Purely Commentary Leon Blum's role as a Socialist leader, as the first Jew to have become Premier of France, as a Zionist whose name is indelibly written in Israel's history — in a colony named in his honor — and as a statesman whose acts were motivated by a great sense of justice, will remain among the most fascinating chapters in world history. Many books have been written about him, num- erous essays reviewed his career, and he has been a subject for heated discussions for many years. A new biography, "Leon Blum —Humanist in Politics" by Joel Colton, published by Knopf, may well be con- sidered as one of the ablest works about the French leader. The facts about the holocaust, the Vichy regime and especially the anti -Jew- ish actions that marked t h e activities of the anti- Leon Blum Blum forces in France are especially well described in this excellent compilation about a very great man and his leadership in his country dur- ing periods of great challenges. The biographer is very well qual- ified for the task he had undertaken in this Blum account. Dr. Colton is the author of other works about France and the modern world. Professor of history since 1947 at Duke University, he has held fellowships from Rockefeller and Guggenheim Founda- tions. His present work is replete with data about French events in relation to Euro- pean and world history. It is splendidly annotated and the depth of research is evi- dent in the more than 500 pages of this work. The wealth of material referred to in the lengthy bibliography is an added indication of the amount of study that went into the preparation of this biography. * * * The extent of anti-Semitic acts that marked the career of Leon Blum is well known, yet, nowhere else is the data so well presented as in the Colton book. Readers will marvel at Blum — that he was able to withstand so many attacks, that he could face bigotry with as much courage as had marked his rich career before Nazism, dur- ing the Nazi era when he was imprisoned in concentration camps, in his battle against Marshal Philippe Petain and Pierre Laval during Nazi rule in France, and in the years that followed that period when he chal- lenged Charles de Gaulle's policies. He was not an observant Jew. He was first a Frenchman and he emphasized it and lived in that spirit. Yet he displayed a sense of honor in his role as a Jew, he was among the leading factors in the battle against the bigots in l'Affaire Dreyfus, and he supported the Zionist idea when it was so necessary to give encouragement to Jewry's struggle for freedom and justice. Blum's family background was thorough. ly Jewish, and he despised anti-Semitism "in all its forms." He was an assimilated Frenchman, but he "always retained a re- spect for the faith of his fathers." Anti- Semites charged that he was a foreigner, but he was a Parisian by birth. His father was of Alsatian Jewish background, his mother, the pious Jewess, who "observed the Orthodox ritual and the dietary laws in the household and lit candles and said prayers on the Sabbath," also was born in Paris. His first wife, Lise Bloch, to whom he was married for 35 years and with whom he had a happy and a loyal life until her death in 1931, "belonged to a Jewish fam- ily of considerable standing." ("He sub- sequently was married twice again: in 1932 to Therese Pereyra, an old family friend and Socialist comrade-in-arms, who died in Feb- ruary 1938; and during the Second World War, in 1943, to Jeanne Levilliers Humbert, who survived him." His third wife joined him in Buchenwald, where they were mar- ried). * * Blum had an important role in the Drey- fus affair. Many volumes have been written about the Dreyfus case, yet, in Colton's biography, there is new interest in the fa- mous scandal that ripped France asunder. Blum was among those who believed Dreyfus guilty. "French Jewish circles in THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 2—Friday, May 6, 1966 particular were eager to forget the episode and they viewed with apprehension the be- ginnings of the campaign in 1896 to reopen the case. Even when evidence of Dreyfus' innocence mounted, they were reluctant to provide possible ammunition for anti- Semites like Edouard Driunont, who charged that the defense of Dreyfus was based on a sense of 'race' and group solidarity. 'As- similated' Jews of Dreyfus' age who, like him, had made their way in the private professions or in government service, were filled with despair that passions aroused by the case might blight their own irreproach- able careers. Blum, who knew these circles well, described this attitude in scathing terms; yet he confessed that to some extent he at first shared in it. Only a few men kept the case alive . . ." His close friends, Lucien Herr, whom he admired greatly, and Jean Jaures, whom he succeedes to socialist leadership, brought Blum into the ,Dreyfussard camp and he became one of the major champions of jus- tice in his country. In the brief review of the Dreyfus case, Colton introduces all of its factors. It is one of the very perfect accomplishments of an able author as part of his total picture of France and of Blum. * * There are scores of references to Blum's Jewishness, to the attacks upon him, and to the friendly treatments as well. Hubert Bour- gin, for example, observing Blum in the early years of his political career, wrote about him: "It seemed to me that I was watching the opening up, the unfolding of this super- ior and strange person, this admixture of messianism and Jewish prophetism adapted to the modern age, of Oriental passion, of Asiatic frenzy, of