2 Friday,tknuaryt24, 1986 THE DETROITiJEWISHi NEWS PURELY COMMENTARY PHILIP SLOMOVITZ Watchman, What Of The Night? 71 1,617:0 1j:t Isaiah 21:11 A noteworthy Isaiahan prophetic as- sertion was reiterated by two of the most distinguished world Jewish personalities during the past six decades. Over a lapse of 62 years, "Watchman, what of the night?" was utilized, first by Israel Zangwill in 1923 and by Elie Wiesel at the commencement of the new year 1986. Israel Zangwill identified Isaiah as the source. Wiesel didn't. It would have been so much more powerful if Elie Wiesel had given the source. Yet the editor of the Op-Ed Page of the New York Times, in its issue of Jan. 5, emphasized a special brief essay by Elie Wiesel, entitled "Welcoming 1986," by placing it in a two-column boxed space. The spirit of Isaiah nevertheless was retained by Wiesel when he wrote: Watchman, what of the night? Years come and go. Prayers are offered and forgotten, resolutions made and repudiated. Will there now be an end to violence? Will fear be vanquished and hate dis- armed? Will death yield to hu- manity and hope? In an equally impressive conclusion to his article, Wiesel added this submis- sion to hope with a dependence on Isaiah's "Watchman, what of the night?": Watchman, what of the night? Humankind needs peace more than ever, or it has, more than ever, been saturated with vio- lence and war. Now the entire planet is in danger. But peace is not God's gift to His creatures. It is our gift — to each other. Israel Zangwill based a famous speech he delivered before the American Jewish Congress in Carnegie Hall, New York, Oct. 14, 1923 on the Isaiah asser- tion. The text of that address was re- printed by the American Je\vish_ Con- gress under the title "Watchman What of the Night?" It was an address that served to analyze existing world condi- tions and the status of world Jewry in the post-World War I era. Zangwill indicated when he com- menced that historic speech that he rec- ognized the assignment that had just been given him as intended "to give a summary of the Jewish situation such as (Max) Nordau supplied at the Zionist Congresses." It was a most appropriate description of the role he was invited to play as a distinguisiried guest of Ameri- can Jewry- with the message of a guest from British Jewry. Zangwill's summation of world Jew- ry's status in the first two decades of the century was truly in the Max Nordau style of the end of the last and the be- ginning of this century. It probed Jew- ry's status and was truly Zionistic, al- though it was uttered by the founder and for years propagator of the Jewish Ter- ritorial \ Moyement. Zangwill emerged in those earry4\ years as an adherent of the later views of David Ben-Gurion that a true Zionist must live in the Jewish Homeland, and he stated in that famous speech that his wife was an even stronger adherent of that view. Like Nordau, Zangwill was critical of Jewish leadership. He referred to those who stood in the way of Jewish self-redemption, of Zionism, as the Grand Dukes. He,was firm, although less blunt than Nordau who, referring to Jewish leadership of that time, which shunned, resisted, even sought to undermine the Zionist effort, was never- theless Jewish when it came to cuisine. T T : 1 1T T 1tT, `11X•4 :5/77111i -17j71 rtt 'Ati T 1•• • V. T: - • • • JT Elie Wiesel Israel Zangwill They loved Jewish food in their ritualis- tic fashion and Nordau said of thenr,Sie crushing burdens. Herzl alluded to Zangwill in the terms of "der guter Zangvvill." I present to the American Jewish Congress "der guter Zangwill." Zangwill took into account the American problems as well as the Jewish. He dealt with the views of the then popular Arthur Brisbane and analyzed the issues at hand. He exposed the inhumanities of the Ku Klux, Klan. His warnings vis-a-vis the blacks are as relevant today. The following is a lengthy but vitally important Zangwil- lian declaration well to take into account at this time: Here, for once, you may be legitimately more American than the Americans. For the great American ideals are Jewish ideals, and their destruction would be more tragic for the world than even the destruction of the Jews. Bryce, in his great work on your Commonwealth, applies to your country Dante's famous simile of the lampbearer whose lamp guides and lights others over the road she has passed ahead. But alas! the lamp, after cheering all humanity with the radiance of a nobler world, threatens to leave a darkness that will be only the more tragi- cally and tangibly felt; and in- stead of that great vision of world peace which President Wilson lit up for us, America's lamp now shows only her own road veering back to the old malarious swamps of European nationalism — nationalism in that fanatical form which made a Balkan patriot recently lament that there was no chance for his Christian country unless its Jews and Moslems were killed off. In this backward course your Ku Klux Klan has not yet arrived at full European blood-thirstiness, but its falsification of American history and its bigoted campaign menace the America