PURELY COMMENTARY, The UJA: The Dramatic Fifty Year Heartbeat PHILIP SLOMOVITZ Editor Emeritus A truly historic occurrence is now being observed in this country. It is the 50th anniversary of the United Jewish Appeal. If it is judged as merely a philan- thropy, there should be speedy correc- tion. It is very much more and vastly different from the tzedaka of the hebraically charitable and philan- thropic. It is a heartbeat. As anniversaries go, United Jewish Appeal is one of the numerous. The American Jewish Committee came in- to being with the Kishinev pogrom of 1904. The Anti-Defamation League was organized by the B'nai B'rith during the horrible Leo Frank tragedy in Georgia. The UJA emerged as a unified effort in fund raising in the year of Kristallnacht. That's when the Joint Distribution Committee, related causes and the United Palestine Appeal created a united front to come to the rescue of Jews hounded and persecuted by Nazism. The unity was the means of providing for the oppressed to find relief, to have a measure of success in funding new homes. It was much more than that. It was the heartbeat of the Jewish people. It stemmed from the heartache caused by the inhumanity that became a curse for mankind. It was the agony into which the Jewish people was im- mersed under the most despicable tyranny while the great nations of the world remained silent to the cry for help. There was need for a new unity in Jewry and the newly created United Jewish Appeal had a desire to attain it. In principle it was realized. Therefore its continuity for 50 years with the present honorable status as the leading force for philanthropic ac- tion in support of the Jewish statehood is encouraged. In the totality of the aspiration for a unified idealism the agony and the heartbeat were marked by the bloodstains. The people who were to be rescued did not have an unhampered road to freedom. In the world ranks there was more heartlessness than compassion. The heartbeat was, like its heartache, limited for Jews. UJA 1110 JUBILEE Yet, in its way UJA remains the heartbeat that unified. It rejected disunity; it demanded consolidation of forces and proclamation to mankind that the planned destruction of the Jewish people will always meet with disapproval and resentment. We were not yet fully united. There were the frightened and the panicked who would not speak out. The UJA ad- monished that divisiveness was intolerable. Whatever the negatives in these recollections, it is the heartbeat that in- spired the formation of the UJA. That's what must encourage and demand the continuity of such an inspired purpose for Jewish activism. The Detroit Jewish community was and continues in the front ranks of the UJA in the aim of rescuing oppressed fellow Jews and assuring protection for the State of Israel in the crucial eras of ongoing threats to security. The Detroit Allied Jewish Cam- paign, the local adjunct of the UJA, in an instrumental force for justice and for the community's identification in all ef- forts to eliminate whatever menace con- fronts our people. The UJA has therefore become the militantly philanthropic symbol for security, for state building as means of assuring vitality for the redeemed Zion. The three-lettered UJA is the symbol for pride in Jewish identification attain- ed in the unity that must be treated as a compulsion for Jewish existence. Elegy On Book Burning: Holocaust Genesis K ristallnacht, with its memories of horror now accounted for by what could be judged as a repentant humanity, is being treated as the genesis of the Holocaust. There were the earlier years from the very commencement of the Hitler curse, that augmented the genesis. Recalling the book burning that was engineered on May 10, 1933, by Josef Goebbels, the beginnings dated to the earliest periods of the collapse of decency in what had been treated as a civilized world. Therefore so much more to remember with the anger and disgust that was oc- casioned by what was then and lasted for many years as an indifferent mankind. The May 10, 1933, conflagration in- cluded the assembling by the Nazi savages of the widely acclaimed classical works by Sigmund Freud, Thomas Mann, Heinrich Heine, Helen Keller, Albert Einstein, Jack London, Karl Marx — the creative literary achievements by Christians as well as Jews. