PURELY COMMENTARY Historical Perspectives Continued from Page 2 outlined in the artcile. They include the American Christian Palestine Commit- tee, fundamentalists, as well as elements among Catholics, the Blacks and others. The many individuals listed, pro and con, include Daniel Poling, Pierre van Paassen, Dorothy Thompson, John Haynes Holmes, Reinhold Niebuhr and others. With the exception of Dorothy Thompson, who was a Zionist advocate who later became an antagonist, this is a list of strong supporters. The most outspoken of them was Reinhold Niehbuhr, whose pro-Jewish role was uncompromising. He was a former Detroiter who became a world figure in theological circles. The Niehbuhr activity is lengthy but com- pels quoting as part of the record of most devoted supporters of Zionism in Christian records. As Voss-Rausch state: During Holmes' absence in Palestine in 1929, he invited a newcomer to New York City, Reinhold Niebuhr, to serve as guest preacher at Community Church for six successive Sun- days. Niebuhr had just arrived at Union Theological Seminary to join the faculty as the William E. Dodge Professor of Applied Christianity. He was already committed to a Zionist ap- proach to Palestine's ultimate settlement and had spoken to that effect in his former Detroit parish. He had also written sym- pathetically about the Jews in his regular Saturday night col- umn in the Detroit News. His strictures against assimilation appeared often in World Tomor- row, the Christian Century, the New Leader, and the Messenger (Evangelical Synod), and he had a special aversion to the ad- monitions and pieties of those who advocated "brotherhood" in all-too-easy language, as in the the newly founded National Conference of Jews and Chris- tians (as it was then called). By the early 1930s, Reinhold Niebuhr was fully aware of the problems German Jewry faced and, with such articles as "Ger- many Must Be Told!" in a May 1933 issue of the Christian Cen- tury, pointed to Palestine as a refuge for Jews fleeing Hitler's sadism. In an historic and stirr- ing address in 1938, before a na- tional convention of Hadassah, the Women's Zionist Organiza- tion, he deplored the moral bankruptcy of the Munich set- tlement of 1938 and its "Evil Pact;" and then he turned to Palestine and spoke of the time, energy, and treasure invested in the national homeland and the necessity of not letting it fail. Professor Niebuhr warned repeatedly in the 1940s about the inequities of the 1939 British White Paper limiting immigra- tion to Palestine and cutting it off entirely in March 1944. His membership in the American Palestine Committee from the early 1930s and his leadership in 44 FRIDAY, JULY 22, 1988 founding the Christian Council on Palestine in 1942 reflected his keen interest in that country's Zionist beginnings .. . Upon Niehbuhr's death, the editors of the magazine Christianity and Crisis adopted an anti-Zionist policy. Mrs. Reinhold Niebuhr demanded that her husband's name be erased from the list of the magazine's founders. Mrs. Niehbuhr remains to this day one of the strongest supporters of Zionism. It is very distressing to learn that there still is too much opposition in con- trast to the friends counted by Israel and Zionism. The two authors of the American Jewish Archives' study re- main more optimistic. They concede to some pessimism. As they declare in "An Overview" to their article: Perhaps the complex state of affairs in the black community today only reflects the historic ambivalence that has domi- nated Christendom as a whole. The World Council of Churches has often uttered expressions of "effective international guarantees" for the territorial integrity and political in- dependence of Israel and the Arab nations, while repeatedly criticizing Israeli policies and calling for "an international presence" over Jerusalem. With so many Christian denomina- tions fearful of losing their mis- sionary agencies and institu- tions in Arab lands, their animosity toward the Jewish state has steadily increased. And forty years of Arab and Christian propaganda have cer- tainly taken their toll. In 1980, the National Council of Chur- ches of Christ in the U.S.A. en- dorsed a pro-Arab commission report which stipulated that the Palestine Liberation Organiza- tion, with Yassir Arafat as its leader, was the accredited agen- cy of the those opposed by Israel. The Middle East agenda of the seventeen-member com- mission was so biased at its in- ception that major Jewish organizations, including the American