"SendOutCards gives me flexibility that I need for arty family and a passive income beyond my former corporate job of 17 years. SendOut Cards has a growing demand & unlimited market ... it's Fun & Rewarding!" World -Chris N. Coinmerce, MI • 'Appreciation Marketing" System - build Stronger Relationships for higher Client Retention & more Referrals • Create Customized Greeting Cards & Postcards with your own Photos • Save Time. Hassle and Expense even make Money with SendOutCards Send() t t Cards Lincoln's from page A27 4 Go to www.sendoutcards.com/22376 for a SendOutCards Demo Account 111.111111MMMIMINIMPF When only extraordinary will do, I call Lisa Gleeson for that special touch" Dee Dee Hoffman 1111== 28834 Woodward Avenue I Royal Oak 1248.547.9094 I www.lisasgiflwrappers.com 1479380 This portrait of Abraham Lincoln was taken by Thomas Le Mere on April 17,1863. National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution Stuart Michaelson Rabbi Fischel and a delegation to Washington to meet with Lincoln. The group pleaded for religious liberty and equal constitutional rights. It's likely they didn't have to beg very hard. The president told Fischel he believed the exclusion of Jewish chap- lains was unintentional and prom- ised to rectify the situation. Lincoln submitted a list of suggestions to the House Committee on Military Affairs that included changing the chaplaincy law to include the appointment of any "regularly ordained minister of some religious denomination." The bill passed in July of 1862. Two months later, President Lincoln named Rabbi Jacob Frankel of Philadelphia as the first Jewish chap- lain. Later, Rabbis Berhard Gotthelf of Louisville and Ferdinand Sarner of Rochester also were commissioned. Proudly Announces a Division to Handle All 't Your Remodeling, Renovation and Addition Needs Residential and Commercial 248-538-7000 ext. 5 Stuart@windmillhomes.com www.windmillhomes.com Adt CELEBRATE! 2009 AD DEADLINE: FEB 24, 2009 ISSUE: MARCH 19, 2009 Our annual party planning guide features party photographs from local professional photographers plus articles on bands, parties and how-to guides. A must have for any simchah. Visit JNonline.us • call 248.351.5107 for advertising information A28 February 12 2009 jf General Grant's Order No. 11 Lincoln's intolerance of bigotry and prejudice came to another crucial test in December 1862, when Gen. Ulysses S. Grant issued Order No. 11. If you haven't heard of Order No. 11, it's not a surprise. The frightening edict never received wide publicity. Grant, upset by what he perceived as greedy Jewish merchants taking over the black market in Southern cotton and trade, ordered an immediate expulsion of all Jews from Kentucky, Tennessee and Mississippi. Many Jewish fami- lies found themselves on the road — walking in some cases — looking for sanctuary. As instantly as was possible in those days, Jewish leaders from around the country sprang into action. They wrote letters and telegraphed President Lincoln and came to the White House to condemn the act. Lincoln revoked the order on Jan. 6, 1863. Rabbi Wise was among those who came to the White House. According Holzer, this was one of the rare occa- sions that Lincoln would overrule his prized general. Lincoln told Wise that Grant had proscribed a whole class of citizens, many of whom were serving as honored soldiers. He vowed that he would not allow anyone to be wronged because of religious affiliation. Holzer credits Lincoln's swift and decisive response to this crisis as the one of the most important reasons why the Jewish community rallied behind his re-election. A Nation Mourns On Good Friday, April 14, 1865, Abraham Lincoln was assassinated by John Wilkes Booth. Ironically, not only was it the same date that Jesus met his death, it was also Passover weekend. That Saturday, Jewish families across the nation gathered for their seders and mourned the loss of their leader, friend and ally. A national day of mourning was declared for Wednesday, April 16. At Temple Beth El in Detroit, Rabbi Isidor Kalisch delivered the sermon. "It is true that he shared the same fate of Moses, the deliverer of Israel from Egyptian bondage, who was not permitted to lead the freed men to the promised land ... So could he perceive only from the gigantic mountain of glorious victories over the enemy the revived power and the renewed glory of our blessed Union," Kalisch said. Abraham Lincoln freed black slaves, unified a divided country and gave no shelter to those who preached prejudice and injustice. The spirit that guided him is evidenced in the words inscribed on one wall of the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D. C., taken from his second Inaugural address: "With malice toward none; with charity for all; with firmness in the right, as God gives us to see the right, let us strive on to finish the work we are in; to bind up the nation's wounds ... "