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25 Years of AZA Magazine Clipping, November 1949
1949
25 YEARS of AZA
Kansas City, Mo., Lincoln, Nebr., Des
Moines, Ia., Grand Rapids, Mich., Coun-
cil Bluffs, Ia., Minneapolis, Minn., and
Gary, Ind. Thirteen chapters were in
existence when the Supreme Lodge of
B'nai B'rith Youth Movement Has Aided 100,000
B'nai B'rith held its convention in 1925.
Jewish Youngsters During That Time
After hearing a report by Henry Mon-
sky, who was even then a power in
B'nai B'rith, and Sidney G. Kusworm,
now the Treasurer of the Supreme
By Dr. Max F. Baer
Lodge, the delegates, as their last act
before adjournment, adopted the AZA
as the official junior order of B'nai
This is the first of two articles on
B'rith.
the 25th anniversary of AZA by the
Philip M. Klutznick was chosen as the
Acting National Director of BBYO,
who is also National Director of the
first executive for national AZA head-
B.B. Vocational Service Bureau. The
quarters. By selecting this gifted young
second article will appear next month.
man, who is now a member of the Execu-
Dr. Baer was Assistant National Di-
tive Committee of the Supreme Lodge,
rector of AZA for several years dur-
ing the 1930s, and has written an
the Supreme Advisory Council assured
authoritative history of the organiza-
the infant organization of a solid growth.
tion, of which these two articles are a
In 1933 Klutznick was succeeded by
condensation.-Editor.
Julius Bisno, who guided the organiza-
tion during its period of greatest growth
-for 12 years. The success of the AZA
led B'nai B'rith in 1944 to organize the
THERE would be a B'nai B'rith youth
B'nai B'rith Youth Organization, includ-
movement today even if Sam Beber
ing also the B'nai B'rith Girls, B'nai
had never existed. For it is almost as
B'rith Young Men, and B'nai B'rith
natural for a service organization of
Young Women. Dr. Abram L. Sachar,
adults to have a junior order as it is for
National Director of the B'nai B'rith
parents to have children. Indeed, junior
Sam Beber, of Omaha, who founded AZA
B'nai B'rith auxiliaries were functioning
Hillel Foundations and now President
twenty-five years ago, and has seen it grow
in one form or another some seventy
into the basis for B'nai B'rith's present far-
of Brandeis University, became over-all
years ago. District Grand Lodge No. 4
flung Youth Organization, which has 1,000
National Director. He was succeeded in
was the first to renew the idea in modern
chapters throughout the world for Jewish
1947 by Rabbi Amram Prero. Towards
times, when it organized the Covenant-
boys and girls.
the
close
of
1948
eers as its junior order in 1921. District
position of Acting National Director of
Grand Lodge No. 2 took the same step
the BBYO, under the chairmanship of
in 1922.
know how to express them in a Jewish
Jacob J. Lieberman of Los Angeles.
However, Sam Beber's dynamic
way."
leadership brought the idea of a perma-
Omaha, Nebraska, Beber's home town,
nent national B'nai B'rith youth move-
was the cradle of the movement. Early in
Serves In War And Peace
ment to fruition much earlier than would
1923 a group of 15 boys around the age
A detailed history of the AZA will
have been the case in the ordinary course
of 16 organized themselves into a group
of events. Without him it might have
which they decided to call "Aleph Zadik
appear in the December, 1949 issue of
The Shofar, official organ of the BBYO,
developed less rapidly and along less con-
Aleph." There was no particular signifi-
structive lines. As the founder of AZA
cance to the name at that time, except
which was first published in 1925. This
and president of its Supreme Advisory
that the boys felt that since they were a
brief article can only make passing men-
Council for 17 years, he guided the or-
Jewish fraternity they should adopt He-
tion of the great spirit of fraternity and
brew letters instead of borrowing from
of service to others that has always char-
ganization with a clear head, a warm
Jewish heart, and a firm hand.
the alphabet of the Greeks. A few years
acterized the AZA. Particularly out-
That was the jazz age of America. A
later, when Aleph Zadik Aleph became
standing was the AZA record of service
moral retrogression, growing out of
the junior order of B'nai B'rith, the
during World War II. More than 10,000
World War I, characterized American
name was interpreted to represent the
AZA members and alumni served in the
life. In this setting, Jewish youth de-
motto of the sponsoring organization.
Thus the first Aleph came to stand for
armed forces of the U.S. and Canada.
veloped few attachments to Jewish tradi-
tions and values. The adoption of a new
Ahovah, brotherly love; the Zadik,
Some 250 were reported as having made
immigration law in 1924 meant that
Tzadokoh, benevolence; and the second
the supreme sacrifice; a greater number
American Jewish life would no longer
Aleph, Achdus, harmony.
were decorated for bravery. AZA chap-
be receiving spiritual transfusions from
When Nathan Mnookin, the first advis-
ters sold almost 20 million dollars' worth
the Jewish communities of eastern Eu-
or to this group, moved to Kansas City,
of War Bonds, and made many other
rope. The time was ripe for the organiza-
Sam Beber was chosen as advisor, and
significant contributions toward victory
tion of a Jewish youth movement in
he made the group the nucleus for a na-
on the home front.
tional movement. Beber called an organ-
America.
izational meeting for May 3, 1924. Also
In peace, as in war, more than 550
Jewish Motivation Needed
present at this historic gathering were
AZA chapters have effectively carried
Sam Beber, then 22, serious-minded,
Dr. Sol B. Arenson, Professor Nathan
out their "five-fold and full" program
intellectually keen, idealistic and practi-
Bernstein, Harry H. Lapidus, and
of educational, religious, community
cal at the same time, was a logical
Goodman. The group organized a Su-
service, athletic, and social activities.
person to establish such a movement.
preme Advisory Council, granted a char-
The B'nai B'rith youth movement as a
"We boys felt that while there were clubs
ter to the Omaha fraternity, and de-
whole has, over the last quarter century,
enough and fraternities enough in this
termined that several additional chapters
helped almost 100,000 young Jewish peo-
country, they were not Jewish enough,"
be organized at once.
young Beber explained. "Here we were
The idea of a youth organization with
ple realize personal satisfactions and de-
growing up, receiving a fairly good gen-
a distinctive Jewish purpose, but also
velop into upright and useful members
eral education, but a very scanty Jewish
some of the outer trappings and trim-
of the Jewish community and of the
training. Our instincts were Jewish, but
mings of a fraternity, spread rapidly.
larger community of which they have
we had no outlet for them and did not
New chapters were quickly formed in
been part.
80
THE NATIONAL JEWISH MONTHLY
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25 Years of AZA Magazine Clipping, November 1949
In the first of two articles, Dr. Max F. Baer presents a condensed history of AZA on the occasion of the AZA 25th anniversary. The article includes a photograph of Sam Beber.