- Leo M. Franklin
Infobox Person
name = Leo M. Franklin
image_size =
caption =
birth_date = birth date|1870|03|05
birth_place =
death_date = death date and age|1948|08|08|1870|03|05
death_place =
occupation =Religion
spouse = Hattie Oberfelder
parents = Michael H. and Rachel L. Franklin
children = Ruth, Margaret, and Leo FranklinRabbi Leo Morris Franklin (
March 5 ,1870 -August 8 ,1948 ) [http://oss.tbeonline.org/Rfranklinarchive1/exhibit3/e30071a.htm Record 701] (Franklin's entry) in the Archives of the Temple Beth El.] was an influential Jewish clergyman fromDetroit , who headed that city's Temple Beth El from 1899 to 1941.Early life
Leo M. Franklin was born on
March 5 ,1870 inCambridge City, Indiana to Michael H. and Rachel Levy Franklin. When Franklin was four, his family moved toCincinnati , where he attended public school.Irving I. Edgar, MD, [http://www.michjewishhistory.org/pdfs/vol16-2.pdf#page=12 "Rabbi Leo M. Franklin: The Omaha Years (1892-1899),"] "Michigan Jewish History", Jewish Historical Society of Michigan, July 1976, pp. 10 - 21.] As a teenager, Franklin attended both theUniversity of Cincinnati andHebrew Union College simultaneously. In 1892, he graduatedPhi Beta Kappa from Cincinnati; in the same year, he graduated from Hebrew Union (as the only member of his class), and was ordained as arabbi . He was immediately invited to serve the Temple Israel inOmaha, Nebraska .Temple Israel, Omaha
:"For further information, see
Jewish community in Omaha "On
September 1 ,1892 , Franklin assumed his duties at Temple Israel. He immediately began advocating changes to strengthenReform Judaism in his congregation, suggesting the adoption of theUnion Prayer Book and the ritual endorsed by theCentral Conference of American Rabbis . The congregation adopted his suggestions enthusiastically. However, due to a business recession in the early 1890s, temple income slowly decreased, and the congregation at Temple Israel shrank (from 114 to 84). Despite circumstances, Franklin was able to augment the Temple Building fund, slated for the construction of a new building to house the congregation. The congregation re-elected him to a five-year term in 1896, with a ringing endorsement.On
July 15 ,1896 , Franklin married Hattie Oberfelder; the ceremony was performed at her parents' house inChicago . The couple's first daughter, Ruth, was born in Omaha.During his tenure in Omaha, Franklin reached out beyond the congregation of Temple Israel. He organized a Reform congregation in
Lincoln, Nebraska , established anormal school for religious instructors, edited the official publication of the OmahaHumane Society , and was active in many other educational and charitable activities. In addition, he delivered sermons at other congregations, including spending a week inSioux City, Iowa .Due to his ministrations and other activities, including contributions to various periodicals, Franklin garnered a reputation as one of the more promising young Reform ministers. In 1898, Franklin was invited to deliver a sermon in Detroit. His speech was received with such approval that Detroit's Temple Beth El immediately invited him to serve as their rabbi, replacing the recently departed Dr. Louis Grossman. Franklin pondered the matter, and, sensing a greater opportunity in Detroit, accepted Temple Beth El's offer. He left Omaha in January 1899 on cordial terms, keeping in contact with the Omaha congregation for years later.