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS (US PS 275-520) is published every Friday with additional supplements the fourth week of March, the fourth week of August and the second week of November at 20300 Civic Center Drive, Southfield, Michigan. Second class postage paid at Southfield, Michigan and additional mailing offices. Postmaster: Send changes to: DETROIT JEWISH NEWS, 20300 Civic Center Drive, Suite 240, Southfield, Michigan 48076 $26 per year $33 per year out of state 60' single copy Vol. XCIV No. 15 2 December 9, 1988 FRIDAY, DECEMBER 9, 1988 What the Nazis did was a replica of the crimes of the Middle Ages, the bur- ning of the Talmud that was approved and actually ordered by the popes dur- ing the centuries of persecutions. A prejudicial and, in fact, hatefully motivated policy of Talmud burning registers a very ugly record of many years' duration. It could be judged as having been responsible for the adherence to this policy in France, Ita- ly and neighboring lands, and in Poland. At a time like the present, when a positive ecumenism is growing, with very friendly communications between Catholics and Jews, it is distressing to recall the saddest periods of Jewish suf- ferings in eras of Vatican influence. But book burning has been one of our tragedies, even in modern times, and is not to be condoned. What was Talmud burning in the Dark Ages and book bur- ning under Nazis must not be permit- ted to become book destruction in our time, even in the minutest forms in schools and universities. Therefore the need to learn the lesson for the benefit of the generations. It was on June 17, 1242, that copies of the Talmud and valuable Hebrew manuscripts were burned in Paris. That's when Rabbi Meir of Rothenburg wrote the elegy which is incorporated in the Kinot, Tisha b'Av lamentations for the Ninth of Av marking the destruction of the Temple. In his Tisha b'Av elegy on Talmud burning Rabbi Meir mourned: 0 (Law) that has been con- sumed by fire, seek the welfare of those who mourn for you, of those who yearn to dwell in the court of your habitation. Of those who gasp (as they lie) in the dust of the earth, who grieve and are bewildered over the conflagration of your par- chments. They grope in the dark, bereft of light, indeed, they wait (in longing) for the daylight that will shine upon them and upon you. (Seek too) after the welfare of one who sighs and weeps with a broken heart; who bewails in- creasingly the pangs of your agony — And who howls like jackals and ostriches and cries out bitter lamentation for your sake. How was it that (you, 0 Law,) given (by God), the Consuming Fire, should be consumed by fire of mortals, and that the heathens were not singed through your burning coals? How long will you lie (resting) in profound tranquility, 0 lover of pleasure, while the faces of my young ones are covered with nettles? You sit in arrant haughtiness to judge the sons of God in every cause, and to bring (us) before your tribunal. Moreover, you (0 Law,) even decreed the burning of the edicts and the statues (which were given) with fire, therefore, blessed be he, who shall requite you. 0 (my Holy law,) was it for this that my Creator delivered you with lightning and fire, that at the end fire should blaze upon your skirt? 0 Sinai, is it for this that God, rejecting the loftier (peaks), has chosen you, and (his glory) has shone in your confines? (Was that) to be an omen, that the Law would (one day) be humiliated and descend from its glory? Behold, I will tell you a parable. The Parable is of a king who wept at his son's wedding feast, (for) he foresaw that he would die, such was your fate, foretold in your own words. 0 Sinai, instead of putting on a (noble) mantle, cover yourself with sackcloth, change your garments (and) put on widow's clothes! I will shed tears until they swell as a stream, and reach the graves of your two no- ble chiefs. And I will enquire of Moses and Aaron, (who were) on Mount Hor: "Is there then a new Law, is that why they burnt your columns?" In the third month (Israel was exalted) and the fourth turned conspirator to destroy your objects of delight and all the perfection of your beauty. (Titus) mutilated the Tablets of stone and even repeated his folly by burning the Law in fire. Is this (the fulfilment of) the dou- ble reward. My soul is amazed — How can ever again food be sweet to my palate after my beholding what your plunderers have gathered? Men whom you have rejected from entering your assembly, burnt the spoil of the Most High in the midst of the market- square, like (the fabric of) a con- Continued on Page 46