An American Jewish Resistance during World War II

Similar documents
The Jewish Labor Bund was one of the most

Schoen Consulting US Canada Holocaust Survey Comparison October 2018 General Awareness - Open Ended Questions

Rodef Shalom clergy will begin each class with a short discussion that relates to the theme.

New Perspectives on Kristallnacht: After 80 Years, the Nazi Pogrom in Global Comparison

Candidate Q&A Beth Harris 1. Why are you interested in running for the JVP National Board?

Yalta and Potsdam: Start of the Cold War. Yalta Conference

Daniel Florentin. Abstract

Where Are You Walking and Why?

Title: BOOK REVIEW: Tropical Zion: General Trujillo, FDR, and the Jews of Sosua, by Allen Wells

Judaism is enjoying an unexpected revival, says David Landau. But there are deep religious and political divisions, mostly centered on Israel

Please note I ve made some minor changes to his English to make it a smoother read KATANA]

New Areas of Holocaust Research

Schoen Consulting Azrieli Foundation Holocaust Poll September What is the primary language or langauges spoken at home?

Victoria J. Barnett The Role of the Churches: Compliance and Confrontation*

S C H O E N C O N S U L T I N G

Jewish History II: Jews in the Modern World

Introduction. Studia Judaica 19 (2016), nr 1 (37), s. 5 9

Evaluate the extent to which the Edit of Nantes (1598) can be considered a turning point in European political and religious history.

Assignments The course s written assignments consist of a map exercise, a document assignment paper, reading responses, and a final examination.

THE STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY OF MISSOURI RESEARCH CENTER-KANSAS CITY

A World Without Survivors

Saturday, September 21, 13. Since Ancient Times

Invocation for Healing the Psyche of Europe

(Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2015) Martin R. Menke, Rivier University

Rescue and Righteous Among the Nations in Holland Joseph Michman

Religious Pluralism and Post-national European Democracy: Reflections on the Westphalian Settlement and the Jewish Question

Special Collections and University Archives UMass Amherst Libraries 154 Hicks Way : Amherst, Mass

University of Haifa Weiss-Livnat International MA Program in Holocaust Studies

JOSEPH TENENBAUM PAPERS, RG-21/

Course Offerings

Picture: Expulsion of the Jews Wikimedia Commons. Web. 9 May 2014.

AMERICAN ^ VV YEAR BOOK THE ANNUAL RECORD OF JEWISH CIVILIZATION THE AMERICAN JEWISH COMMITTEE

What was the significance of the WW2 conferences?

The Contribution of Catholic Christians to Social Renewal in East Germany

Tolerance in French Political Life

North America and the Jewish Refugee Crisis

US History The Holocaust 8.4 (turn in)

Introduction to the Holocaust

JEWS IN THE MODERN WORLD: HISTORY OF JEWISH CIVILIZATION III Spring History 141/Jewish Studies 158/Religious Studies 122/NELC 053

Secular judaism in the XXI Century, Contemplate, The Center for Cultural Judaism, New York, Bernardo Sorj *

THE FACE OF THE GHETTO. Open Hearts Closed TEACHER S GUIDE. Pictures Taken by Jewish Photographers in the Litzmannstadt Ghetto

St. Petersburg, Russian Federation October Item 2 6 October 2017

JEWS IN THE MODERN WORLD: HISTORY OF JEWISH CIVILIZATION III Spring History 141/Jewish Studies 158/Religious Studies 122/NELC 053

BOOK REVIEWS/COMPTES RENDUS

Event A: The Decline of the Ottoman Empire

7) Finally, entering into prospective and explicitly normative analysis I would like to introduce the following issues to the debate:

Animal Farm: Historical Allegory = Multiple Levels of Meaning

HISTORY 1400: MODERN WESTERN TRADITIONS

JEFFREY HAUS. TEACHING APPOINTMENTS Associate Professor of History and Religion, Director of Jewish Studies, Kalamazoo College, 2009-present.

18 Promises - Fulfilment through Israel

HTY 110HA Module 3 Lecture Notes Late 19th and Early 20th Century European Immigration

Don t Stand Idly By! Parashat Achrei Mot-Kedoshim April 28, 2018 Rabbi Carl M. Perkins Temple Aliyah, Needham

The Continuing Arab-Israeli Conflict: Who has the right to Control Palestine?