an intelligence European, French and Cartesian, of a refined esthetic- ism . . . Having seen that apparition rise one evening in the winter of 1916, I was in a position to understand Leon Blum and noth- ing could henceforth atonish me in his polit- ical fortunes." Such views were expressed ad infinitum and the admiration for the man who ex- erted great influence in his country, and in world affairs, brought him leadership in diplomacy and in Socialism unparalleled in history. The Colton biography is a superb study of Socialist ideology, of the struggles en- countered, of the trials and tribulations out of which Blum emerged the genius in ideol- ogical dedication. Students of Socialism will find in this -work a great textbook on the subject. Of interest in the author's description of Blum's rise to Socialist leadership, when Edouard Herriot addressed him as "Mon cher Blum," the comment is that "the saluta- tion itself thoroughly provoked the Right, which was already incensed by the prospect of the country's destinies in the hands of an anticlerical Radical and a Jewish Social- ist." Thus, to the Rightists, Blum "was, in a sense, an outsider, an intellectual, a bour- geois, a Jew." * * * When -Blurn became Premier of France in June of 1936, anti-Semitic outbursts com- menced anew. There were many accusations, and they are disputed in the Colton bio- graphy as follows: "There was not the shadow of justifica- tion for chargeS that the cabinet was pre- dominantly Jewish. (Andre) Blumel and (Jules) Moch were the only Jews associated with the top levels of the cabinet and they were assistants to Blum rather than minis- ters or undersecretaries. Jean Zay, Minis- ter of Education, born of a Jewish father and Protestant mother, styled himself a Protestant. A number of other Jews were associated with the cabinet but only as administrative assistants (chefs de cabinet) to the ministers or undersecretaries. The facts, however, did not deter the anti-Semites then or later. 'There were at least five Jew- ish ministers or undersecretaries in the first Popular Front cabinet,' the journalist-his- torian Raymond Recouly wrote in 1941 with complete inaccuracy. 'Given the tiny pro- portion of Jews in our total population, was this not truly a violation of propriety and reasonableness?' "The Jewish issue flared up at the open- ing session of the new Chamber when the Rightist Deputy Xavier Vallat, just defeated by Herriot for the presidency of the Cham- ber, announced: 'Your arrival in office, M. le President du Conseil, is incontestably a historic date. For the first time this old Gallic-Roman country will be governed by a Jew.' Herriot interrupted at once and called him firmly to order, but Vallat went on: `I have the special duty here . . . of saying aloud what everyone is thinking to himself: that to govern this peasant nation of France it is better to have someone whose origins, Leon Blum, Man of Great Courage Who Awakened the Conscience of the French no matter how modest, spring from our soil than to have a subtle Talmudist.' The important decisions of the government, he warned, would henceforth be made by a `small Jewish coterie' consisting of Blum, Blumel, Moch, and (Oreste) Rosenfeld. Blum, livid with rage, wished to respond, but Herriot insisted on censuring the speak- er himself and closing the episode. 'Anti- Semitism,' one French historian could write of the Popular Front years, 'attained a virulence forgotten since the Dreyfus af- fair.' "The reaction in Jewish circles to the fact that a Jew had become Premier for the first time was mixed. There was a swell of pride in these groups even if one dis- misses Recouly's wild account of wealthy and fashionable Jewish circles so gratified at having a co-religionist elevated to high office that they toasted Blum in champagne and then sang the 'Internationale.' On the other hand, in May 1936 one of the leading rabbis of Paris tried to dissuade Blum from taking office so that he would not expose his fellow Jews to criticism and attack. Blum listened politely and respectfully dur- ihg the conversation, and closed the inter- view. He was aware that he was the first French Jew ever elevated to the premier- ship, but shrugged it off as unimportant. Primarily he was a Frenchman, and his religion was of no relevance." The latter episode is reminiscent of fright in other quarters—in this country when Jews were named as ambassadors, as members of the U. S. Cabinet, as Supreme Court justices. Fortunately such panic is diminishing. It was a panic that was in evi- dence even in pre-Nazi Germany when Walther Rathenau was named to an import- ant government post, and later was as- sassinated by anti-Semites. * * * A bit later, the fright re-emerged, the passions and anti-Semitic utterances were heard anew. Blum's biographer reports: "Political hatreds grew more impas- sioned as the months went by. A whole literature of calumny was directed against Blum; the hatreds evoked by Franklin D. Roosevelt fade to nothingness in compari- son. Charles Maurras led the attack; Henri Massis and Henri Beraud followed. L'Action Francaise, Gringoire, Je Suis Partout were filled with vitriolic attacks. `It is as a Jew that one must see, conceive, hear, fight and destroy this Blum,' wrote Maurras. 