On The Tube jewish.com )Volunteers Needed Ordinary People Ethel and Julius Rosenberg's granddaughter probes family, history in HBO documentary. . tic college students viewed commu- nism, as a kind of utopian system, and that plenty of young, middle-class Jews paid more than lip service to opposing the injustice they saw in postwar America. Meeropol tracks down Morton Sobell, who was tried with the Rosenbergs, and their con- temporary Miriam Moskowitz; both were essentially convicted for refusing to name names. Rosenbergs amid the national hysteria, MICHAEL FOX and who made no attempt to adopt Special to the Jewish News Michael or his brother Robert after the executions. They're not pleased to n the decades since Julius and hear from her half a century Ethel Rosenberg were convicted later, although she finally of conspiracy to commit espi- finds a second cousin her onage and executed in New York in own age who agrees to meet on 1953, the Jewish couple have become camera. (He's a mentsh who offers an larger-than-life icons. apology, but the scene has a "What's To those on the left, the Rosenbergs the point?" quality.) are the archetypal victims of the anti- One gets a similar feeling when Ivy Communist fervor of the 1950s, rail- takes her dad and uncle to the New roaded by the FBI and the judicial York apartment where they lived in system, with the full backing of a the early '50s, and where Julius was ruthless government. arrested before their eyes. They stand Conservatives, on the other hand, in the kitchen, echoing a famous see them as traitors who funneled photo of Ethel at the sink, but the sophisticated technical secrets to moment doesn't resonate with us the the USSR in the crucial postwar way it clearly does with the period and got what they deserved. Meeropols. Meanwhile, literary works — The filmmaker gets points for brav- such as novelist E.L. Doctorow's ery and persistence, not least when she The Book of Daniel and playwright confronts her father about the classi- Tony Kushner's Angels in America fied government documents released — have drawn inspiration from the in 1995 that seemed to confirm that Rosenberg saga and burnished its Julius was indeed passing information legacy. to the Soviets but that Ethel was inno- Inevitably, the couple's elevation. cent. to symbols precludes the The implication is that the govern- Rosenbergs from being seen as ment tried and convict- ordinary people. And that's the side ed Ethel of a capital of Ethel and Julius their thir- Julius and Ethel Rosenberg crime in order to pres- tysomething granddaughter, Ivy sure her — and Julius Meeropol, wants to explore. — into confessing and In her worthwhile though uneven naming others. The best interviewee is documentary, Heir to an Execution, We're left with the Meeropol's father, Meeropol sets out on a personal jour- Michael, long an elo- image of a loving, com- ney to know and understand her quent and thoughtful mitted couple who antecedents as human beings rather speaker about his par- shared political princi- than as mythic representations. ples and would not ents. He's clearly at' Meeropol, of course, recognizes the turn on each other or peace with Julius and average viewer is more interested in Filmmaker Ivy Meeropol their acquaintances — Ethel and what they did the weightier aspects of the Rosenberg even if it meant their or didn't do, and he case than in family scrapbooks. So she observes Ivy's pursuit with pride and children suffered. uses a slew of archival footage in a bemusement. Heir to an Execution is both a contri- mostly deft, occasionally awkward bution to the historical record and an Alas, Ivy's forays into family history attempt to weave together the private provide a series of uncomfortable admirable effort to breathe fresh life and historical. home-movie moments. As she drives into a 50-year-old story. As a family Heir to an Execution: A Grand- past the house where David Greenglass story, though, it doesn't have the emo- daughter's Story, which debuted in lives — he's the tragic, conflicted fig- tional impact it so clearly intends. ❑ competition at the Sundance Film ure who put the Feds on to his sister Festival in January, premieres June 14 Ethel and brother-in-law Julius (and on HBO. Heir to an Execution: served a 10-year sentence himself) — The film doesn't provide a detailed A Granddaughter's Story Ivy tears up, horrified by the innocu- analysis of either the early '50s or the premieres 8 p.m. Monday, ous homogeneity of his bungalow. Rosenbergs' trial, presuming a certain June 14, on HBO. Meeropol contacts relatives who dis- amount of knowledge on the viewer's tanced themselves from the part. We glean that numerous idealis- I Thousands of Iranians are signing up. For what? To be suicide bombers. To carry out attacks against the United States, against Israel, against Salman Rushdie. Should we worry? Maybe, says Micah Halpern; but probably not. Micah Halpern explains in his column on www.jewish.com . ) Long Time Coining Birth and adoption, bar and bat mitzvah, marriage and divorce, death and mourning — each sig- nificant event in the life of a Jew has at least one handbook devot- ed to the subject. It was only a matter of time that pregnancy would join the Jewish lifecycle hit parade. Read the review of "The Jewish Pregnancy Book" on www.jewish.com dotCOM SURVEY Do you think the U.S. mail should have been delivered Friday, June 11, the day of the funeral for former President Reagan? 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