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THE CANADIAN JEWISH REVIEW
JULY 30, 1948
N. D. 6. KOSHER MEAT MARKET
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CLASS IN COOKERY
NEW METHOD Bl/TTER GAZE
two cups of flour two eggs
two and one-half teaspoons* three-quarters cup of milk
ful baking powder one-half cup butter
one cup of sugar one teaspoonful vanilla
Take four tablespoonsful sugar out of cup
Sift flour, baking powder, salt and sugar. Cream shortening slightly, add dry ingredients, milk, vanilla, and egg yolks. Beat [ egg whites one and one-half minutes by mix master adding four j tablespoons of sugar. When batter is mixed, fold in egg white mixture. Use nine-inch layer cake tin and bake in 37S-degree oven for twenty-five to thirty minutes.
Mrs. L, Sutin,
58 Pinewood Avenue, Toronto.
MARINATED PRODUCTS
fl/B ROAST
A day or two before using, get a tender rib roast from three to about five pounds in weight. Wash, salt and place in the frigidcdre.
Pre-heat the oven for fifteen minutes, at a temperature of 500 degrees. Rub the rib roast with salt, pepper and garlic. Place roast on rack over a pan to patch the drippings. Keep the roast in the oven at the 500 degrees temperature for ten to fifteen minutes. For a six-pound roast, keep at this heat for five to ten additional minutes. Then reduce the heat to 350 or less and keep basting at intervals until the meat is cooked and tender.
Mrs. L. SaJtsman,
4997 Circle Hoad, Montreal.
Sabbath Candles will be kindled on Friday, July 30, at 7,50 p.m., D. S. T. Friday, August 6, at 7.42 p.m., D. S. T.
standard* of the Hollywood "serai-docuaautary" school. It was photographed, obviously under severe difficulties, along the actual route of a Brayha party. The dread implied in the attitudes of the refugees gets substance only from the English narration which Levin wrote and speaks, and the repetition of transient camps and stealthy border crossings is seldom relieved by any actual conflict The only personal drama is provided by
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MEMORIAL STANDS WHERE UPRISING BEGAN
"To The Fighters Of The Warsaw Ghetto"
That is the simple inscription on the monument which DOW stands at the spot where there began, five years ago, the epic of the Ghetto Uprising, It commemorates more than 240,000 Jews who lost their lives during and after the six-" vtraggie ia wWeh &e Jews
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Film Tells How Jews Got To Ships
In the desperate need of Europe's displaced Jews to find a community in which they can freely participate, Meyer Levin has found the basis for a documentary film called "The niegals." His picture tells the story of a new under-
ground railway � the Grayha � by which Jews without passports^ without any legal entity, make their way across to Europe to embark on Haganah ships for Palestine. Levin makes the most of the poignant futility of the effort, which leads, nine times out of ten, not to Palestine, but to a British internment camp on the Island of Cyprus.
Technically speaking, "The Illegals" is far short of the slick
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sodety is to fiad tbxar war to Ereti Israel�the Land of Israel The rest of the players are actual "Illegals" except for Levin, who makes a brief appearance as a Brayha worker early in the film. As propaganda, however, "The Illegals" gains strength from understatement. The British Government is the tacit antagonist throughout the action, creating obstacles, the narration suggests, at almost every border in Europe. Levin, nevertheless, carefully avoids the pitfall of attributing any motive to the antagonist, and only once, when British marines board the Haganah ship Unafraid, does the camera editorialise by recording the superior, insensitive smiles of the military.
The war in Israel has required evacuation of several children's homes sponsored by the Miarachi Women's Organisation of America. The children are doubling up in many institutions untH they can be safely returned.
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from many parts of the world, in-dadinr delegations from a number of British Jewish organisations, attended the unveiling of the memorial. Among the ten thousand who gathered ia the hot spring sun-�bine on the edge of the Ghetto wasteland were some of the few survivors of the rising and a large number of Jewish war heroes from the Polish Army.
United States cituena among the delegations of Jews from twenty countries to honor the event were David Pergament, of the World Federation of Polish Jews; Zach-ariah Schuster, of the American Joint Distribution Committee; and Max Steinberg, of the American Jewish Labor Cotmcil in New York.
While Rabbis ia fall vestments chanted songs for the dead, Polish youth flying their banners marched past leading Jewish youth delegates from half a docen countries. Colonel Kahane, Chief Rabbi of the Polish Army, opened the meeting. The official unveiling was carried out by Mr. Sknessewski, Polish Minister of Education. The memorial, he said, was not merely a symbol of the martyrdom of the Jews, but a symbol of the struggle for peace and for a new world.
The work of Nathan Rappaport, 8&-year-old Warsaw-born sculptor, the memorial is in the form of a wall, symbol of the Ghetto. On the front is a group of seven figures representing the inhabitants of the Ghetto�old and young, men and women�depicted as fighters. On the reverse aide ia s frieze of figures on their way to the gas-chambers. The idea of the memorial, in the words of its designer, it "to depict and reveal two itages of this dreadful event�the horror and helplessness of the uprising,
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and the invincible struggle for liberty and the honour of mankind." The memorial stands in what remains of the square which was once known as Gesia and Zamen-hofa, the streets where the rising began in April, 1948. The memorial is in granite, with bronse figures. It was accepted by the Warsaw Arts Council. Responsibility for easthfe and erecting it was undertaken by the Poliah Jewish Committee. Rappaport itudied at the Warsaw Academy. In 1936, he received a stipend to travel in Italy and Prance. In Paris, he received an award in the Paul Vail-
lant Couturier International Contest. -------------
CLEANLINESS FIRST
When travelling in lands where sanitary conditions are primitive, cleanliness is always the firrt role of health safety, health officers say. This will present no problem in most countries, st least along regular tourist lanes, but in eases where traveller* are forced to "put up" in doubtful places it is beet to exercise extreme caution. It pays to make sure water has been boiled, milk is pasteurized or canned and that food has been handled and prepared in a sanitary way.
SOVK