Friday, September 28, 1919 5 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Volume Evokes Discussion of Anti-Semitism, Black Animosity By DR. MILTON STEINHARDT Those who lived in the U.S. during the period be- tween the two World Wars need no proof of anti- Semitism. The manifesta- tions were all too obvious. But the generation on the American scene after the Holocaust may not have been exposed to some of the subtle experiences recorded by Nathan C. pelth in "A Promise to Keep" (Times Books) under the auspices of the Bnai Brith Anti- Defamation League. The author traces the first anti-Semitic incident in the U.S. to Peter Stuyvesant of New Amster- dam who attempted to oust the first Jewish settlers in 1654. But the episode that evoked considerable discus- sion occurred in 1877 when Joseph Seligman, a Jewish financier of the Union, was refused admittance to Hil- ton's Hotel at Saratoga, N.Y. Important national figures such as Mark Twain and Oliver Wendell Holmes came to his support. There were some who felt the an- tagonism represented a xenophobia (fear of stran- gers) which was also di- rected at Catholics and other south Europeans. The new vogue of scien- tific race and nordic superiority gave impetus to many restrictive acts such as ethinic origin and liter- acy tests of a national tongue (as Russian), exclud- ing the native tongue (Yid- dish). In December 1862, General Grant ordered all Jews expelled from Tennessee because of al- leged "trading with the enemy." This unusual order was vetoed by President Lincoln. The year 1915 saw the first and only lynching of an innocent Jew. In Atlanta, Leo Frank was hung after journalistic incitement by Tom Watson. Five years later Henry Ford launched his attacks on Jews. These continued for seven years and ended with a public re- traction after a publicized trial. However, damage was done to the image of the Jew and the derogatory char- acterizations penetrated vaudeville, the press, and movies. This mood was in- tensified by the Ku Klux lan in the South. In urope, Chamberlain 'called "Jewish existence a crime against the holy laws of life." As a reaction, three organizations were formed to combat racial prejudice: the American Jewish Committee, 1906; the Bnai Brith Anti-Defamation League, 1908; the NAACP, 1909. Attempts to limit immi- gration, as well as admis- sion of Jews to colleges and social clubs contin- ued for six decades. Even the Boston Brahmin Laurence H. Lowell stated in 1922, "There are too many Jews at Har- 4Ik yard." The depression years saw the appear- ance of the anti-Semitic Coughlin, Long, the German Bund, the Chris- tian Front. During World War II, American Jews suffered 40,000 casualties, 8,000 of which were combat deaths. Some 36,000 Jews received 61,448 medals. The episode of the Jewish chaplain, along with the Catholic and Protestant chaplains, hold- ing hands in prayer while going down with their ship, after giving up 'their life belts to the soldiers, had a psychological effect upon the American conscience. Evidence of anti- Semitism continued, how- ever, in housing, colleges, corporations and profes- sions. This reviewer recalls encountering a prominent sign on the beach at Crystal Lake in 1946.while trying to rent a cottage: "No Jews or Dogs Allowed." This humiliation came after 31/2 years of combat service. The post-war period wit- nessed further attempts at restricting Jews to college admissions. In 1948, a study showed that applicants of Jewish-sounding names were rejected more fre- quently. anti-semitic Other phenomena included: Joseph McCarthy, The Birch Society, Liberty Lobby. It appeared that Populism and Elitism merged their anti-Jewish propaganda. In the late 1960s and early 70s, the New Left joined the Arabs in the bla- tant charge of racism against the state of Israel and Zionism. There was no hesitation in propagating the forged "Protocols of Zion," using the oil weapon and petro-dollars as blackmail to boycott Jewish interests. Some indus- trialists as well as. U.S. representatives were all too eager to comply. About 1960, an epidemic of swastikas defaced and de- secrated Jewish buildings and institutions. There were 643 incidents. Another shocking episode in the 70s was the accusation by Gen. George Brown that Ameri- can Jews controlled the banks and the media. Belth's account of