Before we begin, I would like to convey regrets from our president Ronald S. Lauder.

Cleveland Zionists: Raising Awareness of the Holocaust

Louis Rosenblum (b. 1923) is a retired scientist who directed the Solar and

Chicago Tribune August 14, 2013

Analyzing Resistance, Collaboration, & Neutrality In the French Revolution

CONGREGATION BETH ISRAEL COLLECTION,

JEWISH AMERICANS AND THE HOLOCAUST. The Holocaust discourse in Jewish American newspapers,

Discovering the Holocaust

What Does Patriotism Mean to You?

Anti-Jewish Legislation (Laws)

LITHUANIAN HISTORICAL STUDIES ISSN PP

Vincent Reynouard editorials

United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Archives Finding Aid RG Greece April 29, 2011

AMERICAN JEWISH YEAR BOOK

Chiune Sugihara: The Japanese Schindler. Troy Kawahara Individual Website Senior Division

US Strategies in the Middle East

History 416: Eastern European Jews in the United States, 1880s-1930s

Schoen Consulting Azrieli Foundation Holocaust Topline September 2018

DOWNLOAD OR READ : WHAT IFS OF JEWISH HISTORY PDF EBOOK EPUB MOBI

Rose I. Bender Papers

FRANKLIN DELANO ROOSEVELT

The Holocaust, the collaboration and the mass murders in Lithuania

More Iran Background ( ) EQ: What was the cultural climate in Iran like before and after the Revolution?

Garcia de la Puente Transcript

Contact for further information about this collection

The Universal and the Particular

Eli Barnavi, A Historical Atlas of the Jewish People: From the Time of the Patriarchs to the Present.

H.E. Dr Oskaras Jusys Ambassador Embassy of the Republic of Lithuania 84 Gloucester Place London W1U 6AU. 7 February 2011.

ANGOLA PROVINCE AFRAM ZONE AFRAM ZONE. Official Language: Portuguese. Vision Statement. Mission Statement

border crossings the reign of Christ 2015

Background Essay on Harry S. Truman and the Recognition of Israel

ENKA INTERNATIONAL MODEL UNITED NATIONS 2018 World in Crisis

Saving The Jews: Franklin D. Roosevelt And The Holocaust By Robert N. Rosen READ ONLINE

History 510:333 France, Old Regime and Revolution Professor Jennifer Jones Spring 2010

American Jewish Identity and Newspapers: the medium that maintained an imagined community through a change in identity

Adlai E. Stevenson High School Course Description

A History of anti-semitism

ALANNA E. COOPER 3 Lancaster Street, Cambridge, MA (cell)

FROM MEMORIALS TO INVALUABLE HISTORICAL DOCUMENTATION: USING YIZKOR BOOKS AS RESOURCES FOR STUDYING A VANISHED WORLD. Michlean J.

The Defamation of Pope Pius XII

Ginsburg Ingerman Overseas Students Program Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

This Sunday School Teaches Jewish Kids Yiddish And Socialism

Name: Hour: Night by Elie Wiesel Background Information

The rescue of Jews in German occupied Western Europe. Dr Bob Moore Visiting Fellow, National Europe Centre

Lesson Procedures. Lesson Preparation Print packets for students including: background essay, document set, evidence organizer, assessment and rubric.

Relatives and Falsifying Death Certificates

A MILE WIDE AND AN INCH DEEP

Transcription:

