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Can You Get My Name in the Papers? |
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THE SCULPTOR WHO NEFFER HEARD OF ME Several
members of the synagogue were involved in the fund-raising process but
two men did more than anyone else to achieve what many people thought
was impossible, Mr Gerald Levin, the congregation's president, and Mr
Trevor Schuster Davis, its honorary solicitor. Not everyone
approved of the expenditure of such a large sum of money on the synagogue's
restoration, least of all the other synagogues and their members, because
Garnethill, in the west end of Glasgow, does not have the volume of attendances it once had as most of Glasgow's
Jewry belong to congregations in Giffnock and Newton Mearns, on the
south side of the city where they live. Some of my co-religionists have
fallen by the wayside and don't belong to any synagogue and efforts
are made from time to time to attract them back to the fold. Garnethill
and the role it has played in the history of
the Jewish community of Glasgow does however attract many visitors
and in the past few of years it has been visited by hundreds of school
children, students, and church groups. Open Doors Day can attract more
than 500 visitors. Another
justification for refurbishing the synagogue at such great cost is that
it has housed the ever-growing Scottish Jewish Archives Centre since
it was established in April 1987. The centre is visited by almost 1000
people a year, Jews, non-Jews interested in Judaism, students doing
research, youth groups, and, like the synagogue, many church groups
and schoolchildren. Coincidentally the archives came into being a year
after I wrote a proposal to establish a Museum of Judaism at Garnethill
to ensure the building's survival.. Garnethill Synagogue is considered by many
to be Scotland's premier Jewish house of worship. Although it was the
first synagogue to be built in Scotland a number of premises were used
as synagogues a long time before that. Its members
also founded a considerable number of communal organisatons; the Glasgow
Hebrew Philanthropic Society, the Hebrew Boot and Clothing Guild, the
Ladies' Benevolent Society, the Dorcas Welfare Clinic, the Jewish Lads
Brigade, Lodge Montefiore and Glasgow
Jewish Choral Society. The last three are still flourishing, although
the lads brigade now has lassies, too. The day
Garnethill Synagogue opened Queen Victoria still had two more decades
to reign, the telephone and the gramophone were grating infants, Tchaikovsky's
masterpiece Eugene Onegin was given its first performance in Moscow, and in Glasgow Mr McTear of St Rollox
Chemical Works claimed to have made artificial diamonds. The year
was 1879 and on an overcast Tuesday afternoon crowds of people, mostly on foot but some in hired broughams
and landaus, made their way up several steep cobbled streets in the
West End of Glasgow to attend what the Glasgow Herald called "a
unique and attractive ceremony," the dedication of
the synagogue. One hundred
years to the day later, September 9, 1979, with a flair that would have
impressed that old master interpreter of the bible himself, Cecil B.
De Mille, a group of Glasgow Jews, myself among them, produced a spectacular
of our own in celebration of the centenary. Jack
Miller, a member of the synagogue's ruling council of laymen, and his
friend Dr Sidney Naftalin had a few months earlier conceived the idea
of staging a series of celebratory events appropriate to an institution
of such importance in the history of Scottish Jewry. I had no
connection with the synagogue but Jack recruited me to the organising
committee anyway. As Head of Public Relations for the city it was not
difficult for me to negotiate venues for all the events with my colleagues
in the council and to publicise them widely. The result was that a local
event was made of interest to news media in Israel,
Europe and America, as well as of course the rest of Britain. The Israeli
newspaper Ma'ariv (Evening) described Glasgow as a noisy, industrial
city, the Tel Aviv of Scotland just as Edinburgh is the Jerusalem. The
paper went on, Many people who wanted to make a name for themselves
in business went to Glasgow. One of the most famous is Sir Isaac Wolfson
who still has a faint Glasgow accent although he left the city many
years ago in his youth. The curtain
went up on the main celebratory event on September 9 when a cast of
400 gathered on the old synagogue-on-the-hill for a thanksgiving ceremony.
This was followed by a banquet in the Victorian splendour of the City
Chambers. A galaxy of stars from a variety of firmaments,
politics, the church, medicine, law, science, diplomacy, the halls of
academe, and industry and commerce, joined in the celebrations. Among them
were Mr George Younger, Secretary of State for Scotland, Lord Provost
David Hodge of Glasgow, Roman Catholic Bishop Joseph Devine, Lord Galpern
(a former Lord Provost), Dr Alwyn Williams, and Sir Samuel Curran, principals
of Glasgow and Strathclyde Universities,
and retired diplomat Sir Horace Phillips. The thanksgiving
ceremony was conducted by Dr
(later Lord) Immanuel Jacobovits, the Chief Rabbi, Rabbi Leon Benarroch,
minister of Garnethill, and the Rev. Ernest Levy. At the
banquet my wife and I had no sooner sat down when a council usher tapped
me quietly on the shoulder and said, "Would you go along to the
Lord Provost's room, please, Harry." There I found the Secretary
of State, the Lord Provost, and one or two others trying to sort out
some difficulty which had arisen with the arrangements for the Chief
Rabbi's return to London later that night. By the time I got back to
the dinner table the meal was almost over. I was not amused as I had
been looking forward to the occasion for months. Among other
events were a "Jewish Way of Life Exhibition" in Hillhead
Library, with which we were given great help by Andrew Miller, director
of libraries, an exhibition of Jewish art in Glasgow's flagship museum
at Kelvingrove, and two quizzes, one for schoolchildren and the other
for adults. The two exhibitions were a great success and attracted 38,300
visitors. The Exhibition
of Jewish Art had its own organising committee to assist the city council's
very experienced Director of Museums and Art Galleries Alasdair Auld.
