metro FR EICH FURRIERS TAILORS Sam CLEA NERS DRUGS SODA! 1210 Hank Greenberg's 41 home runs topped the American League and led the Tigers to the World Series and to being named the American League's MVP. Small stores with colorful awnings lined the streets in residential neighborhoods of a growing Detroit. C airo The Oriole Theater on Linwood and Blaine was a popular destination for Jewish movie-goers. hP War A look back at a very peaceful Detroit in 1940. I Irwin Cohen eventy-five years ago in 1940, Americans were humming and whistling the new tunes of the year, "You Are My Sunshine," "When You Wish upon a Star" and "Blueberry Hill:' Best-selling books included Raymond Chandler's Farewell My Lovely, Ernest Hemingway's For Whom the Bell Tolls and Thomas Wolfe's You Can't Go Home many buildings in Tel Aviv. The raid killed 112, 55 of whom were children, and wounded 151. The "London Blitz" also began in September. German planes targeted the heavily populated East End district of London. An estimated 2,000 planes virtually destroyed the Jewish quarter. Many survivors loaded their possessions on their backs and sought shelter in cen- tral London's schools, hotels and public buildings. Again. Movie fans enjoyed Charlie Chaplain's The Great Dictator, Walt Disney's Fantasia, John Ford's Grapes of Wrath and Alfred Hitchcock's Rebecca. The latter starred Laurence Olivier, Joan Fontaine and George Sanders and won Academy Awards for best picture and cinematography. Life was far different on the other side of the ocean. More than 200,000 Polish Jews were confined into the Lodz ghetto. On April 9, 1940, Germany invaded Denmark and Norway and, a month later, the Nazis marched into Belgium, Luxembourg and the Netherlands. On May 17, Germany invaded France. As Western Europe was being overrun by the Nazis, Winston Churchill became prime minister of Britain in May. On June 14, 1940, the Nazis marched into Paris and six days later the French army surrendered. Around the same time, the Soviets began their arrests and deportations of 198,000 Jews to Siberia. On Sept. 9, 1940, an Italian bombing mission destroyed As many buildings and families were being torn apart in war-ravaged Europe, Detroit prospered as many families moved to the Motor City in search of a better economic life. Many Southern whites and blacks arrived in Detroit in search of higher-paying jobs in automo- bile factories. Black residents numbered 149,119 or 9.2 percent of Detroit's 1940 popula- tion of 1,623,452. Almost 20 percent of Detroit's population was foreign-born, and most were paying close attention to events in Europe. There were conflicting reports on the number of Jews residing in Detroit in 1940. The 42nd annual volume of the American Jewish Year Book issued by the Jewish Publication Society of America claimed Detroit had 90,000 Jews, and 105,201 Jews resided in the entire state of Michigan. America had 4,771,000 Jews, according to the Year Book, or 3.69 percent of the country's population. According to the Detroit Jewish Chronicle, the 1940 Jewish population Special to the Jewish News S 18 July 2 • 2015 Jobs In Detroit was closer to 85,000. Many of the city's Jews were moving closer to Dexter and Linwood, housing many Jewish- owned businesses centering on the streets between Chicago Boulevard and Davison. The Allied Jewish Campaign set a quota of $925,000 for 1940. The first week netted $550,000, but by the end of the drive, the 20,440 contributors accounted for $735,970. However, it marked the first time the number of con- tributors passed 20,000 and the amount raised passed $700,000. The Center Symphony Orchestra made its debut under the direction of composer, conductor and pianist Julius Chajes at the Jewish Community Center on Woodward and Holbrook. Temple Beth El's sisterhood organized a Red Cross unit that became the larg- est of any congregation in Detroit. Beth El's membership was smaller than it was a decade earlier, though. In 1940, there were 1,613 members, 137 fewer than in 1930. Shaarey Zedek had 750 member families while the 32 other orthodox synagogues in Detroit had a combined membership of 2,977 families. The Rose Sittig Cohen Building on Lawton and Tyler, housing the United Hebrew Schools (UHS) and the Jewish Community Center, was formally dedi- cated. Abe Srere, president of Detroit's Jewish Welfare Federation, presided over the ceremonies, which included community dignitaries and rabbis. UHS pupils previously attending the branch at McCulloch School were transferred to the new building. Yeshiva Beth Yehudah, which had 103 students in six grades for Hebrew stud- ies on Sundays and afternoons, used a four-family home on Elmhurst east of Linwood for school purposes. However, a fire in the house next door prompted Detroit safety officials to give a deadline to the yeshivah to vacate its quarters. Leaders of the yeshivah approached directors of the Mogen Abraham Synagogue, who recently sold their Farnsworth building, regarding future plans. The meetings resulted in a merger with plans to construct a synagogue and school building on Dexter and Cortland. Hank The Hero Ira Kaufman, a former milk salesman and hardware store owner who went to night school to earn a license to operate a funeral parlor, opened the Ira Kaufman Chapel in a two-story flat on Dexter. As Kaufman was preparing for funerals, Detroit baseball fans were celebrating their team and Hank Greenberg. Greenberg's 41 home runs and 150 runs batted in led both leagues and led the Tigers to the World Series. Greenberg, who batted .340 in the regu- lar season, hit .357 in the series, but the Tigers were defeated by the Cincinnati Reds in seven games. Mel Allen and Red Barber were teamed to broadcast the World Series on radio. Allen, whose real name was Melvin Allen Israel, idolized Greenberg and spent many a summer day visiting relatives in Detroit as a youngster. He was 27 at the time and in his first year as voice of the Yankees. Barber, 32, was a Calm Before The War on page 20