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Box 1078 Birmingham, MI 48011 313 ,645 , 5930 RANGE ROVER (A) INFINITI, 908 FRIDAY, AUGUST 23, 1991 eace is now more fre- quently pronounced and repeated than perhaps any other ideological term. It is begin- ning to be asserted as fre- quently as shalom, its Heb- rew originator. It has its doubters and skeptics, but the Jewish way advocates it with a positiveness. The Hebraic shalom is not only repeated prayerwise but in the traditions traced to Talmudic times. It is treated as a compulsion even in friendly interchanges of greetings. Among the in- stinctive Jewish concepts that were assembled by Rabbi Philip Birnbaum, there is a fascinating defini- tion for this humanizing way of life; it teaches mankind not to corrupt friendships. The Talmudic lesson ap- pended to the Birnbaum concept is illustrated in the following: The responsibility of the individual toward the community is illustrated as follows: "It is to be compared to people sit- ting on board a ship, one of the passengers of which took an awl and began to bore holes in the bottom of the vessel. Ask- ed to desist from his dangerous occupation, he answered: Why, I am only making holes in my own seat. He was forgetting that when the water came in it would sink the whole ship." The sin of a single person might endanger the whole of humanity. "The world is judged after the merits or demerits of the majority, so that a sin- gle individual by his good or bad actions can decide the fate of his fellow men, as it may happen that he is just the one who con- stitutes this majority." In this connection, treating the ideal as a con- ception of humanism, it is worth accepting Rabbi Birn- baum's definition of shalom as the way of life for all of us. Here is how Rabbi Birn- baum wants to treat the term: The Hebrew word shalom has a wider mean- ing than the English equivalent peace, for it signifies welfare of every kind: security, content- ment, sound health, pros- perity, friendship, peace of mind and heart, as opposed to the dissatis- faction and unrest caused by evil (Isaiah 32:17; 48:22). Hillel said: "Love peace and strive for peace" (Avoth 1:12) Among talmudic statements about peace the following may be quoted: "The whole Torah exists only for the sake of peace. For the sake of peace, truth may be sacrificed." Many movements have been instituted for peace, and often there have been illusions and doubts which demanded more serious commitments to shalom. One such experience is wor- Mr. Truman dropped the pen with which he was autographing the printed program and he said, "There is no peace!" th recalling here. In 1966 a movement was instituted to honor the former president Harry S. Truman, known as the Truman Peace Center, a part of the Hebrew Univer- sity in Jerusalem. The idea was inaugurated at im- pressive ceremonies in In- dependence, Mo. The movement was made possible with contributions of $100,000 each from 36 prominent American Jews. They were then designated in accordance with a great tradition as Lamed-Vav Tzaddikim. This concept is defined by Rabbi Birnbaum. The thirty-six hidden saints described by legend as being extremely modest and upright, con- cealing their identity behind a mask of ig- norance and poverty and earning their livelihood by the sweat of their brow, are generally re- ferred to as lamedvov- niks. This widely-held belief among pious Jews is based on a talmudic statement to the effect that there are in the world no fewer than thirty-six righteous men in every generation who "greet the Shekhinah", the Divine Presence. Emma Schaver and Abra- ham Borman were Detroiters in the list of 36 who established the Turman Hebrew University Center. It would be unfair not to give due credit to Emma Schaver as a leader in our community who plays a role not only as a musician but in scores of major causes and encourages preservation of historic facts in relation to the Truman Center. Now it is necessary to recall the doubts that were expressed by Mr. Truman in the possibilities of realizing the hope for peace. The day after the inauguration of the idea for the Truman Center this episode occurred. I ex- pressed my enthusiasm for the ideal with confidence that it would be historically embracing. Mr. Truman drop- ped the pen with which he was autographing the printed program and he said, "There is no peace!" It is not under the title Truman Peace Center that the idea was realized;, it is perpetuated at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem as the Harry S. Truman Research Institute for the Advancement of Peace. It is as such that it is now one of the world's great peace- advancing centers. N Tributes to Truman em- phasized the significance about a Hebrew University function held in Jerusalem N for the presentation of the newly established Truman Peace Prize. The selection of Simone Veil was announced in a JTA dispatch: The Harry S. Truman Research Institute for the Advancement of Peace will award its first prize to French stateswoman Simone Veil next week. Veil, who received an honorary doctorate from the Hebrew University in 1980, is a former president of the Parliament of Europe and a former health minister in the French government. / As a survivor of Auschwitz and Bergen- Belsen, she has been at the forefront of movements to ensure that the Holocaust is never forgotten.The com- mitments at the Hebrew University defy skepticism. They would appeal to Harry S. Truman for fulfillment of the tribute linked to his name. It will surely always (