Trotsky's 'Stalin' and E. E. Smith's 'The Young Stalin' Reveal [Dictator's Irrational Anti-Semitism From Youth protection that was accorded to for criminals:" "On one occasion, Leon Trotsky (Lev Davidovich Trotsky whose life was in con- in the course of an argument, Bronstein) was not only one of the stant danger, how Jacques Mor- Stalin had presumably revealed architects of the Communist State nard, alias Ramon Mercader, himself as an anti-Semite, resorting and its earliest military genius: found a way into Trotsky's home, to coarse Georgian expressions he was one of Russia's most dis- after making love to a Trotskyite against the Jews." tinguished publicists and ablest and himself posing as one, killing writers. He was Lenin's close Stalin's purges of Jewish mem- Trotsky with a pickax, Aug. 20, bers of the Party, his linking of associate, and he was the bitter 1940, so that this book remained Jews in his condemnation of Jewish enemy of Joseph Vissarionovich unfinished. Djugashvili Stalin. opponents, are part of the vivid Trotsky was expelled from Rus- The biography was translated byi descriptions of the dictator-tyrant sia, he was hounded by his arch the late Charles Malamuth, one- in this historic work which now, in enemy, he found refuge in Mexico time son-in-law of Jack London and a newly-edited volume, again at- but an assassin a specialist in Russian history. It tacks widest attention. caught up with is a masterful work of translation, "Young Stalin' — Who Began him. and the Wolfe introduction adds His Anti-Semitism Early He wrote the Indeed, Stalin began his anti- immensely to an understanding of classic biography, the people and the periods under Semitism very early. His prejudices are recorded also in another signi- "Stalin — An Ap- study. ficant book — "The Young Stalin— praisal of t h e Wolfe indicates that "in 1917, The Early Years of an Elusive Man and His In-. when Lenin accepted Trotsky's con- Revolutionary," by Edward Ellis fluence," but it cept of the party machine, they Smith. published by Farrar, Straus was not com- compounded each other's errors and Giroux. pleted: the as- and raised the totalitarian poten- sassin interrupted Stalin's rapid rise to power is tial to the second power: an un- that task. Trotsky democratic machine to make an recorded here. Lenin, at the London conference of the Bolshevik party. Stein and Day (7 E. 48, NY17) undemocratic revolution." Stalin, has just reissued that biography the "man created by that ma- in 1907, said he did not know who in a new edition, with an impor- chine," is the vile spirit emerging Stalin was. Yet within a decade the future dictator rose to dominating tant new introduction by the from this biography. roles. American writer Bertram D. Wolfe Trotsky described how Stalin who knew both Stalin and Trotsky The history of Communism. the and who therefore writes with resolutely criticized the Jewish relationships of the leaders of the authority. Bund and its policies and he party, their inner struggles and the wrote about the Bund that it battles for power are reviewed Trotsky's work exposes Stalin's "was organized not on the terci- here. Trotsky's role is referred to actions, accuses of many plots, torial but on the national prin- and the Stalin-Trotsky feud is traces his life from his earliest mile and attempted to impose alluded to. There is this interesting childhood, indicates his prejudice that system upon the whole comment: and his bitter anti-Semitic atti- party." tude. "Before Stalin's hireling drove Wolfe shows in his introduction There are several references to an alpine pickaxe through Trot- that "If in the purge trials and Stalin's anti-Semitism in the Trot- sky's skull in Mexico City, the Stalin's 'Short Course' Trotsky is sky biography. Describing the victim had recorded a tranchant cast as 'Judas Iscariot.' in Trotsky's "Stalinist rebuttal" in the debates observation in his unfinished biography of his great antagonist among leaders that took place in biography of the dictator. 'Our Stalin is cast as 'Cain,' a Cain of party assemblies, Trotsky wrote: epoch is above all an epoch of the great purees who killed not lies.' Trotsky's comment might Ile and his henchmen even ---,--7 mom- - • one but all his well apply to Stalin himself, who stooped to fish in the muddied created a whole fabric of lies waters of antiSemitism. I recall In-Lenin." about his life — especially the particularly a cartoon in the Rabo- early period . . ." is pointed out by It Wolfe that chaya Gazeta (Workers' Gazette) Razden Arsenidze, an early asso- entitled 'Comrades Trotsky and "Trotsky's 'Stalin' Zinoviev.' There were any number ciate of Stalin, is quoted in the author's expose of the dictator's is only fully of such caricatures and doggerels dersta ndable of anti-Semitic character in the bigotry. There are these interesting when we bear in Party press. They were received references to the Stalin hatred: mind that this with sly snickers. Stalin's attitude "Arsenidze vividly recalled that book is intended toward this growing anti-Semitism during 1905 Koba was an irrational as Trotsky's re- was one of friendly neutrality. But anti-Semite. He scorned