of Washing- ton and Lincoln with a reversion to the medieval which Europe has never really shaken off. Prof. James Taft hatfield has amusingly shown that the whole idea of the Ku Klux Klan is ulti- mately of German aspiration, coming from Goethe through Walter Scott. you must fight this sind auch Juden? Sie sind bauch-juden! — "Are they also Jews? They are stomach Jews!" Zangwill also was the prophet for man4ind in his "Watchman, what of the nightr–' Zangwill's speech of 63 years ago was advice to America to take "the right turn" while Europe was taking the wrong one. He stated that the spirit of America, as he interpreted it, was to range "with those who believe not in Might but in Right." Thereupon Zangwill, concluding his speech, turned to the Prophet Isaiah: When Isaiah asks "Watch- man, what of the night?" there is a wonderful answer, "The morn- ing cometh and also the night." Nothing in human history is fi- nally secured. In every age the fight must be renewed. The morning cometh but also the night. It may be, therefore, that here, too, the wave of Christian madness will spread from the shambles of Europe. But for God's sake stand openly and as- sertively for something worth dying for. That you will find will make life worth living, and if die you must, go down like your forefathers, flag in hand. It is important to note that Dr. Stephen S. Wise, who really was the founder of the World Jewish Congress, commented on an introduction to Zangwill that the famous guest from England, addressing the American Jewish Congress, was "speaking not for Israel but for Israel Zangwill." Neverthe- less, Zangwill made a strong endorse- ment of the World Jewish Congress idea, asserting it would have been better for Zionism and world Jewry if it were a World Jewish Congress rather than a World Zionist Congress as means of enlisting in the cause more or all Jews. While admonishing caution in wel- coming the anticipated Zangwillian criti- cisms, Dr. Wise offered an historically interesting reminder of Zangwill in the early years of his association with Theodor Herzl. Wise thus introduced Zangwill: Just before he died in April, 1904, the outstanding Jew of cen- turies, Theodor Herzl, spoke to me in the city of Vienna of what Zangwill had done in the effort to help bear his — Herzl's — heavy, . grotesque Klan, not because it is a menace to Jews, but because it is a menace to America. You must fight it by all moral weapons, not so much because of impugned Judaism, but because of its insults to the Catholic Church, which, when all is said, has to its credit more noble and beautiful achievements of the human spirit than anything the Klan can boast of. But the antics of the Klan are not the only sinister phenomenon in your environment. The recent refusal of nationalization to Hin- doos is as significant as the limi- tation of European immigration at the moment of Europea's greatest misery and by a method still crueller in the working, though this. last will, I gather, soon receive a merciful modifica- tion. There is a hardening to a sort of Nordic nationalism, based on pseudo-scientific theories; theories that utterly ignore that the savage North has always gone to the sunny South — to Athens and Rome, ay, even to Jerusalem, for its art, its legisla- tion, its religion. Just as France has turned into Prussia, so America, misun- derstanding the richness pro- duced by the diversity of her peoples, as of her scenery, and forgetting that she is rather a Continent than a country, seems itching to turn into a China, in- habited by monotonous millions of hundred-percenters. Mr. Bris- bane tells us, when Columbus landed in America he thought he was in China. Perhaps he was only premature. America still calls herself God's own country, but let her beware lest God emi- grate. He does not need her passport. Hamlet defines the politician as "one who would cir- cumvent God." But God is not to be mocked, and for every white you keep out, a black will migrate North leav- ing the South economically for- lorn and will finally multiply against you. Already the colored populations of the world are 115 millions to 500 millions, and now that we are teaching them all the deviltries of our science, unless the white man behaves as such, -this day will soon be over. All this Nordic nonsense, of which the only alleviation is that it-rehabilitates the great German people, comes from the attempt to fill the gap left by the collapse of Christianity, which its priests have failed to maintain. It is a seeking to create a National God and of the most primitive species. It is time we Jews reasserted the Universal God, and the unity of civilization. It is time we stopped this attempt to make polities reli- gion and helped make religion politics. The day after his Carnegie Hal "Watchman, what of the night?" speec Israel Zangwill was guest of Natha Straus, then president of the America Jewish Congress, at a luncheon at Ne York's Hotel Commodore, Oct. 15, 1923 In that speech he reiterated warnings h had made the day before not to misjudg the Arabs, not to treat them as unle Continued on Page 18