Temple Beth El, Detroit, 1899 - 1920
Franklin preached his first sermon as Rabbi of Beth El at the Washington Boulevard temple on
January 27 ,1899 . He again began by advocating changes. The congregation passed a new constitution later that year, and, in November 1899, Franklin organized the United Jewish Charities, an umbrella organization to coordinate the philanthropic acticities of the currently-existing Beth El Hebrew Relief Society, Hebrew Ladies' Sewing Society, Self-Help Circle, and Jewish Relief Society. Jacob R. Marcus, "The Beth El Story, with a History of the Jews in Michigan Before 1850," Wayne State University Press, 1955.] In 1901, Franklin organized the Woman's Auxiliary Association (later the Sisterhood of Temple Beth El), and assumed editorship of the "Jewish American", Detroit's first English-Jewish weekly.Franklin thought a new temple on Detroit's "Piety Row" along Woodward would serve the congregation by increasing the visibility of the Jewish faith. [http://www.detroit1701.org/Temple%20Beth%20El.html Temple Beth El/Bonstelle Theater of Wayne State University] from Detroit1701.org] He convinced the Beth El congregation to build a new temple. They purchased land on Woodward near Eliot and engaged
George Mason as an architect; Mason was aided by the young (and then relatively unknown) Beth El congregantAlbert Kahn . The cornerstone of the building was laid in 1902 and the first service was held in the new Temple in January 1903. Beth El used this building until 1922; it is currentlyWayne State University 's Bonstelle Theater.While in Detroit, Franklin's family expanded. In addition to Ruth, born in Omaha, Hattie Franklin gave birth to another daughter, Margaret, and a son, Leo.Neil Baldwin, [http://books.google.com/books?id=dLepLrhKU-AC "Henry Ford and the Jews: The Mass Production of Hate,"] Public Affairs, 2003, ISBN 1586481630, pp. 121-133; 251-254.]
Franklin introduced more changes over the next few years, including holding services on Sunday morning (in addition to Saturday morning), unassigned seating, and an exchange of pulpits with out-of-town rabbis. He reached out to Orthodox and Conservative congregations, instituted an interdenominational community Thanksgiving service, and spoke often at church groups to attempt to bridge the gap between Jews and non-Jews. Franklin was a popular Rabbi, the Temple congregation increased from 136 members in 1899 (Franklin's first year in the pulpit) to 422 in 1910. In 1917, Beth El was the third largest Reform congregation in the country.
Franklin reached out to younger Jews, establishing an annual service for students of the University of Michigan in 1912, and establishing a student congregation (the forerunner of the
Hillel Society ) at the University of Michigan in 1914. As a result, the Central Conference of American Rabbis and theUnion of American Hebrew Congregations created a Joint Commission on Religious Work in Universities, naming Franklin as the chair. Franklin was named president of the Central Conference of American Rabbis in 1919.Leo Franklin and Henry Ford
An accidental result of Franklin's prominence in Detroit was his relationship with
Henry Ford . In the early 1910s, Ford and Franklin lived on the same block of Edison Avenue (and were, along withHorace Rackham , the first three residents of the block). Ford would occasionally stop and chat with Franklin on his way to thePiquette Plant , and entertained Franklin in his home on social occasions. In 1913, Ford asked Albert Kahn (who, as well as being a Beth El congregant, had worked for Ford) to approach Franklin on Ford's behalf and offer him the use of a customized Model T for use on his pastoral rounds. Ford chose Kahn as an intermediary "lest [Franklin] would misunderstand his motive." Franklin, however, accepted Ford's offer, and Ford presented him with a new car every year for several years, even after Ford had moved to Dearborn.However, in 1920, Ford began publishing a series of anti-Semitic "
International Jew " articles in his paper, "The Dearborn Independent ". The articles took Franklin (and most of his Jewish colleagues) by surprise. Franklin believed Ford was, at heart, a good man and an ally; he wrote: "Such venom could only some from a Jew-hater of the lowest type, and here it was appearing in a newspaper owned and controlled by one whom the Jews had counted among their friends. It was veritably a bolt out of the blue."Franklin was a member of the local
Anti-Defamation League . As a friend of Ford's, and having easy access to his office, Franklin was delegated to discuss the matter with Ford. He paid Ford a visit and was on the verge of convincing him to issue at least a partial retraction when an intemperate telegram fromLouis B. Marshall , president of theAmerican Jewish Committee , hardened Ford's stance. Franklin left the meeting in disappointment, upset with Marshall's lack of tact (as Marshall was upset with Franklin's naivete). When the "Independent" continued to publish anti-Semitic articles, Franklin returned his latest customized Model T, with a letter of protest to Ford. Within days, Ford phoned Franklin, genuinely surprised that "good" Jews -- like Frankin -- would be opposed to what had been written.Max Wallace, [http://books.google.com/books?id=MRQtC2Pd9h8C "The American Axis: Henry Ford, Charles Lindbergh, and the Rise of the Third Reich,"] St. Martin's, 2003, ISBN 0312335318, pp. 17-18, 147-149.] He did not, however, cease publishing the "Independent".That day came much later: in 1927, Ford endured a libel trial over the "Independent" that caused him to close the paper and issue a public apology. Franklin immediately wrote Ford, reminding him of their conversation seven years earlier but accepting his apology. Franklin did not, as some of his colleagues suggested, immediately approach Ford for a monetary example of his contrition. Instead, he preferred to keep Ford in his debt, saying, "let us be the creditors while he remains our debtor."
