64 Friday, July 9, 1982 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Mussolini's Imitation of Hitler's Anti-Semitic Racism Revealed Dennis Mack Smith, as the recognized and widely acclaimed historian whose works on Italy are viewed among the most authoritat- ive adds to his significant works on the subject in his biography of "Mussolini" (Knopf). While this biographer emphasizes that this is not a history of fascist Italy but a political biography, the av- erage reader will feel enriched by it on both scores. In process of dealing with the personality of. Musso- lini, Smith also provides a history of the events which elevate this "Mussolini" volume as a valuable addi- tion to world history in rela- tion to the fascist and Nazi ideologies. While other groups had used the term, Mussolini appropriated the fascist name to himself and the party he was mobilizing, it is indicated by Smith. While Mussolini is de- scribed as "neither born great nor had greatness thrust on him," Smith de- fines him as "a person of shrewd political intelli- gence, but had the ability to fascinate and charm whenever he set his mind to it, and he led a movement that he could be dressed up to look plausible." Smith's definition: "Fas- cism was an Italian word for an Italian invention which as a body of ideas and prac- tices reached its classic form in Italy as perhaps nowhere else; but great numbers of people in other countries had their lives altered by it, and either looked hopefully towards what they took as a promising solution to the problems of the 20th Cen- tury, or were so repelled that they fought against it in a world war." Adolf Hitler learned from Mussolini and copied from his views. Smith shows how Hitler admired him from first to last. But Mussolini also learned from Hitler. While he had, at the outset, given the impression he was not anti-Semitic, he soon adopted the Hitler methods and yielded to the extremist forms of persecution of Jews, sending them to death camps, imitating Nazism. "Mussolini was in- terested mainly in ap- pearances: he wanted the appearance of being greatly favored by the Pope but, at the same time, the appearance of being subordinate to no one. He wanted to con- vince the Americans that he believed in absolute freedom of conscience and was actively helping Jews and Protestants, though in practice he pleased the Pope - by showing he was ready to persecute the Walden- sians, the Pentecos- talists, and the Salvation Early Solar Energy Research Pays Off for Israeli Consumers Israel Scene 1 JERUSALEM — Israel is one of the largest consumers of solar energy in the world. About 500,000 Israeli households receive their hot water from solar energy, which accounts for about 50 percent of total domestic water heating. The potash industry saves the equiv- alent of three times the total oil imports each year by using solar evaporation in potash production. The history of Israel's solar energy exploitation goes back to the early stages of the state, some 20 years before the energy crisis broke on an unsuspecting world. Iprael's first prime minister, David Ben- Gurion, aided in the es- tablishment of a solar energy development program within the Na- tional Physical Labora- tory (NPLI). In 1955, Israel exhibited the results of its research work on solar collectors at the first world symposium on solar energy, held in Arizona. Of special interest was a new black coating for the heat collectors which demonstrated a very high degree of efficiency in ab- sorbing heat from the sun's rays. The coating was in- vented by Dr. Harry Tabor, then director of the NPLI. With help from the NPLI, a commercial factory, Miromit, began mass- producing solar collectors for the public, and in 1966, Israel scored an interna- waste into methane gas, tional first by publishing which is then burned as standard specifications for fuel. A full-scale plant has solar collectors to protect been set up for the purpose the buying public. Today, $3 and a local industry is grow- million worth of solar col- ing aroung the system. It is lectors is exported an- estimated that farms could produce 50 percent of their nually. heating, cooking and elec- In 1958, work started tricity needs in this way. both on the solar pond In the Negev, algae is program and on the tur- being grown in saline water bines which would turn in the sunlight, which the hot water energy promises to produce protein from the ponds into elec- and energy in the form of an tricity. Commercial oil-like substance, and a production of the tur- major oil company is show- bines started in 1964 at ing serious interest in the the Ormat Turbine com- project. pany, and exports to 40 At the Ben-Gurion Uni- countries now amount to versity of the Negev in $6 million annually. Beersheva, research is Serious research is also under way into the design of proceeding into many other buildings which utilize uses of solar energy. For solar energy to produce a example, Kibutz Kfar comfortable indoor climate Giladi is using solar radia- with virtually no machin- tion to convert agricultural ery. This spherical-shaped high-temperature solar collector is being developed in Israel for heating and cooling applications and hot water heating. Army; before long, also the Jews. "He needed to persuade Catholics that fascism was Catholic and he himself a believer who spent some of each day in prayer, while he said something very differ- ent to other people and took care to exclude from the newspapers any photo- graphs of himself kneeling or showing deference to the Pope." While he had begun by stating the Italian Jews were "no problem," he commenced his anti- Semitic campaign in 1938 when he announced that he was introducing "racial laws on the German model." Smith asserts: "Many Jews had been close col- leagues of his in the fascist movement and for a time he had encouraged Zionism in the hope of exploiting it for anti-British purposes." He began to propagate the notion