Jewish Committee, the American Jewish Congress, and the Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith, refused to present testimony — the pro- PLO findings were a foregone conclusion. The recent defeat of positive statements on Israel in both the 199th General Assembly of the 3.1 million member Presbyterian Church (USA) and the 1.7 million member United Church of Christ in June 1987 underscores the political ploys, stereotypes and caricatures, and fears of divisiveness over Israel that plague even the best of intentions in Jewish- Christian relations .. . This essay has underscored the conclusion that Israel may well count on a strong core of Christian supporters in America, but at the same time the Jewish state must never ex- pect justice from American Christendom as a whole. There are many lessons to be learned from all the essays in the magazine. The Christian attitudes are especially important for a knowledge of what is occurring in ecumenism and Christian-Jewish relations generally. American Jewish History of the American Jewish Historical Socie- ty, and the American Jewish Ar- chives of the movement by that name, often enrich our knowledge with studies just alluded to in the latter. The administrators of American Jewish Archives, Dr. Abraham Peck and Dr. Jacob R. Marcus, earn our gratitude for the current discussion of the Zionist- Israel experiences. Daniel Tickton Recollections Continued from Page 2 mains a continuity with the Jason Ticktons. The special mutual interest with Daniel was in the personalities he depicted, the most notable being the world leadership of Nahum Sokolow. It was before he was elected to the world presidency of the Zionist movement that Sokolow spent nearly a week in Detroit, addressing public functions, conferring with Zionist leaders — Rab- bi A.M. Hershman, Morris Zackheim, Abraham Srere, Robert Marwil, as well as with non-Zionist well-wishers. The major dinner meeting was in the social hall of the then Shaarey Zedek on Willis and Brush. Nahum Sokolow Sokolow was diabetic and he was ac- companied on his many Zionist lecture trips by his daughter, Dr. Celina Sokolow, who provided the medical guidance he needed. During that week's visit I was with him a great deal, at conferences, for meals at the then Joseph's Restaurant on Montcalm and Woodward. It is important to note that the man who arranged the details for the visits by the Sokolows was Jacob Miller, who Daniel Tickton was at the time executive director of the Detroit District of the Zionist Organiza- tion of America, and of the Keren Hayesod — Palestine Foundation Fund — campaigns here. Soon thereafter, Miller was named managing director of the newly-formed Palestine Insurance Co. His first visit upon his arrival in Jerusalem was with the British-named Governor of Jerusalem Ronald Storrs. After a brief exchange of English greetings, Gover- nor Storrs, who was known to be not too sympathetic to Zionism, said "Miller, daber Ivrit, ata b'Eretz Israel" — "Miller, speak Hebrew. You are in the Land of Israel." It was a cordiality that I read later when he acknowledged my review of his biography. Nahum Sokolow returned to Detroit in 1929 to address the opening session of the national convention of the Zionist Organization of America held here that year in the Cass Theater on Lafayette. The recollections are about the most distinguished in our history of the world Zionist presidents. I could not have known Theodor Herzl. But as a mere youngster, I was, with my brother Ben, at the memorial assembly in the Groisse Shul — the Great Synagogue — in Lida Byelorussia, in 1904, in the week after the world leader's death. The anti-Zionist Bundists rioted to break up the memorial procedures. And I could not have known Herzl's successor, David Wolfson. I did meet for about an hour with the German scientist and scholar, Prof. Otto Waburg (1859-1938) who succeed- ed Wolfson and was World Zionist presi- dent from 1911 until 1920. Then follow- ed by close association with the suc- ceeding presidents, Chaim Weizmann, Nahum Sokolow and Nahum Goldmann. They are unforgettable. Bar Mitzvah Book: Commencing A Diary n interesting pubishing trend is encouraging the compiling of diaries and retaining family records. An inducement in preparation of a diary is provided for bnai mitzvah in a large volume entitled "The Bar Mitzva Book — A Written Remem- brance." Published by Stewart, Tabori and Chang, the record book contains the basic facts leading to a knowledge of observances. The synagogue obser- A