An American Jewish Resistance during World War II Laura HOBSON FAURE Against the widespread idea that the American population remained indifferent to or willingly ignored the genocide of European Jews, Catherine Collomp traces the history of Jewish Labor Committee (JLC) and its action to raise awareness on Nazism but also to save many Jewish lives in France and Poland. Résister au Nazisme. Le Jewish Labor Committee, New York, 1934-45, by Catherine Collomp, Paris, Editions CNRS, 2016 There is a widespread idea among some historians and the greater public that the American population, including American Jews, remained indifferent to or willingly ignored the genocide of European Jews during World War II. Popularized by the 1968 book, While 6 Million Died, A Chronicle of American Apathy by journalist A.D. Morse, historical research on the United States during the Holocaust has documented the failures of the Roosevelt Administration, American civil society, and even American Jews, who have been framed as indifferent and divided. 1 The title of Morse s book speaks for itself; its findings set forth the questions that historians continue to debate: at what point did the US government become aware of the Final Solution? Why did Congress refuse to alter the United States s restrictive and discriminatory immigration policies? Was the State Department driven by antisemitism? Why did the Roosevelt Administration wait until January 1944 to set up a rescue initiative? If Morse, and later Wyman set out to identify the guilty parties, others, such as Feingold, Breitman, Kraut and Lichtman, have sought to contextualize the American response to the Holocaust, and explain the barriers to rescue. 2 The verdict is still out: most historians agree on the basic facts, but disagree on how to interpret them. As a result, this rich and useful domain of historical inquiry often lapses into a glass half-full or half-empty? debate. By focusing on what should have happened in the political sphere, the more straight-forward question of what happened has until recently been largely obscured.

American Jews, for example, divided by class, linguistic and ideological tensions, were unable to create a unified front. They could not prevent the massacre of 6 million Jews on European soil. They did indeed try, however, and sought solutions both in the political sphere and in civil society. Yet very few studies of such grassroots mobilizations in the name of American Jews have actually been conducted. 3 This explains why Catherine Collomp s most recent book, Résister au nazisme, le Jewish Labor Committee, New York, 1934-1945, is a much-needed contribution to World War II history. The book s six chapters trace the establishment of the Jewish Labor Committee (JLC) in New York in 1934, its activities in the US to raise awareness on Nazism, and its support for rescue and resistance in France and Poland. An expert on the American Labor movement, Collomp provides here a fascinating transnational social history of the response of European and American labor movements to the Third Reich. Meticulously researched, the book will interest scholars and advanced students working on Jewish rescue during the Holocaust as well as on labor and socialism during World War II. The significance of the JLC s mobilization lay not only in its financial contribution to the resistance movements in France or Poland and the number of individuals it saved during World War II, but in the JLC s cross-cutting allegiances to the Jewish Bund and the Labor movement, which allowed for an unexpected collaboration. As chapter one points out, JLC leadership, including David Dubinsky, head of the International Ladies Garment Workers Union (ILGW), and Baruch Charney Vladeck, general manager of the Yiddish newspaper, the Jewish Daily Forward, had roots in the distinct political culture of the Jewish Bund. Neither Communist nor Zionist, the Bundist movement was formed in Vilna (now in Lithuania) in 1897 and spread throughout the Pale, serving as both a Jewish workers union and a Socialist party. Fighting for the recognition of Jews and the Yiddish language within the broader Labor movement, Bundists were eventually forced underground because of their role in the 1905 Revolution, and especially after the 1917 Revolution, due to their rejection of Communism. Both Dubinsky and Vladeck had fled Eastern Europe, but traveled extensively in Europe during the 1930s, returning to the United States as credible messengers to the larger American labor movement about the growing Nazi persecutions.

Nonetheless, it was no small task to enlist the efforts of American labor, embodied by the American Federation of Labor and, after 1938, the Congress of Industrial Organizations, in the fight against Nazism. After World War I, a growing isolationist movement called for restrictions in US immigration policies. The Quota System, established in 1921 and reinforced in 1924, severely limited immigration from Southern and Eastern Europe, intentionally setting up barriers to keep out non-protestants. The AFL (American Federation of Labor) supported immigration restrictions as a means of improving American working conditions. Even though the AFL condemned Nazism and its persecution of labor leaders in 1933 and even organized a boycott of German goods, its isolationism kept European Labor at a distance. In a pragmatic move, the JLC did not try to challenge US immigration policies. It did however, push the AFL to mobilize to save European labor leaders. As chapter two points out, the JLC, through its Bundist networks and international connections, had a clear vision of which European labor leaders were in the greatest danger. The JLC thus set out to save European labor by helping its leaders (many of whom were Jewish) find refuge. Chapter four analyzes how, in spite of US immigration restrictions, the JLC, with the support of the AFL, obtained temporary emergency visas from the US State Department, helping about 1500 labor leaders and their families immigrate to the United States in 1940-42. With the Nazi Occupation, France, where many of the hunted political activists had sought refuge, had become a death trap. Working closely with Varian Fry s Emergency Rescue Committee, Frank Bohn evacuated the individuals identified on the JLC/AFL list. The JLC was also concerned about Bundist leaders who were trapped in what had become, after 1940, Soviet Lithuania. The JLC therefore again fought for emergency visas and, thanks to the actions of Sempo Sugihara, Japanese ambassador in Kovno, some of these individuals were provided visas to Japan, and thus were able to continue on to the US via the Pacific. The JLC also worked within the borders of the United States, as Collomp demonstrates in chapter three. Indeed, like the AFL, the JLC joined the movement to boycott German products in 1935, establishing the Joint Boycott Council with another American Jewish organization, the American Jewish Congress. The latter s workingclass, Yiddish-speaking membership made these two organizations natural allies, even if the issue of Zionism divided them. Together, the organizations mobilized thousands of