that Italians belonged to an Aryan race that was superior to others. The road Mussolini trek- ked towards racial anti- Semitism is thus described b_y Smith: "He talked early in 1936 of starting an anti-Jewish campaign and by the end of 1936 was already dis- criminating against Jews by discouraging their em- ployment. Soon afterwards he began to call himself a full-blooded racialist and looked forward to the day when the Italian and Ger- man master races, which alone would be free froth corruption by the Jews, would be generally recog- nized for their superior qualities. "Possibly it was during his four days in Germany in 1937 that he saw the politi- cal usefulness of anti- Semitism, and his views de- veloped rapidly in 1938 as he moved closer to a Ger- man alliance. Subsequently he tried to excuse himself by ac- cusing the Germans of exerting pressure to push him into a racialist pol- icy, but it is hard to dis- cover evidence of any such pressure; the motive was rather his own spon- taneous decision to show solidarity with Nazism and provide a convenient scapegoat for the years of austerity that he meant to impose on Italy. "He was, however, fairly cynical about what was a merely tactical move and occasionally continued to state that there was no real Jewish problem in Italy. Then, by the beginning of 1938, the press was encouraged to inform the public that the Jews had wormed their way into strategic positions in Ita- lian life. "Already he was thinking out the principles of the `Charter of Race' which was published in July 1938 and which he claimed was largely drafted by himself. He continued to assert that possession of an East Afri- can empire was what forced him to bring these racial questions into the open, yet the charter made it abun- dantly clear that not just Arabs and Ethiopians, but Jews too were an inferior race." BENITO MUSSOLINI Smith emphasizes that the racial policy was not generally approved by the public in spite of the unanimous action on the subject by parliament. Pro- tests by the Pope (Pius XI) were ignored in the press which acted on orders from Mussolini. There is this in- teresting comment on Mus- solini's anti-Semitism as well as his anti-Papacy views: "When news arrived of some quite exceptionally savage persecutions by the Germans, he simply noted that in their place he would have been even more brutal. He was going to teach Italians to behave with severity until there were no more Jews left in Europe. "This exodus, he pre- tended, was essential and urgent in order to preserve the purity of the Italian race: though he personally thought the idea of racial purity was nonsense, it was politically expedient that others should think differ- ently. "He used to boast, and justifiably, that the cruel- ties of fascism were on a small scale compared to what was happening elsewhere. Nevertheless he gloried in fascist deeds of bloodshed and, in the late 1930s, described himself as the same man of violence he had been in 1921-1922; he talked of unleashing the squads again and said he was not averse to breaking a few heads to show that fas- cism was the same as ever. "The man who ordered prisoners of war to be exe- cuted, and the gassing of whole villages in Libya and Ethiopia, who was sorry that so few Italians had been killed in East Africa and who, according to Ciano, would not think twice before firing on a crowd of hunger demon- strators, was not a man to stop short if he thought Hit- ler wished him to expel the Jews from Italy. "When the Vatican re- monstrated strongly, Mussolini warned that racialism was by now a basic fascist dogma that left no room for com- promise. To spite the Pope — whose death, he said, he was hoping for soon — he tried to per- suade himself that reli- gion, and indeed any be- lief in God, was on the de- cline: if Italians still went to church, that was merely because t knew that the wanted them to'; t were anti-clerical at heart, and if he gave the word, were ready to get rid of the Pope for good. anti- "Mussolini's clericalism was thus areas- serting itself. Sometimes he now acknowledged that he was an outright disbeliever, and once told a startled cabinet that Islam was per- haps a more effective reli- gion than Christianity. The papacy was a malignant tumor in the body of Italy and must 'be rooted out once and for all', because there was no room in Rome for both the Pope and himself. "When some of the younger fascists took him at his word and launched a furious campaign against religion, he backed down and repudiated them; but privately continued to talk in the same vein." Smith's "Mussolini" has an interesting refer- ence to Arturo Toscanini who had been a fascist for a couple of years but left the party in 1921. The following from Smith's account is an historical note of great signifi- cance: "His favorite conductor was Toscanini — 'a great ar- tist but a contemptible man'. Toscanini had been a fascist in 1919 but quickly defected and, as early as De- cember 1922, made a scene at the Scala theater by re- fusing to play (Giovinezza'. "In 1926, Mussolini had arranged to be present in the Scala for the first night of Puccini's `Turandot' until he realized that Tos- canini would persist in his refusal. So plans were abruptly changed and, at the very moment the opera was starting, the Duce began an extempore ad- dress to a huge crowd hur- riedly assembled just out- side the theater in pouring rain. "Toscanini was one of those creative artists who categorically refuse' • compromise; he suffei public beating from fascist hooligans and then de- parted to work in the more congenial atmosphere of the United States. Just possibly it says something for fas- cism that he was allowed to go." Smith's "Mussolini" is re- vealing, as biography, as historical analysis. It serves as a valuable addendum to this study of all factors of World War II, the persecu- tions, mass murders, as well as the relationships be- tween dictators. —P.S.