80 Friday, December 18, 1981 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Stephen Wise: `A Voice That Spoke for Justice' (Continued from Page 2) Fighting Against Impending Holocaust Dr. Urofsky does not ig- nore the charge that was leveled at SSW that he failed to release the facts regarding the mass murder of Jews, that he yielded to Assistant Secretary of State Sumner Welles to refrain from spreading, the facts that were revealed in a tele- gram to Wise from the World Jewish Congress rep- resentative Gerhart Riegner. It took weeks to get confirmation from the State Department. Wise was stymied by anger from men like Max Gottschalk, himself an escapee from Nazism, who viewed the reports about the Nazi bes- tialities as atrocity prop- aganda. Urofsky poses a question and provides the answer when he states: "If Wise had refused (to withhold information con- tained in the Riegner cable) might anything have pre- vented the further massacre of hundreds of thousands of Jews? The answer sadly is probably not. Hitler had de- termined to destroy the Jewish people no matter what the cost and cared no- thing for so-called public opinion." Dr. Urofsky has a defense of the American Jewish community. He refers to the many protest meetings, the sense of outrage expressed, and he also indicates how the refusal to recognize the CHAIM WEIZMANN - Nazi menace persisted in some Christian ranks, stat- ing: "Perhaps no more call- ous response could be found than in the pages of the Christian Century, which while admitting that terrible things were happening to the Jews, questioned 'whether any good purpose is served by the publication of such charges as Dr. Stephen S. Wise gave to the press last week.' The journal disputed Wise's claim that Hitler wanted to kill all the Jews of Po- land, noting that the Polish government-in- exile claimed that only half had been marked for extinction and less than 250,000 actually killed." Dr. Chaim Weizmann 'fi- gures prominently in the Wise biography. Wise was the leading Brandeisist at the 1920 Cleveland conven- tion. He had his differ- ences with the world Zionists. It was when Weizmann was awarded an honorary degree by the Jewish Institute of Relig- . ion, the rabbinical college that was formed and headed by Dr. Wise and later merged with Hebrew Union College, that the Wise- Weizmann rift was re- paired. Dr. Urofsky refers to the biographical writings by Dr. Carl Hermann Voss who also compiled a volume of the letters of SSW. He quotes this tribute to Wise by Dr. Voss: "Carl Voss once said that `Stephen Wise was the most Christian man I ever knew,' meaning that Wise tried to live out in his own life the teachings of brotherhood enunciated by the Galilean Jew two millennia earlier." * * * A Tribute to Stephen Wise There is this noteworthy tribute to Wise with which Dr. Urofsky concludes "A Voice That Spoke for Jus- tice": LOUIS MARSHALL "To measure a man's life is not easy, for surely it is more than just an ac- counting of achieve- ments and failures. Wise was the last of a genera- tion of titans in American Jewish life, people who by the force of their per- sonalities and will shaped the Jewish com- munity into a self- respecting, self-reliant force. "Such individuals are no longer on the scene, foi- American Jewry, like American society, has ma- tured to the point where no one person can exert the in- fluence a Wise or a Brandeis or a Louis Marshall was able to exercise in the ear- lier part of this century. "In large measure, the success of Wise and others in creating the institu- tional structure of Ameri- can Jewish life has shifted the focus away from the charismatic leader toward the organizational man- ager. The inchoate Jewish society in which Wise lived and worked has now become structured, and in the eyes of many observers overly rigid and terribly unin- spired. "What set Wise apart was not his great accomplish- ments but his less pub- licized work as a caring and devoted shepherd of his people. He fought Hitler not only because fascism threatened democracy, but because the Nazis tortured and killed individuals, men and women and children. He opposed Tammany Hall and worked for numerous reforms not only because of the larger principles in- volved, but because of the terrible effect that corrupt politics, stinking tene- ments, and unsafe factories had on people. "For Wise, the Tal- mudic dictum that 'he who saves a single life saves the entire world' had a special meaning, and as Nahum Goldmann said, he not only loved the Jewish people, he loved every individual Jew, and beyond that, every person in need. The thousands of common people who filed past his bier or stood bareheaded in the rain as the funeral cortege passed loved him not for his great acts but for the greatness of spirit he showed in his small deeds. "He was not a saint, a role he would have found rather uncomfortable to play. He had his share of failings, his ego and temper at times got the best of him, and on occa- sion he could be madden- ingly self-righteous, as- sured that he alone knew what was right. But these failings pale to insignifi- cance when measured against, if nothing else, the love and care he lavished so prodigiously on his people. "He fought for decency and