the re- lation of blacks to Jews be- comes more relevant in light of the Andrew Young aftemath. The author nar- rates how the anti-Semetic magazine, "The Liberator," accused Jews of dominating civil rights movements and black colleges, this undue influence being strangely attributed to the millions of dollars contributed to Negro colleges by the Jewish philanthropist Julius Rosenwald and his founda- tion. Black Muslims, radi- cals, Panthers, Malcolm X, Stokely Carmichael, Rap Brown, Eldridge Cleaver and others were vicious in calling Israel "immoral, illegal and un- just" and American Jews "the enemy." Cleaver returned to the U.S. after a stay in Algeria and recanted his anti- Zionism line, and with mea culpa stated: "To condemn the Jewish survival of Zionism as racism is a travesty upon the truth." In spite of the obvious handwriting on the wall, some still refused to recog- nize the new situation. The Andrew Young episode started a search for an agonizing reappraisal. It may be noted that it is the more educated black who is anti-semitic — which is in sharp contrast to the Jewish attitudes that find the intellectual elite to be the most liberal. Coalitions must be based on frankness and honest mutuality and not on instant demands. Perhaps it is more construc- tive for society to offer edu- cational aid to the young disadvantaged. It appears that the blacks resent being re- minded of the contribu- tion Jews made to civil rights with their lives, leadership and money, and reject the gratitude expected from them by countering that the pur- pose of the help was self- ish — to mollify a guilty conscience. It is a known truism that benefactors are frequently resented and hated. Since Belth limits his presentation to "a narrative of American encounter with anti-Semitism," with no intention to probe for the roots, it is quite pertinent to present a few paragraphs from a paper by this re- viewer presented in Jerusalem at a Social Psy- chiatry Congress in 1972: "A psychological under- standing of the militant black is that his new self- awareness and search for identity favor group solidar- ity and antagonism to others. He is like the adoles- cent, whose search for iden- tity is accompanied by a re- stless and tumultous self- expression, and intoxicated with power, flexes his m _ us- cles. "The American blacks tend to identify themselves with the Afro-Asian Mos- lems in conflict with whites — ignoring the historical truth that it was the Arabs who sold them into slavery. "In the urban areas, the black may associate the Israeli with the Jewish landlord who serves as a convenient target for all the unsolved problems. One reason is that the Jew is only one step higher on the social es- calator. The black who was first accepted in the Jewish neighborhood sees the Jewish mer- chant, teacher, physi- cian, or social worker whom he envies. He does not see the top echelon of the interlocking directo- rates of the large corpo- rations that represent the real power and wealth of the country." As to what course Jewish leadership should follow, one may answer in the manner of Ben Gurion who told the British, in essence: We shall fight the White Paper (prohibiting immi- gration) as if there was no war, and we shall battle the Nazis as if there was no White Paper." To parap- hrase the current situation: "We shall fight for civil rights as if there is no black anti-Semitism, and we re- PARTY-WEDDING-BRIDESMAID-BAR MITZVA LONG and SHORT DRESSES 1/2 OFF 8199 GROUP $99 GROUP $59 GROUP $99 '49 529 GE SIZES PETITE-MISSES-EXTRA LA RL SHANDE 154 SOUTH WOODWARD BIRMINGHAM * MI 2-4150 sent any anti-Semitism re- gardless of civil rights is- sues." Thee recent hasty at- tempts at dialogue failed to grasp the rage reaction which was more in the na- ture of a tantrum, making rational interaction im- possible. One would wish that our leadership include a wider democratic repre- sentation whose historical grasp extends beyond local politics. 4.$1„ rf • IP , 1 rAlp , Dais, Iy m pathy —Hospitol "Cooling it" has merit if by that is meant a deliber- ate judicious approach; but if it implies silence then it is indeed a grave error. It is not in superior cul- ture and higher education that we may find saving grace but rather in a tolerance and understand- ing. 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