102 Friday, September 9, 1983 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Scholar Reviving Lewisohn's Writings By BEN GALLOB ings. Lewisohn edited the Collection and wrote a lengthy introduction which Lainoff said "is one of the best studies of Herzl ever done." (Copyright 1983, JTA, INnc.) Neglect by modern readers and critics of some of the writings of Ludwig Lewisohn, a pioneering 20th Century American Jewish writer, "do not de- serve the neglect they have received" from today's cri- tics and readers, in the view of a Yeshiva University pro- fessor of English. Dr. Seymour Lainoff, Ab- raham Wouk Family Pro- fessor of English, has writ- ten a book on Lewisohn for the Twayne United States Authors Series. Lainoff said he had unearthed some of Lewisohn's almost forgot- ten writing and he called on readers to pay attention again to Lewisohn. He said Lewisohn was one of the first writers to declare that American Jews should pro- tect themselves from melt- ing into mainstream American society. The book's title is "Ludwig Lewisohn." Lainoff said that when he decided to take an in-depth look at Lewisohn's work, he started "with a lot of an- tagonism. The stigma at- tached to Lewisohn was un- pleasant." Lewisohn, who died in 1955 after producing more than 40 books, includ- ing novels, literary and dramatic criticism, au- tobiographies and polemi- cal books about Israel, had had "a bad press" during much of his career, Lainoff said. Lewisohn's three mar- riages and his 16-year extra-marital relation- ship with a young singer had made him a sensa- tional newspaper per- sonality. Many of his cri- tics labeled him a neuro- tic, Lainoff said. While most of Lewisohn's work is out of print, one book that is still in print is "The Island Within," Lewisohn's fictional attack on Jews who assimilate. Lainoff declared that "the main theme" of Lewisohn's fiction "is the self- destruction wrought by the loss of one's religious iden- tity." The scholar said that theme is particularly sur- prising in light of the fact LUDWIG LEWISOHN that Lewisohn came from a very assimilated back- ground. Born in Berlin in 1883, he emigrated with his parents to the United States in 1890. They then settled in Charleston and there Lewisohn grew up in the Methodist church. It was not until he faced anti- Semitism while studying for a graduate degree at New York's Columbia Uni- versity that Lewisohn began to think of himself as a Jew. When he died, the Jewish Post eulogized him as "the first great American liter- ary spokesman for the. Zionist movement." He had been advocating a Jewish state in Palestine since 1925, when he published "Israel," and he served for a time as editor of "New Palestine," a publication of the Zionist Organization of America. Lewisohn also wrote "Theodor Herzl: A Por- trait for This Age," a col- lection of Herzl's writ- Lainoff thinks one of Lewisohn's best books is a novel, "The Case of Mr. Crump," now out of print. He called the novel, about a man struggling in an un- happy marriage, an "excel- lent study. It is ugly and painful but it is also truth- ful. It is one of the best American novels of the 1920s" which "certainly de- serves better than its pre- sent oblivion." When Lewisohn is re- membered now at all, Lainoff said, he is often re- membered as a neurotic writer, adding that "I want to re-introduce what is of value in his work and make people see him more objec- tively and accept him more positively." Best wishes for a happy, healthy New Year MRS. SHULA GOLDOFTAS We wi- sh our family and friends a very healthy, happy and prosperous New Year We wish our family and friends a very healthy, happy and prosperous New Year. PETER & SHIRLYE HELMAN & FAMILY We wish our family and friends a very healthy, happy and prosperous New . Year HELEN & HENRY MALTER & FAMILIES We wish our family and friends a very healthy, happy and prosperous New Year REBECCA, BYRON & JANICE LIEBERWITZ LILLIAN & SEYMOUR GALLANT RITA & IRVING LIPSKY THE RADOMER AID SOCIETY A HEALTHY & HAPPY NEW YEAR WISH ALL THEIR FRIENDS Wish all their members and friends a Happy, Healthy and Prosperous New Year Nate Wolok, President Oscar Tuttleman & Helen Greenberg, Vice Presidents Rita Ager, Honorary Vice President • 1111111111iFFIWT111111111 May the coming year be one filled with health, happiness and prosperity for all our friends and family. NATHAN GOLDIN To All Our Relatives and Friends, Our wish for a year filled with happiness, health and prosperity ASA & SARA SHAPIRO & SONS Romania's Jews BUCHAREST There are approximately 30,000 Jews left in Romania, which had a pre-war, Jewish popu- lation of 800,000. Almost half of Romania's remaining Jews live in Bucharest. Although the bulk of the Jewish popula- tion are elderly survivors of the Holocaust, the Ameri- can Jewish Joint Distribu- tion Committee reports that Jewish homes for the aged in Romania have a total capacity of 446. Wishing a happy, healthy and prosperous New Year to all our friends May Real Peace Come to Israel! Herzog Sworn in at Knesset • Chaim Herzog, right, is sworn in in May, 1983 as Israel's sixth president at the Knesset. Pictured with him, are, from left: former President Yitzhak Navon and Knesset speaker Menaheni Savidor. Mr. and Mrs. Max Stollman and Family Philip Stollman and Family