PURELY COMMENTARY''' . 4, Compare the rest we're still the best! A JARC Vacation Recalls Farming Era PHILIP SLOMOVITZ Editor Emeritus Interest rates as of 3-4-92 MONEY MARKET RATES .1.1:" 7.:W,V;":' ,:."...1 ' it,. ks, , , , ' .... " N\ :::::: :„ s , :: .:: : :. -. :4, :......:::::„:,......„,_ „..„.„,....::Kw... , 1- -a , ,5.44,,,, ,.., „„, , slt...'W* ::''. - n., .4.Kv...:,'. , s::::i**: '''''...:V, , , National Bank of Detroit 3.60 Michigan National 3.50 Comerica 3.60 First of America 3.50 Manufacturers • Standard Federal' , • ,.., 3.60 3.80 3.80 First Federal of Michigan 'Based on $5,000 deposit. Some minimum deposit requirements may be lower. Higher rates may be available for larger deposits. Rates subject to change. TAX DEFERRED ANNUITIES Now available at Franklin branches through MARKETING ONE INCORPORATED Franklin Member FDIC N.A. PR Tag For information, call 358-5170 For Southfield • Birmingham • Grosse Pointe Woods t of Southfield - N 2K 3L1 PLAZA r • PASSPORT • 1 1 37.0-0 -0- FF $7.95 $14.95 $2.00 &roil:60 OFF SPECIAL 1 set • 2 sets "Must Be Done Al The Some Time" 12 Photos per passport [with coupon) 10% off on- posters (G.0 1 for Anniversarteri & Bar Mitzvahs) 24 exposures or 12 exposures 2nd SET FREE L With Coupon We transfer your old movies, prints & slides to video cassette 1 FULL PHOTO SERVICES INCLUDING: BLACK & WHITE, ENLARGEMENTS, POSTERS I 29215 Northwestern Hwy. at 12 Mile Rd. in Franklin Shopping Plaza Collision Work • Custom Painting Insurance Work • All makes & models Full restoration • Unlbody & frame repair • Towing Maxie Collision, Inc. 737-7122 32581 Northwestern Highway Farmington Hills, MI 48108 I t can happen that a mere social function might lead to important recollections and remarkable activities. This is the case with one of the JARC groups that is plann- ing a vacation in what has become a nearly-forgotten Michigan area. One of the directors of the JARC Frankel group, Cory Darnell, decided to take the group on a trip to South Haven. That's where the reminders begin. Numerous assemblies and seminars sponsored by the Zionist Organization of America were held in South Haven. B'nai B'rith and landsmanshaften did much planning there. Percy Kaplan, executive director of the Jewish National Fund for many years, supervised organizational and cultural sessions there. A June 1957 clipping from the Detroit News reveals that an honor was accorded to Leonard N. Simons in South Haven. It was at the fourth annual institute of human relations of the Michigan Regional Advisory Board of the Anti- Defamation League of B'nai B'rith. It is also interesting to note that Mr. Simons was flown to South Haven in Max Fisher's private plane. An entire bookshelf is be- ing assembled on Michigan farmers by Judy Cantor, editor of the Michigan Jew- ish History Magazine. One of the documents is about a novel by Ceil Pearl Schnapic about Jewish farmers in the Benton Har- bor area. While in the beginning of this century some 400 Jews participated in Benton Harbor farming ventures, fewer than a dozen remained 20 years ago. The South Haven ac- tivities later developed into summer resort aspects. That's how the area became important for conventions and public assemblies. In the 1950s and 1960s there were resort facilities with kosher restaurants serving to at- tract statewide and national movements for the ad- vancement of Zionist, ADL and Jewish social service needs. The revival of interest in South Haven creates special attention in Jewish farming activities in Michigan. The first major pioneering effort was in the 1880s and 1890s in Bad Axe. A second was the Sunrise Colony near Saginaw in the 1930s. Only a few apple and other fruit farms established by Jews still survive; yet they enrich the record of Jewish achievements in our state. The most sensational Michigan Jewish farming experience toward the end of the last century was in Bad Axe. A number of prominent Michigan citizens took an interest in the back-to-the- land tasks that managed to survive. The Bad Axe story was given prominent space in the Michigan Jewish His- tory Magazine in an item written by Emanuel Ap- plebaum. He presented us with the following facts: In 1891, when the growth in the area returned and contained brush and poplar trees, an ex- perimental agricultural colony was established by Jews. This was but one of the attempts during the nineteenth century, by Jews in the western area of the United States, to establish such colonies. These Jewish "farmers" in Bad Axe were completely inexperienced and untrained. With one exception who had come from Germany, they all had arrived from Russia in 1888 and had liv- ed in Bay City, Michigan. The United States was in the midst of a depression when the Palestine Colony, as it was called, was begun. All of the 12 settlers had been peddlers or itinerants wandering from farm to farm and from town to town. The originator of the idea of an agricultural set- tlement was Hyman Lew- enberg, who had arrived in the United States in 1880, and had read of other such experiments and attempts by Jews elsewhere to return to farming . . From the financial banks in the area of Bad Axe, which held title to huge tracts, twelve adjoining parcels of land were then- purchased . . . They hoped to establish a "new Zion" in America and so they nam- ed the colony "Palestine." However, being inex- perienced they were failing miserably in their undertaking. A passing Jewish ped- dler brought the story of their failure and extreme hardship to Martin Butzel, a prominent Detroit mer- chant who was then presi- dent of the Beth El Hebrew Relief Society. He became quite involved in a number of attempts to aid the strug- gling farmers of Bad Axe . . . Emanuel Wodic, a retired, experienced farmer of 25 years of farm- ing in the area of Utica, Michigan, was a member of Temple Beth El. Martin Butzel asked him to visit Bad Axe and report back on his observations. Upon his return and his report to Martin Butzel, a meeting was called of the Beth El Relief Society. A fund of $1,200 was raised to help the farmers .. . As a result of Martin Butzel's correspondence with the Baron de Hirsch Fund that had just been established, the Fund voted $3,000 to meet the im- mediate needs of the Jewish farmers, and Butzel served as trustee of the Fund. In September, 1892, Butzel traveled to Bad Axe and paid out $2,300 to cover back payments on the mortgage on the farms. Other pressing debts were then also taken care of. There is another more sen- sational chapter in which some of us became involved quite intimately in the 1930s. Sunrise in Michigan was a larger scale farming under- taking which merits exten- sive study. Professor Sidney Bolkosky gives considera- tion to the Sunrise colony in his recent history of Jews in Michigan. Dr. Bolkosky presents the following: Regarding Sunrise colony in his history of the Jews in Detroit Dr. Bolkosky presents the following outline: Stimulated in part by the Depression, an eclectic group of socialist-oriented Jews actively moved to "make the world a better place" in 1933. Members of the Workmen's Circle, the Poale Zion, and others of similar political and ideological persuasions, followed Joseph Cohen (a leading American anar- chist thinker and former editor of Die Freie Arbiter Stimme, a Jewish leftist newspaper) to found the ,