democracy,. for the rights not only of the Jewish people but of all men and women. Throughout Stephen Wise's long life and career, he was indeed a voice that spoke for justice." Mrs. Wise was a leader in her own right. She was a charming hostess, an artist, an inspirer of many follow- ers. She was associated with Henrietta Szold in the founding of the Hadassah women's Zionist movement. Judge Polier received much acclaim when she presided over a juvenile court in New York. Upon CARL VOSS her retirement she actively cooperated with her hus- band, Shad Polier, in the leadership of American Jewish Congress affairs. James Waterman Wise, who has become an art col- lector and a prominent fig- ure in the art world, au- thored several books. His historical analysis of the Swastika, which emerged as a symbol of hate, was among the first books deal- ing with the Nazi terror, published in the mid-1930s. —P.S. The Battle Against Assimilation Festival of Hanuka Has Modern Meaning for Diaspora By DVORA WAYSMAN World Zionist Press Service JERUSALEM — We call Hanuka a minor festival. This Feast of Lights is not even mentioned in the Bi- ble, and it celebrates a military event rather more than a miracle. During the eight days of its observance, very little fuss is made — Jews continue their work- day routine; there are no celebrations in the synagoguefew customs as- sociated with it apart from gastronomical ones and the nightly kindling of the menora lights. Why do we still bother to celebrate it at all? Hanuka celebrates the successful revolt of the Jews in the days of the Second Temple against the Greeks who had inherited the Sy- rian part of Alexander the Great's fallen empire. An- tiochus Epiphanes, the tyrannical ruler, tried to force Greek religion and culture on Judea, finding the non-conformist Jews a threat to the state. His op- pression reached its peak in 168 BCE when his army erected an idol in the Tem- ple in Jerusalem, and he forced Jews to sacrifice swine to the Greek gods. This was the final insult that caused the Jews to rise up and revolt, stem- ming the evil tide of events. On 25th Kislev 165 BCE, Judah Maccabee led a victorious band of loyalists and the Temple was recaptured. Eight days were spent in purifying and rededicat- ing it (Hanuka literally means "Dedication"). The Temple service con- tinued for two more cen- turies until the Romans overthrew Jerusalem in 70 CE and again the Temple was destroyed. Hanuka is the most re- cent Jewish festival in terms of origin, and has the least number of observances connected with it. Although it commemorates oppres- sion and subsequent vic- tory, there are countless examples in our history of Jews driving out oppressors and regaining indepen- dence. What makes Hanuka more important? It was Judaism's first en- counter with the danger of assimilation that threatened to wipe out Jewish identity for all time. It is a similar threat which Jews living in the Diaspora are facing today, and the same question which must be asked: can a small minor- ity, dwelling among a diffe- rent culture, take part and contribute to the general society without imitating its customs to such an ex- tent that they are swal- culture superior to their of the cruse of oil that lasted own. lowed up? for eight days instead of one The masses of Jewish It begins by celebrating in the Temple. What we are people today face two major Christmas as well as, or really commemorating is threats to Jewish identity even instead of, Hanuka; our whole history . . . the — one posed by the cruel the New Year rather than Jewish nation that should repressions of the Soviet Rosh Hashana; Easter in- have lasted a brief hour yet Union and similar regimes, stead of Passover; until a has never been consumed, and one posed by the toler- _ Jew sees most of his herit- and still burns brightly. ant, seductively attractive age slipping away as he Israel is a nation again societies of the free Western takes on more and more with its own heritage, its world. It is hard to know gentile culture and obser- own destiny. The miracle of where - the greatest danger vance. It is hardly different Hanuka is not a super- from the Hellenization that natural act. Its symbol is to Judaism lies. was imposed on Jews in the Behind the Iron Cur- time of the Maccabees, ex- the light which emanates tain, Antiochus lives cept that it is a voluntary from God, but the real mira- cle is that because of our again where our faith is act. Torah and. the state of Is- considered to be When we light the superstitious and bar- Hanuka candles, we are rael, the light is still burn- baric. Marxism has re- "proclaiming the miracle" ing brightly despite the sur- rounding darkness. placed God and freedom of worship exists mainly on paper. Jews who wish to practice their religion, study the Hebrew lan- guage or make aliya to Is- rael are persecuted and placed outside the pale, with all their rights and liberties denied them. The opposite is true in the West, yet the danger is gre- ater because the threat is more subtle. There are no restrictions at all on follow- ing the Jewish religion and tradition, yet there is the hidden pressure to imitate what many Jews are Worshipping at the Western Wall during Hanuka seduced into believing is a