'This man is anything butFrance.' His private correspondence was filled with similar at- tacks. Even fellow Jews wrote him: 'Alas, three times you furnish irrefutable arguments to the all-too-many anti-Semites who hold the Jews responsible for the dis- order and disintegration that is going on in France and elsewhere . . . You are a bad Frenchman and a traitor to your race.' Blum, who could weep over the bloodshed at Clichy or over the events in Spain, remained impervious to such personal attacks and criticisms." * * He did what he could to bring about peace. He was ready to negotiate even with Hitler. He conferred with Hjalmar Schacht whom he met again later at Buchenwald where Hitler had sent the industrialist and financier. When Munich was hailed as "the victory of peace," another anti-Semitic note was struck and a leader in the pacifist wing of the Confederation Generale du Travail, Ludovic Zoretti, insinuated that Blum's ini- tial firmness had been prompted by sym- VNNeWe;.'m 44, • The Vichy Nazis who betrayed France and who were excoriated by Blum: Pierre Laval and Marshal Henri Petain. Laval did not receive the mercy he pleaded for from Bhmi. He may have helped save Blum's life by delaying tactics when Mandel was brought to Paris to be shot, but Blum knew his deeds and was silent. Petain also was given the death sentence but because of his age the 89-year-old collaborationist with Hitlerism was permitted to end his days in exile. By Philip Slomovitz pathy for his fellow Jews. The charge was made that there was the aim to see civiliza- tion destroyed "to make life more agreeable to the 100,000 Jews of the Sudetenland" and Blum refused to comment on the "wild charges." The anti-Semitic attacks on Blum con- tinued. Colton writes in thiS biography: "The fact that Blum and (Georges) Mandel (the vigorous, patriotic Minister of Colonies, once a protege of Clemenceau) were Jewish was suggested as the prim, reason for their anti-Nazism. A private;. printed brochure alleged that Blum, bore Karfunkelstein, traitor to his adopted coun- try, had been born in `Vidin, Bulgaria.' There was not a shred of truth in the ac- cusation but Blum felt himself impelled to protest the vicious pamphlet in an editorial (in Le Populaire, Nov. 19, 1938). He re- ceived letters filled with invective and abuse from people in all walks of life. Many were outright calls for his assassination. `The hour for the settlement of accounts is approaching, Leon Blum,' said one. Another, addressed to 'President du conseil, Mon- sieur le Juif,' stated: Personally I hold you responsible for all the present misfortunes of which our country is victim,' and con- cluded: 'One ought to do away with individ- uals as dangerous as you are.' He was told to 'go back to Vidin.' " Sumner Welles reported at that time that there were 3,000 letters addressed to him by Frenchmen protesting against his visit with Blum. He wrote that he was shocked by the penetration of Nazi ideas and reported: "The vast majority of these letters were written in the most violent and insulting terms. A few of them were couched in moderate words of reproach. They were all written, however, solely be- cause, as a representative of the President of the United States, I had dared to call upon a Jew." These are just a few of the many indica- tions of a spreading anti-Semitism and of the hatred of Blum the Jew. But it was this Jew Leon Blum who saved France's honor with his courageous stand against the Vichy government in the case he presented at the Vichy trial during which he exposed the vile Laval-Petain rule under Nazism. * S * It was at the Vichy trial that Blum emerged as the great Frenchman, the cour- ageous exposer of the Nazi crimes, the man who, acting as his own counsel, held forth to light the events as they had devel- oped, the justice of his own and his party's position, the crime of the Laval-Petain- Spinasse-Vallat-et-al regime. Colton's ac- count of the trial and of Blum's presenta- tion of the case is brilliant writing. It forms a significant historic chapter describing the occurrences during Nazi rule. As "Witness for the Republic," as the chapter describing Blum's speech is titled, the French Jewish statesman emerged the `astonishing dialectician. The American cor- respondents hailed his genius, the "remark- able performance" during which, his bio- grapher states, "he had held the court under his sway for hours on end." Marshal Petain later tried to explain that he could not remember the details that had led to his becoming a tool of the Nazis. He was 91 and, as Colton comments, 4_, such an age "human memories fade, an men have more than human tribunals t face.", * * * There are interesting accounts in this biography of Blum's stay in the concentra- tion camps, how he miraculously escaped death, Mandel, who was with him as a Nazi prisoner, having been taken out only a short time before liberation and murdered by the Nazis in Paris. Many were the rumors about Blum. He was reported dead in the New York Times which credited him with great achievements and an extreme sense of justice. lit was a false report. It also was wrongly reported that he had embraced Catholicism. He em- erged instead as a strong support of the Zionist cause and Kfar Blum was estab- lished in his honor in Israel. He returned to his homeland with great honor. Twice again he was Prime Minister. He was not only the French but also the Jewish and the world hero. He spoke of independent Israel as "a fatherland of dignity, equality and freedom for all Jews who have not had, like myself, the good fortune to find one in their native country." In two matters Blum played a vital role —French attitudes towards Communist Rus- sia and Communists and Charles de Gaulle. He was strongly opposed to Communism but he insisted on drawing Communists• into his Cabinets and on their being represented in other Cabinets. He opposed Communism (Continued on Page 48)