5708 �� ftMh Hethdtteh � 164?
CANADIAN JEWISH REVIEW
With Faith In The Ultimate Sense Of Justice
fly Snwilet nrnnfmtttii Of Mvrifrpnl4 I'r'ftitltnt tlf The (.'Vnrtrffrtft Jwhh Conyr***
With the approach of the 401-*mn holy days which ttaher In our New Year* ninny and solemn are the thoughts whieh must agitate i IIP minds of our people,
Certainly Canadian Jewry wmilrl r�e unworthy of Itself If It viewed ivith equanimity the tropic4 plight
Snmuel Bronfman; M'o'-n t r � a 1 .
President, Canadian Jewish
Congress
� </bpyrlffht by
in which thousands of its brothers in Europe, fully two years after a war which was to bring the Four Freedoms to the four comers of the world, still find themselves, Displaced in camps that have no exit, misplaced in ships that have no destination, the pitiable remnant which miraculously survived the onslaught of Nazi terror, knows today of peace only by hearsay. '. -" �*'"'.'��'�'. :
The great act of rectification which one expected from the world, the gesture which would in some measure atone for and correct the unspeakable ordeal to which our pooplo had been subjected, faibd to material \�. For all the participant* in th� world-wide conflict, �cheme* of rehabilitation �r* under way; *v*n for tho German* U*t* *r* the bcweAta of the tEUr*hall ptitn; for the enrlUut fttui fhe ravaged uf tho Naid vtoiiiua N�B iHtly th* 1 1 oh cumin* <
giving way to this Buieidnl attitude, what we fett then, all knorw despair fart Jea-d orijy t/� rle-
and shame.
men are desperate men) and per ate men know not what they
Against despair, two weapon* ore paramount: first, crtir JsKh }fl C4or1y In Him who has brought t� through the long nerittiriea tothis point, ftfifl Who, though we stom-blefl, tieter let us full. Whoever Hticcumhs to deffpftJr thiw wonM rtiminlsh from I'l-ovider^e; he fights our traditions, That is not our way; not the way of a people which is preparing for those at�-nual religions services whose triple the^ne Js The Snjxreme Monarchy of Oodj, the Rememtoralfce* <yf Things Past, and the Trumpet* of rnevHahle tiberation/
Further militating against despair should be the knowledge thai the problem of our people is not separate from, bat a part of, the general problem of mankind, Not only we, btrt abno*t aH of the nations of the earth Jive fcxkt^ in uncertainty; fn international pcii-ties, saspkiofi and fear are the dominant motives; the presence <jf a new weapon has east * shadtrgr over the entire e*>irr*e of history, from the first Adam to the last atom.
Only when the reali2Aticr. thai all mankind U cne reaches men with the same impact aa the realization that all the earth ia at^m-izabte, can there ensue a. way -:u-of this dreadful post-war iaipaase. Unless- civf7T'7ativa � is to ejiti- bef ^TTJ it has hardly begun, socfi i vay out must be fomul: and unless the way out proTices far aH peogl&L, including the Jewish pecpi�v n: must ptxrre bet a biiad alley,
Cana�g�rr Jewry, strcn^ with, die stea-dfastcess <?f an ai strvrt^ with uie aag*'\jjt 4 y countrr. i$ cvjs&ifcm thas, in s
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