusing the privileges granted in a world seeking freedom for nations as well as individuals, awakens the responsible in civilized society to unite against the horrors that are being perpetuated. What has happened is a warning to the gov- ernments of the world never to tolerate any- thing approaching the terror that makes human life valueless at the hands of the sickminded in many areas of the world. Wherever and whenever there are symptoms of the insanities, they must be repelled, re- pudiated, rejected, never granted the slightest accord from a human mind. This must begin at the United Nations where it was unfortunately symptomized on occasions, and in all the parliamentary settings in man- kind. What had occurred in Washington several weeks ago, and now at the Vatican, must. not be repeated. Caution against repetition is imbedded in the prayers that were chanted for President Ronald Reagan and are now repeated for the welfare of Pope John Paul IL *OA Proof That Nazi Horrors Were Known But Not Understood An important study of the news coverage of the Holocaust and of the failure to understand the motivations and results is presented in an important study of "The American Protestant Press and the Nazi Persecution of the Jews." A thorough study of the subject, published under the title "So It Was True" (University of Minnesota Press) was conducted by Associate Professor of Religious Studies Robert W. Ross of the University of Minnesota. Dr. Ross' researched material includes the years of the Nazi terror, 1933 to 1945, and is an all-inclusive document. It shows that the events that occurred were_fully reported. But he indicates how they were either misunderstood or that the extent of the barbarities was not''realized. There is, for example this conclusion to his chapter entitled "1939 to 1942: Toward the Final Solution: Who in America Knew?": - Who in America knew about the Final Solution? The reports in the American Protestant press clearly establish that, as early as 1939 and through the subsequent three years until the end of 1942, the record of the Final Solution for the 'Jewish question' was being written for the readers of that press. To be sure, the editors, writers, and composers of copy for the paid advertisements did not have a full understanding of what they were reporting. They did not know that a formal set of directives and orders had been issued that were, in fact, designed to eliminate all Jews by annihilation in Nazi-occupied Europe.' "They did not know of the dedication of Heydrich, Himmler, Eichmann, Hans Frank, and the Nazi bureaucracy_ as they set about to accomplish the task of exterminating the Jews. "They did know that Hitler, Goering, Goebbels, Himmler and members of the Nazi party hated Jews, that nothing was done by the Nazis to halt the extermination of the Jews, and that one of the first actions of the Nazis upon their conquest of a country was to initiate the persecution of Jews ; establish the Nuremberg decrees as law, and soon after begin to deport Jews to Germany and Poland .. . "But the cumulative evidence had been written. Deportation, labor camps, hostages, Nuremberg decrees, sterilization, disease. Food cards 'and work permits, the lack of which meant deportation, destitution, hunger, massacre, extermination, mass murder, and fi- nally 'poison chambers.' American Protestant Christians knew!' The totally documented study by Prof. Ross is among the most vital studies of the events that occurred during the Hitler era. Dr. Ross comments on the silence. He emphasizes the failure understand what was happening which contributed to the silencc_ stating: "The editors and writers of the American Protestant press tried to deal with the mass extermination of the Jews of Germany and Europe as if it were a part of an ordered, stable, normal world. In fact, it happened in a world gone mad. "In the end, editors and writers seemed unable to cope with somethina as unreal, even unimaginable, as the mass slaughter of millions' b of people, among them six million Jews, in an organized, bureaucratic, planned extermination. They could report this mad- ness, this unreality, but, beyond the reporting and even beyond the expressed shock and horror over the discovery of the death camps, there remains the awful pall that hangs over this entire episode in modern history." Prof. Ross' "So It Was True" rates among the most important books on the subject of the Nazi tyranny. It is an historical document of very great merit.