M ... ,?s g... Circle Of Thanks Franklin Bank's Affinity Program The business community has been very good to us. We want to give back to the community with a reward to JARC for the good BUSINESS work it does for so many. OWNERS The "Circle Of • Thanks" program is our way of thanking you and JARC for honoring us with your business banking. jarc Affinity Program Franklin Bank Direct dollars to JARC by directing your business to us. Open your business checking account today and we will make an automatic donation to JARC in your name. JARC must be mentioned when account is opened.* Call Julie Rollins 248.358.6493 Franklin Bank V*35' 12/31 1999 20 Thank you Metro Detroit Business Community...and thank you JARC for making such a difference to so many. New accounts only, transferring account balances not permitted. Contribution based on activated account's third month balance. Certain high volume cash and coin accounts such as food stores, beauty salons and vending companies are excluded from this program (call for details.) reaction. Following the leader- ship of the Jewish Welfare Federation (founded in 1926), Detroit Jews, like Jews in most parts of the western world, had reacted to antisemitic rhetoric and activities with rational responses or with silence. This virtual avalanche of anti- semitic activity spurred the Jewish Community Council, officially founded in 1936, along with the Anti-Defamation League, the League of Human Rights and B'nai B'rith to follow Philip Hebrew school children arrive at the JCC at Slomovitz's lead and take public Curtis and Meyers in 194.9. action to combat those vitupera- tive attacks on Jews. They con- Coughlin, that "Christian character is fronted their antagonists — challenged the true basis of real Americanism." them to debates and defied them to Americanism, therefore, by definition offer proof of Jewish conspiracies and of excluded Jews. And, in 1944, Rev. Jewish communism. "They threatened Smith declared that "if someone will lawsuits, boycotts, exposes and spoke figure out the best way to handle the out in open meetings and in newspa- Jews, he will go down in history as pers. the wisest person in all the centuries." Along with threats from groups like the Silver Shirts, who fashioned them- selves after the 0 Nazi SS, and the Ku Klux Klan, such rhetoric 0 burned into the minds and hearts 2 of Detroit's Jews. The Great Depression corn- bined with the rise and triumph of Nazism to cause A rally was held at Central High School in Detroit in celebra- distress, fear, tion of Israel's independence on May 16, 1948. despair, even terror in Jews everywhere. On the threshold of war and the Most Jews considered Hitler a tempo- Holocaust, Detroit's Federation rary phenomenon; most had little idea seemed to anticipate the horrors to how difficult life was becoming for fund-raising cam- come in its 1939 German Jews; none had the slightest paign. But European Jewry would inkling that genocide was in the mak- soon be out of reach, beyond rescue ing. With the voices of hatred increas- in many respects, when the Germans ing at home, led by Father Coughlin, would implement the `_`Final Solution" attention naturally focused on in earnest in 1941. America. Detroit Jewry tended to believe that The '30s would determine the once in the war, Americans would course of responses to anti-Jewish oppose antisemitism as part of their rhetoric and action not in the Old opposition to Nazi Germany. Yet the World, but here, in Royal Oak or on results of a government survey showed Eight Mile Road at the Crystal antisemitism had increased after the Swimming Pool that brazenly forbade Japanese bombing of Pearl Harbor. Jews from swimming there. In the end, after throwing them- Jews in Detroit feared Monday selves wholeheartedly into the war mornings, uncertain how their co- effort, World War II changed Jewish workers had received Father lives and consciousness in two funda- Coughlin's Sunday broadcast. There mental ways: the profound alteration was no consensus about the proper -