newly-minted American Jews in rallies, calling for an aggressive boycott and in your face tactics that shocked the more discreet, elite American Jewish organizations. To protest the Berlin Olympic games in 1936, the JLC also organized a Counter-Olympics, gathering 20,000 spectators over two-days in New York. Collomp s analysis shows a grassroots protest movement among a faction of US Jews. However, while she takes time to carefully situate the JLC within the diverse American Jewish Community, Collomp does not dwell on the inter-organizational dynamics of Jewish organizations in the same detail in which she analyzes the ins and outs of the American and European labor movements. Indeed, it was labor ties that led to the most unexpected aspect of the JLC s work in Europe. Chapter five explores how the American Jewish organization not only supported the Jewish Bundist resistance in France, but also sent funds to French socialists and the French labor movement, supporting the underground publication of the SFIO s Le Populaire, for example. If the JLC s solidarity took multiple forms and was never designed to remain only within the Jewish circles, Collomp demonstrates in her final chapter the visceral attachment of its leaders to save lives in Poland. In collaboration with the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee, 4 the JLC sent funds for relief. It also financed armed resistance and supported both Jewish and non-jewish resistance networks. Collomp s approach reframes the American Jewish response to the Holocaust from the bottom-up, showing how one subset of this population mobilized, not only out of ethno-religious solidarity but in the name of European socialist and labor movements. By documenting the role of an American Jewish organization in Europe during World War II, the book internationalizes American history. It would be reductionist to consider this book as only a contribution to American Jewish history or Holocaust studies. Other scholars could have interpreted the JLC as a tale of Jewish solidarity and would have missed a great deal of the picture. An American Jewish resistance, indeed, but not only. Published in Books&Ideas, July 4 th, 2016 booksandideas.net

1 In order of publication, the historiography includes: A. D. Morse, While Six Million Died : A Chronicle of American Apathy, London, Secker and Warburg, 1968; D. S Wyman., Paper Walls: America and the Refugee Crisis, 1938-1941, Amherst, University of Massachusetts Press, 1968 ; H. L. Feingold, The Politics of Rescue: The Roosevelt Administration and the Holocaust, 1938-1945, New Brunswick, Rutgers University Press, 1970; D. Wyman, The Abandonment of the Jews: America and the Holocaust, 1941-1945, New York, Pantheon Books, 1984 ; R. Breitman and A. Kraut, American Refugee Policy and European Jewry, 1933-1945, Bloomington, Indianapolis, Indiana University Press, 1987 ; H. L. Feingold., Bearing Witness: How America and Its Jews Responded to the Holocaust, Syracuse, Syracuse University Press, 1995 ; R. Breitman and A. Lichtman, FDR and the Jews, The Belnap Press, Harvard University Press, 2013. 2 See note one. 3 Exceptions include Y. Bauer, American Jewry and the Holocaust, The American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee, 1939-1945, Detroit, Wayne State University Press, 1981; M. Gottleib, American Anti-Nazi Resistance, 1933-1941, Ktav, 1982. 4 On the JDC in France, see Laura Hobson Faure, Un «Plan Marshall Juif» : la présence juive américaine en France après la Shoah, 1944-1954, Paris, Armand Colin, 2014.