The members of our committee included my friends Miller and Naftalin, and Mr Benno Schotz, the Queen's Sculptor in
Ordinary in Scotland, whom we elected honorary president. The chairman
was Mr Michael Goldberg, an Arts graduate of Glasgow University, a director
of the Scottish National Orchestra, a former chairman of the Citizens
Theatre, a lover of painting and sculpture, playwright, and joint managing
director of the department store group of A. Goldberg and Sons. A formidable collection. At one
meeting at the home of Michael Goldberg the subject of publicity was
brought up by Benno Schotz. I was sitting next to him and said quietly,
"I don't think you need worry about publicity, I'm looking after
that." Benno leaned
back, stared at me with raised eyebrows as if I had suddenly been beamed
down from the Starship USS Enterprise,
and said imperiously, "Vot iss your name?" "Henry
Diamond." "I
haf neffer heard of you!" said the Queen's Sculptor in Ordinary.
"I
don't think you're alone in that," I told Benno, "but I'm
taking care of the publicity anyway." A slight edge had entered
my voice as I perhaps arrogantly considered myself quite good at what
I did, including convenership of the one-man centenary publicity committee.
Benno made no further comment. In the
weeks that followed I organised messages of goodwill from the Queen,
Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, and Menachem Begin, Prime Minister
of Israel. In my letter to Begin I told him I had heard him speak at
the Methodist Hall in London the previous year and I was taking the
advice he had given to the audience, "When you are trying to achieve
something worth while never take no for an answer". I learned
later that Begin wrote a lengthy message and told an aide, "See
that Henry Diamond gets this message in Glasgow as soon as possible.
He never takes no for an answer!" Naturally I publicised the messages
widely, not forgetting my own part in the operation. Not long
after the celebrations the synagogue council my wife and I were delighted
to be awarded honorary membership of the synagogue, which I have attended
regularly ever since. For some years now I have also been a member of
the synagogue council. A year
after the centenary celebrations Sidney Naftalin, a close friend of
Benno Schotz and his general practitioner, asked me if I could do anything
to obtain the Freedom of the City of Glasgow for Benno. I have to admit
I was not filled with enthusiasm at the idea. Maybe I was being small-minded
about Benno's comment about neffer having heard of me, but Sidney was
a man of great charm and persuasiveness for whom I had affection so
I finally succumbed and wrote a nomination for Benno, who generated
affection and loyalty from his friends despite a tendency to identify
himself with Epstein and Rodin in the Mount Rushmore of sculptors.
I I couldn't
put my own name to the nomination as I felt I made enough demands on
my political masters without that kind of thing so I gave it back to
Sidney who had it signed by a number of influential figures including
the then president of the Representative Council, Dr Gerald Jesner,
Lord Galpern, Harry Barnes, director of Glasgow School of Art and Sir
Robin Philipson, president of the Royal Scottish Academy. I then
got it back and slipped it furtively under the door of the Town Clerk
and Chief Executive Steve Hamilton who in turn gave it to the leader
of the council for consideration by the ruling Labour group. I don't
know if Steve knew where it really came from because he never said anything
but there weren't many people in the City Chambers who didn't know I
was active in Jewish affairs. Besides, I think many people also had
come to recognise my flights of rhetoric. I had a few chuckles as I
indulged in one or two of them in Benno's nomination. The accompanying
biography will give you the highlights in the career of this distinguished Glaswegian whose work is recognised
world-wide and who has brought such credit to the city in which he has
lived and worked so long. Conferment of the Freedom of the City would
be regarded by this great artist as the ultimate honour. It would
be difficult in a letter of this kind to list the famous and not so
famous who have been immortalised in the work of Benno Schotz or the
cities and institutions of the world in which his work is proudly displayed.
In Glasgow itself his artistry can be seen in many churches and schools
and in private institutions, including the Art Galllery and Museum in
Kelvingrove. We hope this submission will be given the earnest consideration
of your council. A few days
later a senior member of the Labour group asked me, "Did you write
the nomination for Benno Schotz?" "Me!"
I exclaimed in feigned surprise. "Nothing to do with me. I'm just
an innocent bystander." Benno was
later awarded the Freedom along with world champion lightweight boxer
Jim Watt, Sir Samuel Curran, and Nelson Mandela, the black African nationalist
leader, who was still confined on Robben Island. Dr Alex Ekwuene, Vice
President of Nigeria, accepted the Burgess Ticket Freedom on his behalf.
I'm rather
ashamed to admit that when I first heard the name Nelson Mandela I didn't
know who he was, but I wasn't alone. When I hesitatingly asked a friend
in the City Chambers he said, "Isn't he a pop group leader!" Some years
later Benno Schotz's daughter Cherna Crome, a trustee of his estate,
phoned to say she wanted to present one of her father's works to the
city council and could I do something to bring that about. She told
me it had been his intention to present the work to the Lord Provost
as a gesture of gratitude for his Freedom but a combination of circumstances
interfered with this plan and he died in 1984 without making the gift.
I wrote
to the Lord Provost explaining Mrs Crome's request and a presentation
was organised for Wednesday, August 28, 1991, the 100th anniversary
of his birth. The presentation
of the work, Dedication, a 5ft 6in welded bronze, valued at £20,000
was made by 14-year-old Avigail Schotz, the sculptor's grand-daughter,
who flew from her home in Los Angeles for the event. Her father Amiel
flew from the biblical town of Beersheba in the Negev desert of Israel. Dedication
is considered to be one of the
sculptor's finest pieces of its kind and is still prominently displayed
in the City Chambers. Cherna
very kindly gave me one of the many drawings of stones done by her father
but unfortunately it is not signed, which rather diminishes its value. |