the Men- Stalin joiner, and that matters went so far that we forced sheviks because of the preponder- his murder made it also his last to come out with a published state- ance of Jews among them." The word in defense of his own career ment which declared, 'We are author of "The Young Stalin" and indictment of his all-powerful , fighting Trotsky, Zinoviev and then quotes Arsenidze as follows: antagonist." Kamenev not because they are Wolfe gives an account of the Jews, but because they are Opposi- tionists,' and the like. It was ab- solutely clear to anyone who 40 — EMPLOYMENT thought politically that his deliber- ately equivocal declaration was HOUSEKEEPER NEEDED aimed merely at the 'excesses' of Care for elderly man. Good anti-Semitism, while at the same living conditions. Off on Thurs- time broadcasting throughout the day. Weekly salary. entire Soviet press the very preg- nant reminder, 'Don't forget that 356 - 1722 the leaders of the Opposition are Jews.' 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Local and Long Distance Packing, stor- age. pianos, appliances, household furn- ishings. 8829 Northend—Ferndala 543-4832 Referring to the period when Stalin used the pseudonym Koba, Trotsky recorded in his biogra- phy of his arch enemy: "In his views Koba became an interna- tionalist. But did he ever become one in his feelings? The Great- Russian Lenin could not endure any jests or ancedotes that were likely to hurt the sensibilities of an oppressed nationality. Stalin had in him too much of the peas- ant from the village Didi-Lilo. During the pre-revolutionary years he did not dare, of course, to trifle with national prejudices, as he did later, when he was already in power. But that dis- position- disclosed itself in small matters even then. Referring to the preponderance of Jew in the Menshevik faction at the Lon- don Congress of 1907, Koba wrote: 'Apropos of that, one of t h e Bolsheviks jestingly re- marked (I think it was Comrade Alexinsky) that the Mensheviks were a Jewish faction while the Bolsheviks were truly Russian, and hence it would not be amiss for us Bolsheviks to instigate a program in the party.' " Again, in 1913, Trotsky wrote, commenting on "Koba's partiality "Lenin," Koba said, "is exas- perated that God sent him such comrades as the Mensheviks! Really, what kind of people are these! Martov, Dan, Axelrod — nothing but uncircumcised Jews! And, that old baba (this is a deprecatory term in Russian) Vera Zasulich! All right! Go work with them. They won't fight and there is no rejoicing at their feastings. Cowards and shopkeepers. Don't the workers of Georgia know that the Jewish People produce only cowards who are useless in a fight?" Smith proceeds to make this in- teresting observation to indicate how Stalin was "a selective anti- Semite": "This early anti-Semitism, bitter and deep, remembered so clearly by his contemporary and country- man Arsenidze, was confirmed by Stalin's removal of most of the old Jewish bolsheviks in the purges of the thirties, his campaign against the Jews as "homeless, passport- less, cosmopolitans" in the late forties, and the infamous "doctors' plot" just before his death in 1953. On the other hand, Lazar Kagano- vich, a Jew, was his faithful col- league in the Politburo. And there seems to be little doubt that he married Rosa Kaganovich, Lazar's sister, sometime in the thirties. Moscovites still claim, moreover, that Beria, Stalin's deputy for the official distortion of history and his secret police chief, was a Jew. Thus it would appear that from 1905 until his death Stalin was a selective anti-Semite, using Jews when it suited his purposes while retaining his basic prejudice against them. Smith, too, gives an account of Stalin's attitude toward the Jews dating back to the London 1907 conference when he wrote that Jews constituted a majority of the Mensheviks, not counting the Bund representatives, and in "The Young Stalin" is repeated the Stalin com- ment about the Bolsheviks organiz- ing "a program in the Party." References also are made in Smith's book to the anti-Semitic activities of the Black Hundreds, the frequent Stalin demonstrations of anti-Semitism, and with regard to the party meeting in Sugusy of 1918 Smith writes: "Stalin's deeply irrational anti- Semit ism must have been aroused as he realized that Jews constituted a large part of the membership of the meeting. Furthermore, the brainpower and intellectual prowess was largely theirs: Trotsky, Kamenev, Zinoviev, Sokolnikov and Urit- sky were providing an important contribution to the Bolshevik push for power. Stalin was large- ly responsible for the death of five of them." Rabbi Carlebach, Father of Hasidic Singer, Dies NEW YORK (JTA) — Rabbi Naphtali H. Carlebach, of Congre- gation Kehilath Jacob, once chief rabbi of Baden, Austria, died here Dec. 23 at age 78. Rabbi Carlebach was born in Lubeck and served as a rabbi in Berlin and in Baden before coming to the United States in 1939. He was the author of a biogra- phy of his late brother, "Joseph Carlebach and His Generation," published in 1960. His brother had been chief rabbi of Hamburg and Altona, Germany. Among the