However, "The International Jew," published in book form in the early 1920s, was still in print, and Ford did not respond to Franklin's requests to halt printing. Relations between the two men remained frosty, and they didn't directly communicate until 1938. Smarting from the fallout over his acceptance of a
Grand Cross of the German Eagle from Nazi Germany, Ford asked Franklin to disseminate the message that he wished to hire displaced European Jews. Franklin worked with Ford to craft a message decrying the treatment of Jews and delivered the missive to Detroit's newspapers. Upon publication, antisemitic activists such as FatherCharles Coughlin questioned its authenticity. Franklin was outraged, but Ford never publicly backed the statement.Temple Beth El, Detroit, 1920-1948
Meanwhile, in the early 1920s, Beth El was outgrowing the temple that had been constructed in 1902; the congregation had grown and many had moved north into neighborhoods such as
Boston-Edison (where Franklin himself lived). In 1921, Albert Kahn was contracted as the architect for a new temple, located on Woodward and Gladstone. [http://www.detroit1701.org/Temple%20Beth%20El-Lighthouse.html Temple Beth El/Lighthouse Tabernacle] from Detroit1701.org] The new temple (now the Lighthouse Cathedral) was dedicated in November 1922. In that same year, Franklin was elected by the congregation to a life tenure.Beth El and Franklin continued to evolve. In 1925, the By-Laws of the congregation were amended to provide that the wife of a congregation member could become a member in her own right. That same year, weekly broadcasts of services over WWJ were instituted. Franklin also wrote and published multiple books, including "The Rabbi, the Man and His Message;" "The Road to Understanding Between Christian and Jew;" and "An Outline History of Congregation Beth El, Detroit, Michigan." By 1926, the congregation numbered over 1400 members.
Franklin continued to be involved in numerous activities within the congregation and beyond. He was a trustee of the
Detroit Symphony Orchestra and theDetroit Civic Theatre , and was on the board of theDetroit Public Library , acting as president in 1932, 1938, and 1944. He also served on the boards of the Fine Arts Society, the Board of Commerce, the Greater Detroit Motion Picture Council, theDetroit Historical Society , the Wrangler's Club, the Ford Republic, the League of Nations Association of Detroit, and the Citizens Housing and Planning Association. In addition, Franklin was active as an officer on theMichigan Humane Society Michigan Humane Society, [http://books.google.com/books?id=3406pzVrXMAC "The Michigan Humane Society: Animal Welfare in Detroit, 1877-2002,"] 2002, Arcadia Publishing, ISBN 0738520284, p. 41.] for many years. He received an honorary Doctor of Law degrees from theUniversity of Detroit (a Catholic institution) in 1923 and Wayne State University in 1939, and an honorary Doctor of Divinity from his alma mater, Hebrew Union College, in 1939.In 1941, Franklin retired from active ministry, succeeded by B. Benedict Glazer. The Board of Trustees bestowed on him the title of "rabbi emeritus," and he continued to be involved in the congregation.
On
August 8 ,1948 , Leo Franklin passed away. The archives of the Temple Beth El are named in his honor. [http://oss.tbeonline.org/leofranklinarchives.htm The Rabbi Leo M. Franklin Archives] of the Temple Beth El.]References
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