THE JEWISH NEWS (USPS 275-520) Incorporating The Detroit Jewish Chronicle commencing with the issue of July 20, 1951 c Copyright (a) 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 Sabbath Scriptural Selections This Sabbath, the 27th day of Heshvan, 5743, the following scriptural selections will be read in our synagogues: Pentateuchal portion, Genesis 23:1-25:18. Prophetical portion, I Kings 1:1-31. Tuesday and Wednesday, Rosh Hodesh Kislev, Numbers 28:1-15. Candlelighting, Friday, Nov. 12, 4:55 p.m. TOL. LXXXII, No. 11 Page Four Friday, Nov. 12, 1982 BOOK FAIR: A FESTIVAL Valuable opportunities for study of American as well as world occurrences as they affect Jewish life are provided in the subject matter covered in the more than a score of lectures to be heard during Book Fair, which commences at the Jewish Community Center this Saturday wening. As the opening address by Alan M. Der- 3howitz• indicates, the discussions will com- nence with a review of efforts for vigilance igainst anti-Semitism, a movement in which he guest speaker plays an important part. Subsequent lectures will deal with the chal- enges inherent in the Middle East struggles as 4,01 as the political and social issues involved in • he American way of life as it is confronted by the Jewish communities. Because of the extent of the contents of an mportant undertaking, revolving around )ooks and their authors, Book Fair retains its - cultural status. And because of the impressive cooperative spirit, as indicated in the long list of participating organizations, Book Fair has be- come a festival for Metropolitan Detroit Jewry. With more than 20 visiting authors and some 80 cooperating organizations popularizing the period of more than a week of dedication to a major communal undertaking, Book Fair re- tains its cultural significance. It is at the same time a significant event with social impressive- ness. Perhaps the ingathering of so many authors is overpowering. Some of the visiting writers could have addressed more than a single event and might have covered a larger area of partici- pation with a reduced staff. Nevertheless, the totality of it is impressive and evidences a wholesome approach to cultural needs in this community. Book Fair is a festival to be cherished. AN INQUIRY'S HUMILIATORS As in many other developing factors in a crisis like the one that affected Israel and the entire Middle East since the early June military ac- tion to end the PLO menace to the people of Israel, the search for the sensational caused havoc. What Israel does through investigating )rocesses is primarily that nation's responsibil- ity, with a world's interest watching the results which may prove to be a guidance for actions by other nations. Previous Israeli concerns with moral issues, • with human conduct, with responsibilities for the advancement of democratic ideals, remain a compact tribute to a new nation whose ideals are as old as mankind itself as a legacy from valued traditions. It is the handicap that comes from judging and prejudging- from the outside that is menacing to good-will among all peoples. From every available source in the Middle East there now emerges a single impressive fact which must be viewed as a collective indictment of irresponsible judging aimed at a vituperative attitude toward Israel. It is the revealing fact of a guilt charged to Israel that is attributable only to the vengeful in a tragically-divided Lebanese community. The very attitude of the new president of Lebanon, who now demands dictatorial power, may be at the root of a situation marked by prejudices which may prove hard to erase. Lebanon itself is exemplary. A peace pact be- tween Israel and Lebanon, the aspiration of Is- rael Prime Minister Menahem Begin, would have been the beginning of a roadway toward amity which might induce the participation of King Hussein of Jordan. But the new leadership •of Lebanon appears to be courting anew Arab League devotions, and that must prolong the wait for possibilities for peace. Israel will surely emerge vindicated, in most of the recent acts, in the marshalling of facts by the commission of inquiry. But the hope for an immediate peace between Israel and her neighbors appears as remote as ever. The con- fusing of data, especially attributable to the media, is not helpful. An American Jewish Committee analysis contends that there was less prejudices editorially in newspapers than on radio and TV. That's a bit of an encourage- ment, but not enough. The hatred for Begin is more harmful than all the military actions, and that's hard to erase. In