survivors are his son, Rabbi Shlomo, the well-k no w n Hasidic folk singer. Harold Goldberg Dead; Boston Philanthropist BOSTON (JTA) — Harorld S. Goldman, a leader in Jewish phil- anthropy and a vice president of the American Jewish Committee, died at age 64. Mr. Goldberg was former gen- eral chairman of the Jewish Phil- anthropies of Greater Boston, a past president of the Boston Jewish Vocational Service and a trustee of In addition to the clashes with the Boston Jewish Memorial Hos- Menshevik leaders and other Jew- member and ish Communists, Stalin's attitude pital. He was a former trustee of Temple Israel in towards the Jewish Bund is inter- estingly accounted for in Smith's Boston. book. On the matter of nationali- ties, Smith reviews the Jewish Bond's history and refers to an essay by Stalin: "It now appears clear why Lenin wanted a non- Russian signature to 'The National Question and S'ocial Democracy,' and why he wanted Stalin 'saved' for this job. In the article, the Bond, Jews, the Jewish people and Jewish customs and traits are men- tioned more than 185 times, and not one comment about the Bund or Jews is favorable." It is a lengthy review of the Communist approach to problems of minorities and nationalities. Smith states: "Under Stalin's dicta- torship the Jews were hideously persecuted." But Stalin reorganized his regime on the basis of recogni- tion of nationalities and: "In order to make the Jews in Soviet Russia conform to the definition provided in the essay, Stalin in 1928 established a na- tional home for Russian Jews in a dreary and remote area of Siberia on the Manchurian fron- tier. Ile called it the Je4ish Autonomous Oblast, or region, but it came to be known after the name of its capital, Birobid- zhan. Russian Jews disliked the cold and forlorn area and it was thoroughly unpopular. Stalin tried to put his theory into prac- tice with the whole power of the state behind him, and it did not work." In both the newly-et ited Stalin biography by Trotsky and in Smith's work there are valuable annotations and lengthy lists of important dates in Stalin's life. The dictators pseudonyms and aliases are recorded, there are important bibliographies, lists of Trotsky's published works in the Trotsky book and also a very valuable glossary in the latter. Both volumes are significant addenda to Communist history and both expose the cruelties of Stalin and emphasize his anti-Semitism. * • • Penguin Issues Unabridged Edition of Shub's 'Lenin' An unabridged edition of "Lenin" by David Shub has been issued in paperback by Penguin Books, as part of the series on 20th Century political leaders. Shub's work reveals the conflicts within the party, Lenin's relation- ships with Stalin and Trotsky, the struggles from war to revolution, the internal strife. S'hub's ranks among the most valuable accounts of the rise of Communism, the intrigues, the ter- rors and the unscrupulousness with which party aims were pursued. Stalin's assumption of power, his views to Lenin at his bier, are 38—Friday, December 29, 1967 Joseph Rabinovitz, Store Executive, Contributor BOSTON — Joseph Rabinovitz, retired president of Stop & Shop. Inc., Boston-based supermarket and department store chain, died Dec. 23 at age 89. Mr. Rabinovitz was an honorary director of Beth Israel Hospital and honorary trustee of the Com- bined Jewish Philanthropies of Boston. With his children, Sidney, Norman and Irving Rabb, he gave the Rabb Graduate Center to Brandeis University. Joseph Tuvim, Age 71; Garment Union Official NEW YORK (JTA) — Joseph Tuvim, since 1933 the manager of local 142 of the International Ladies Garment Workers Union, died here at the age of 71. Mr. Tuvim was secretary of the American Labor party in 1937 and was active later in the Liberal Party. He was also a member of the executive board of the Cen- tral Trades and Labor Council. P. Yuditch, Labor Editor NEW YORK (JTA) — P e s a c h Yuditch, a Yiddish journalist well- known in left-wing and labor circles, died here Monday at age 81. Born in the Ukraine, he came to the United States in 1909, was editor of the Naye Welt, organ of the Jewish Socialist Federation from 1914 to 1922, and later joined the staff of the Morning Freheit, Communist-oriented Yiddish daily, as labor editor. Yaakov Katz of Knesset JERUSALEM (JTA) — Yaakov Katz, a member of Parliament, died here at age 59 Dec. 24 after being knocked down by a car three days ago. He was a member of the Poalei Agudat Israel Party. Next on his party's list is Avraoam Verdiger, who will probably be sworn into the Knesset after the seven-day period of mourning. supplemented with the author's comment: "Stalin went considerably beyond Lenin: in executing dissidents and potential rivals even among Com- munists, in accusing Party and Red Army leaders of being Fascists, in cancelling Lenin's New Economic Policy and proceeding with forcible collectivization of agriculture, in encouraging anti-Semitism and the deification of his own person. After Stalin's own death, his heirs pro- claimed a 'return to Leninism,' but in its first decade even this return was only partial .. ." THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS