Jewry's Role in Human Affairs GIANTS OF AMERICAN LABOR Before and after the century's turn, the industrial revolution brought great wealth to business and industry, which in the minds of workers in the country's mills and factories, was not fairly shared. Labor grew restive, fanning the flames of unionism. Meet several of its most visionary crusaders. SAMUEL GOMPERS (1850-1924) b. London, England The father of our nation's labor movement, and its chief spokesman for a generation, also prompted Congress to make the first Monday in September a legal holiday to honor working people. Emigrating to the U.S. in 1863, Gompers was employed as a New York City cigar maker, and joined the profession's national union; within three years he assumed its leadership and steered it into the American Federation of Labor (AFL) which he had helped establish. From that point on, Gompers devoted a purposeful lifetime, as AFL president, to building the country's largest and most effective labor organization. Conservative in nature, he was opposed to political, governmental and employer controls over his craft union members. He advocated collective bargaining, as well as strikes and boycotts, to secure better wages, shorter hours and improved working conditions. Rejecting social- ism and radicalism, Gompers was a steadfast believer in workers' democratic rights to shape their own destinies through economic action. A man of great personal integrity and patriotism, he was later approached by Woodrow Wilson in a successful bid to win AFL support for the President's World War One policies. Determined to promote stability in the workplace, Gompers also served as vice president of the National Civic Federation (since 1900) through which industrialists, bankers and labor leaders could air and reconcile disagreements to minimize labor unrest. More than any other pioneer in the cause, he forged relationships between unions and management that helped guarantee an adequate standard of living for America's working men and women. SIDNEY HILLMAN (1887-1946) b. Zagare, Lithuania The Yeshivah- trained grandson of an orthodox rabbi experienced an early taste of union activity and conflict three years after his arrival here. Hillman joined coworkers in organizing a 1910 strike against the Chicago plant of Hart, Schaffner & Marx which also crippled the city's massive garment industry. , He had brought from his homeland a record of persistence and courage in struggling for the rights of workers--having spent nine months in a Russian prison for proposing labor reforms. Relocating to New York City, lie was elected president of the Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America, a post in which he served from 1915 to 1946. During these years, Hillman preached moderation through- "constructive cooperation" which brought employers and employees together in a heightened spirit of understanding and harmony. The union thereby won sweeping and historic • benefits for its greatly expanded membership: a 44-hour week, employment insurance and affordable housing, and it established several banks which, through loans and stock purchases, helped a number of clothing firms weather the Great Depression. In 1938, the widely respected labor figure was a founder of the nation's other major trade union--the Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO) to which he was elected vice president. As lie rose in political prominence, Hillman became a trusted confidant of President Franklin D. Roosevelt and his chief labor advisor during World War Two. "Clear it with Sidney," was the oft-quoted remark by FDR to his party faithful during the 1994 Democratic nominating convention; Following the war and until his death, Hillman appeared on the global stage as a leader of the World Federation of Trade Unions. - Saul Stadtmauer .ni 10/25 2002 22 Visit many more notable Jews at our website: www.dorledor.org COMMISSION FOR THE DISSEMINATION OF JEWISH HISTORY Walter & Lea Field, Founders/Sponsors Irwin S. Field, Chairperson Harriet F. Siden, Chairperson The World Must Know Survivors brave the cold to place ceremonial bricks at the new Holocaust Memorial Center. DIANA LIEBERMAN Copy Editor/Education Writer T he air was chilly and the sky gray on Oct. 17, as some 75 aging men and women gathered at the site of the new Holocaust. Memorial Center in Farmington Hills. Sonia and Nate Nothman of West Bloomfield drew their coats more tightly around them as the wind whipped through the steel skeleton of the HMC's future home. "So many have spoken about what happened — but any speaker can tell only 10 percent," said Nate Nothman, who survived the Holocaust as a mem- ber of Oskar Schindler's famous list. It was not the groundbreaking for the new building — that took place on June 23. Instead, it was a day for the survivors to add their own symbolic Rabbi Charles Rosenzveig-: "Today you will place a brick for a new kind of building" touch, a touch that will make a memo- rial from a tower of bricks and steel. Addressing the group was Rabbi Charles Rosenzveig, HMC's founder and executive director. He said, "You who have witnessed the construction of buildings for the destruction of human beings; you who have witnessed the building of gas chambers for men, women and chil- dren; today you will place a brick for a new kind of building." The new building rising on Orchard Lake Road north of 12 Mile Road repre-