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YOUNG JUDAEA CONVENTION ADOPTS
PALESTINE PROJECT
About 200 Young Judaea delegates rep
resenting 385 constituencies throughout
the country, decided upon several new de
partures for the forthcoming year. Of
utmost importance is the organization of
the Keren Hanoar L’Eretz Yisroel, a
Palestine Youth Fund. The Young Judaea
clubs will be asked to raise a sum of
$5000 over a period of three years for
youth activities in Palestine, and the edu
cational program of Young Judaea will
he built around these activities. The con
vention voted $500 to he sent immedi
ately to Palestine for the establishment
of a leaders’ training camp of the Pales
tine Scouts. The convention also passed
a resolution in favor of the organization
of an honor society in Young Judaea to he
called Jeshurum, which will consist of
those Young Judaeans who have at
tained a high standard of excellence in
Jewish studies, as well as a broad par
ticipation in Zion activities. Young Judaea
will cooperate with the newly formed
Halutz organization, which plans to train
Halutzin for Palestine.
The convention unanimously elected as
president, Dr. Louis I. Newman, rabbi of
Temple Rodeph Shalom, New York City.
The other officers are, vice-presidents,
Abraham Tannenbaum, New York City;
David Polish, Cincinnati; Joseph Cuba,
Atlanta; secretary, Mrs. Lawrence Meyer,
New York City, and treasurer, Louis
Rocker, New York City. Lt. Gov. Herbert
H. Lehman honorary chairman, and
Clarence Y. Palitz, chairman, will con
tinue to head the Board of Trustees. The
following constitute the National Govern
ing Board: New York City—Rabbi Leon
S. Lang, David Schneeberg, Isador
Levinson, Lawrence Meyer, Rabbi Joshua
Trachtenberg, Edna Suer, Miriam Eph
raim, David Levine, Aubrey Mallach,
Esther Dingol, Ellis Radinsky, Daniel
Rosenberg, Morris Ruffman, Mue Kaplan,
Jacob Barshay and Ben Fain. Albany—
Rose Hershberg. Buffalo—Ben Edidin.
Rochester—Harold Kolko and Lillian
Greene. Boston—Frank Rubin, Meyer
Goldman and Mrs. Benj. Schweitzer.
Providence—Joseph Keller. Philadelphia
—Benj. Weinrach. Pittsburgh — Flora
Snyder. Washington—Rebecca Rabenovets.
Cincinnati — Samuel Cook. Chicago—
Charles Levin. Atlanta—Edward M.
Kahn. New Orleans—E. E. Lisitzky and
Fannie Prenner. Jacksonville — Mrs.
Gabriel Dryfoos. Chattanooga — Dinah
Rausen.
During the four days of deliberations
at Long Branch, New Jersey, the sessions
were addressed by A. W. Binder, pro
fessor of Jewish music in the Jewish In
stitute of Raleigh; Dr. Louis I. Newman,
Miriam R. Ephraim and Ellis Radinsky.
The convention ended with a banquet at
the Hotel Scarboro, which was presided
over by Rabbi Leon S. Lang, president
of Young Judaea during the past year.
AT THE CROSSROAD
(Continued from page 7)
the line. His will to do great things col
lides with the petty banality of Jewish
life.
Adler does not desire more than he
can achieve. He does not seek the ti
tanic. Things excessively great intimi
date him. The possible complications
frighten him. His ideal is great honor
with little responsibility. Little responsi
bility because his sense of responsibility
is over timorous.
It is the tragedy of Jewish life that
Wise and Adler would complement each
other; and, above all, that with each his
failings gain the upper hand.
The positive qualities of Wise are:
Courage, eagerness for battle, vision, ini
tiative, the pioneer spirit. The positive
qualities of Adler are: System, caution,
love of tradition, patience. But without
a counterpoise courage becomes foolhardi
ness, eagerness for battle is transformed
into belligerence, system grows jejune
and caution apprehensive.
In these days when democracy and
dictatorship are in the midst of an unde
cided battle, when the old diplomacy and
the new paralyze each other, when in
ternational thought and narrow national
ism stand in violent conflict, it is quite
natural for the Wise and Adler views
of Jewish life to be actively hostile. Wise
has, to an extent, been infected by to
morrow; Adler adheres timidly to yester
day. Yet these two personalities repre
sent only the beginning of a great com
bat. The beginning, for Wise is not al
together tomorrow, and Adler no longer
stands completely for yesterday.
1 he Jewish World Congress was only
the cause, not the ultimate reason of the
Wise-Adler controversy. I consider it a
sign of health in our life that an open
conflict has broken out between these two
leaders. American Jewry, today heavily
burdened with problems of its own, will
have to choose between a Monroe Doc
trine or a League of Nations in the Jew
ish sense. For herein lies the real, the
fundamental difference between Adler and
Wise.
Copyrighted 1932 for Tut Solthirn Israelite
Rabbis lo Meet in Cincinnati
The forty-second meeting of the Cen
tral Conference of America Rabbis will
be held in Cincinnati, Ohio, November
2nd to 6th. This action of the Executive
Board was taken in response to the re
quests of an unusually large number of
members of the conference seeking a post
ponement of the meeting until some date
in the fall, in view of the fact that con
ditions at present would preclude the
possibility of their attendance in June, as
originally scheduled.
I he program will be presented as orig
inally planned by the Program Commit
tee, of which Rabbi Samuel H. Golden-
son, of Pittsburgh, Pa., is the chairman.
1 he featured paper of the program will
he read by Rabbi David Lefkowitz, of
Dallas, Texas, immediate past-president
of the C. C. A. R., on the subject, “The
American Principle of the Separation of
C hurch and State in its application to
Modern Life," this in commemoration of
the Washington Bicentenary. The cen
tenary of the publication of Leopold
Zinz s Gottesdienstliche Vortraege der
Juden, called by some critics “the most
important Jewish work published in the
nineteenth century,’ will be commemo
rated by the reading of a paper by Rabbi
Bernard Bamberger, of Albany, N. Y., on
the subject, “The Beginnings of Modern
Jewish Scholarship." Other papers will
he lead by Prof. Z. Diesendruck, of the
Department of Philosophy of the Hebrew
Union College, on the subject, “The Ideal
Social Order as Expressed or Implied in
Jewish Thinking"; and by Rabbi Julius
Gordon, of St. Louis, “Personal Piety in
Modern Jewish Life,” the discussion of
which will he led by Rabbi Abba Hillel
Silver, of Cleveland, Ohio.
The officers of the C. C. A. R. are:
Rabbi Morris NewHeld, Birmingham,
Ala., president; Rabbi Samuel H. Gold-
enson, Pittsburgh, vice-president; Rabbi
Isaac E. Marcuson, Macon, Ga., record
ing secretary; Rabbi Harry S. Margolis,
St. Paul, Minn., corresponding secretary;
Rabbi Felix Levy, Chicago, treasurer.
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