many respects, there is humiliation of the truthful in what has occurred. The hope for peace is paramount in Israel. The aspiration is for an elimination of hatreds between peoples. World public opinion could, as it must, contrib- ute pragmatically toward that end. It doesn't. ISRAEL BONDS OBJECTIVES Consistent support for Israel, in the encouragement given to tasks for the advance- ment of Israel's economic development, was in evidence again at a dinner meeting at which national and local leaders recognized the con- tributions to the labor movement by Harry Les- ter. The interracial and interreligious sponsor- ship of the event added credence to the spirit that animates tasks for the encouragement of democratic principles abroad as well as here. Israel, as a democratic nation, keeps receiving cooperation from the labor movements in all categories. The labor alliance with Israel gave emphasis to the basic aims of the Israel Bonds projects. They are directed towards involving workers of all faiths in a mutual record for economic de- velopment to aid Jews and non-Jews in Israel. They are strictly separated from the military objectives of Israel and they typify the amity that must lead to peaceful accords among all peoples. It is this respect that an American labor continuity of friendship for and with Is- rael registers a universal acclaim for liberty and peace, wherever it may be advocated in a world craving for peace. JTA Edited by Neugroschel The Shtetl' Universality Is Anthologically Depicted Shtetl- life and shtetl literature, the personalities involved, the difficulties that marked the experiences of a people that rose spiritu- ally to great heights despite oppressive conditions — these combine into symbols that have elevated the Jewries who represented the era into humanity's high ranks. Because the shtetl is a symbol of the past, it has become a subject of deep interest. Whatever is written about it becomes a matter of historic significance. Therefore, a volume specifically devoted to it assumes a role of special value. "The Shtetl" (G.P. Putnam's Sons) is a compilation of essays by authoritative writers. The book, "A Creative Anthology of Jewish Life in Eastern Europe," was translated and edited by Joachim Neug- roschel. Thorough is this collective, effort that includes all aspects in the life of Jews in what is described as the Yiddish term for a small town, as the editor also notes in defining shtetl as "a word that has passed sentimentally into English, describing the small towns in which Jews lived in Eastern Europe for centuries." Neugroschel states at the outset that there is more than one type of shtetl, that they differ in many respects. This is how he explains the differing conditions: "But despite the features common to all Eastern European Jews, no two shtetls were truly alike. The personal and public dynamics, the interrelations with non-Jews, the climate, the economics, the politics, even the dialect of Yiddish and the pronunciation of Hebrew varied sufficiently to form sharp differences, often contraditions — a crazy quilt through time and space. For we are speaking of an enormous geographical area, and we are speaking of centuries of Jewish his- tory." In this volume the compilers dealt with the religious life, with the two languages in use — Yiddish for the vernacular, Hebrew for prayers, the literary wealth, the relations with non-Jews. Because of the personal experiences of many of the authors of the essays included in "The Shtetl," they are especially noteworthy. There is a defined universality in shtetl life and the editor's evalua- tive concluding comment declares: "The 19th Century brought the disruption of shtetl life. The 20th Century brought its destruction and the end of a civilization. The people of the shtetl took up permanent abode in the literature created about them. They were like Rilke's flamingos: They entered one by one into imagination." The influence of the Hasidic movement and the role of the Baal Shem Tov; the works of Mendele Mocher Seforim and their portrayal of the life of Jews in the shtetl, all add invaluably to the value of this collective effort. Included are excerpts from the writings of Sholom Aleichem, Avrom Reyzen, Jacob Ben-Isaac Ashkenazi, Rabbi Nachman of Bratslav, Yisroel Aksenfeld, Isaac Leib Peretz, Mendele, Dovid Bergelson, Lamed Shapiro, Y. M. Weissenberg, Peretz Markish, Fishel Bimko, Moyshe Isulbak and Der Nister. There is a totality of this anthology that will enlighten those introduced to the shtetl as well as those well-versed in its historic importance. J